2024.05.14 21:14 YouExcellent1831 I just walked out on my first ever sous chef position. Contemplating leaving industry.
2024.05.12 19:51 Eversonout Anyone have a better resolution of this chart?
It’s hard to make out the fine print when you zoom in to look at the ingredients. submitted by Eversonout to Sandwiches [link] [comments] |
2024.05.12 04:37 duellingislands 5:16 EEST; The Sun is Rising Over Kyiv on the 809th Day of the Full-Scale Invasion. The indulgent splendor of Sandy Varenyky!
"Sandy" Varenyky: Maybe Don't Count the Calories?I would eat that whole bowl, no hesitation. I've always been bad at math.Varenyky, one of the central pillars of Ukrainian cuisine, is often served with cracklings (along with caramelized onions) on top. Well... today we present Sandy Varenyky, a variant that features a cracklings filling. Its name comes from the color of the filling, which is reminiscent of golden sand. This dish is especially popular in Poltava, Chernihiv, and in Kharkiv Slobozhanshchyna. I should say upfront that the weight loss potential for this dish is essentially non-existent - its caloric density is off the charts! The filling of these little guys is mostly straight up pork fat... but I can assure you that the sinful taste of this ancient Ukrainian food makes up for the hit your macros will take. A dish like this would give people a lot of strength back in the day when tough physical work was a daily expectation for everyone. But if you're an office worker type, you could consider decreasing the caloric count by making them a little less puffy, and by adding more onions. Or just go with it. Note: We've written a lot about Varenyky in the past! You can find pics/more info on that in our sunrise posts about the dish: General Info About Varenyky "Lazy" Varenyky Strawberry Varenyky How to Make Classic Varenyky Okay, let's have a look at this indulgent recipe! _______________________________ How to Make "Sandy" VarenykyPhoto: cookorama.netIngredients for the Dough
Смачного!Part of our series on Ukrainian recipes! You can find the other entries in the series here:Borshch Varenyky (Recipe) Varenyky Cultural Background Horilka Banosh Hrechanyky Kyivskyi Cake Makivnyk Vyshnyak Drunken Cherry Cake Varenukha Pumpkin Porridge Lazy Varenyky Holubtsi Kalach Kvas Christmas Borshch Uzvar Kutya Beetroot Salad Kapusnyak Nalysnyk Bublyk Deruny Wild Mushroom Sauce Kozak Kapusnyak Yavorivskyi Pie Spring Dough Birds Kholodets Easter Bread (Babka/Paska) Khrin & Tsvikli Shpundra Teterya Green Borshch Kalatusha Elderflower Kvas Crimean Tatar Chebureky Ryazhanka Verhuny Liubystok (Lovage) Young Borshch with Hychka Baturyn Cookies Strawberry Varenyky Stinging Nettle Pancakes Kholodnyk Syrnyky Salo Kotleta Po Kyivsky (Chicken Kyiv) Savory Garlic Pampushky Pampukh (Donuts) Halushky Odesa Borshch Korovai Hombovtsi Traditional Medivnyk Space Age Medivnyk Mandryk Pliatsky: Royal Cherry Ohirkivka (Pickle Soup) Benderyky Pliatsok "Hutsulka" Kruchenyky Vereshchaka Medivka Honey Cookies Fuchky Khrinovukha Knysh Bryndzya Kalyta Pasulya Pidbyvana Kapusnyak Kvasha Kachana Kasha Mazuryky The Ponchyky of Lake Svitiaz Rosivnytsia Kulish Shcherba Dandelion Honey _______________________________ The 809th day of a ten-year invasion that has been going on for centuries. One day closer to victory. 🇺🇦 HEROYAM SLAVA! 🇺🇦 |
2024.05.12 04:08 shaneka69 MASSACHUSETTS NUMEROLOGY DECODE
2024.05.11 23:03 Come_at_me_brahh 1st trip to ATX
2024.05.10 03:13 adventuremonger1 Question: Cooking Local Free Range Chicken
2024.05.09 05:33 Alexander-305 "Top 5 Trending Cryptocurrencies to Watch Today! 📈🔍 Share Your Picks!"
2024.05.08 15:41 HUHM234 Significant cholesterol dropping after 3 months without statins
2024.05.06 04:36 jeslyn1984 We did it! 80 people for 7.5k!
Well we did it! 80 people for $7.5k just outside of St. Louis last weekend! We used a friend’s property (a horse arena for the reception) and did everything (except the food) ourselves. It was a lot of hard work, but we did it. submitted by jeslyn1984 to Weddingsunder10k [link] [comments] Luckily, my husband is incredibly handy. He built our photo wall, our head table wall, and used his own photo equipment for the Photo Booth. I made my own bouquet with flowers from Trader Joe’s. My dress was a “last season” dress for $800 and only needed $200 worth of alterations. I did my own makeup and my hair stylist gifted me my wedding hair as my gift since I invited her. I used Facebook marketplace and resale groups for so many things.. chargers, vases, crates, napkins, etc. I bought all the lights on clearance after Christmas. I used down trees around the property as decorations around the venue. Co-workers gave me our seating chart window pane and lanterns. Food was catered by a smaller local restaurant.. and everyone was obsessed. Smoked chicken, pulled pork, soft pretzels with smoked brisket cheese, macaroni and cheese, roasted red potatoes and salad! Plus dessert were a variety of donuts and fruit. We used gift cards I had been holding onto to supply all liquor, beer and soda. Basically… we pulled it off and I couldn’t be more happy. Biggest expense was food and a photographer. But it was well worth it. Everyone told us afterwards how much fun they had and it was one of their most favorite weddings. |
2024.05.05 14:28 The_Nutcrack How Memes on Ethereum Shape Volume, Gas Fees, and Transactions
1. Meme Trading and ETH Gas fees submitted by The_Nutcrack to ethtrader [link] [comments] Overlaying the daily meme trading volume chart on the ETH gas fees chart, we notice spikes in meme trading are accompanied by spikes in ETH gas fees. This indicates that when meme trading volumes are high, so are gas fees because of congestion on the network. https://preview.redd.it/gjcalprqglyc1.png?width=1232&format=png&auto=webp&s=19d92128d519b91a964cb6f7a768f153aed9023d 2. Gas spent on Meme vs other transactions Only a fraction of the total ETH gas fees spent every day goes towards gas for Meme transactions, while more than 90% of the total ETH spent account for other transactions (such as trading, staking, sending tokens, etc.). While meme trading has an influence on the increase in gas fees, it accounts for a very small percentage of the transactions on-chain. https://preview.redd.it/bnv0qs72hlyc1.png?width=1242&format=png&auto=webp&s=d21fec17535a0cb9bc1991885a7481a825d3a1a3 3. Meme Trading and BTC Price Looking at Meme trading volumes overlaid with the BTC price chart, spikes in the price of BTC also accompanies spikes in Meme trading volume. This could mean Meme trading picks up in anticipation of a run-up in price or a bull-run. https://preview.redd.it/1eejvbrxglyc1.png?width=2528&format=png&auto=webp&s=4e39f55806962889d61e1b95773150c0d3378b35 4. Ethereum Meme Volume Pepe, Grok, Bobo, Shib and Floki are the top 5 most traded Ethereum Memes. Pepe accounts for over $80M in volume, while the next 4 memes combined account for over $53M in volume. https://preview.redd.it/cuelgkheglyc1.png?width=1244&format=png&auto=webp&s=dbe201a5a912375ac80b5d9a2eecd31fd751490b 5. To-date Performance Pork (41%), Floki (24%), Pepe (23%), Doge(21%), and Bonk (20%) are the memes with the best month-to-date performance. https://preview.redd.it/tlo95go5ilyc1.png?width=1252&format=png&auto=webp&s=6310ed9019178e73ca0b4cb59dcfebe7028451aa 6. Most Traded Meme Tokens by Meme Traders Here is a list of the most traded meme tokens traded by degen meme traders on ETH including address, volume, trades, and total traders. https://preview.redd.it/ebctthamjlyc1.png?width=2536&format=png&auto=webp&s=810f31091857828863c1fb6d7bf90bb863e6c17c 7. Meme Token Holders The number of Meme token holders on Ethereum increased by over a million holders in the last quarter ending in March 2024. Currently, over 3.36 million holders hold meme tokens on Ethereum. https://preview.redd.it/4usxzyzzolyc1.png?width=1258&format=png&auto=webp&s=4c250ace138445cec1b599b5d33ce52016c4e8c3 8. Meme Token Creations Over 166K meme tokens were created (including memes created on Ethereum, Arbitrum, Polygon, and BNB). Between 2021 to 2024, the number of new creations have dropped significantly. https://preview.redd.it/1fpg4g1dplyc1.png?width=2548&format=png&auto=webp&s=9bddea4da5d29815cf626d22e310c3560f73bdce Data for this post was taken from Dune Analytics. |
2024.05.05 05:51 Permit-Street Overhyped death spiral live
2024.04.28 07:16 wsppan Today In Phishstory - April 28th
2024.04.27 07:16 wsppan Today In Phishstory - April 27th
2024.04.26 07:15 wsppan Today In Phishstory - April 26th
2024.04.25 07:15 wsppan Today In Phishstory - April 25th
2024.04.22 07:16 wsppan Today In Phishstory - April 22nd
2024.04.21 07:16 wsppan Today In Phishstory - April 21st
2024.04.20 07:16 wsppan Today In Phishstory - April 20th
2024.04.19 07:16 wsppan Today In Phishstory - April 19th
2024.04.18 19:32 Jacked-to-the-wits My complete silver investment thesis
Sorry this is a bit long winded, but I wanted to put out my entire investment case for silver, maybe just to feel better about having so heavily into it. This is just my opinion. Do you own research and get real advice. I’m not qualified or interested in, giving investment advice. submitted by Jacked-to-the-wits to Wallstreetsilver [link] [comments] First, it’s important to consider that silver is not like other commodities. It sounds kind of silly, but if we were talking about wheat, oil or pork bellies, the supply and demand would have to balance, in the long term and the short term. Gold and silver are mostly valued based on existing stockpiles. They have been mined for thousands of years, and for most of that time, excluding the last 150 or so years, almost everything ever mined was still in some sort of usable form. This is why these metals can act differently than almost any other commodities. If the price of corn spiked higher, farmers would switch crops to farm more, and it would eventually correct the price to the cost of production and a reasonable profit margin, since every year, all the corn in the market is consumed and grown again. Gold or silver could go for a long time being too expensive or too cheap, and it wouldn't immediately correct itself, since the price is based more on the huge stack already mined, rather than just what's going to be mined in the next year. This one frame shift is really key to understanding the current state of the market. Silver is primarily mined as a byproduct of Copper, Lead, Zinc, and Gold mines. This may seem like a random interesting fact, but it actually affects the market a whole lot. If we were talking about lithium instead of silver, and the lithium price went up 5x, every lithium mine in the world will go into overdrive, try to expand production as fast as possible, build any new mines they could, and that will eventually reverse or slow the price increase. If you have a mine that produces 90% of their revenue from lead and zinc, they aren't likely to do the same expansion if the 10% of production that’s silver goes up 5x. https://preview.redd.it/i1yt3jsyr9vc1.jpg?width=2148&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=f4036c55ed3813eea0772a3925e610a67954f457 I’ve heard some people talk about the market size of silver as being $1.5T. That's the rough value of all silver ever mined in 3000 years, and is pretty irrelevant in this context. The amount of silver in investible bar form is under 3B oz, which is less than $86B. The Comex has about 46M oz, in registered inventory, and 245M oz in eligible inventory. Eligible inventory is bullion in a depository, that could be put up for sale if the owners wanted, so it might not be for sale at any given price. The LBMA has around 820M oz, but around 85% is already owned by ETF’s. There is lot of silver in the world, but very little for sale in an investment grade, at anywhere near current prices. For a market apparently worth $1.5T, it seems like you could buy every bar in available in the world for a little over $4.7B. That’s obviously not counting the existing demand, so it might not take much new demand to move this market significantly. Although there has been much more silver mined through history, silver inventories have been chipped away for decades by industrial consumption, while gold inventories have grown. Although gold inventories have grown, so has the human population, and especially the population those with enough wealth to own gold or silver. Silver inventories have shrunk in absolute terms, but far more compared to the number of people who could buy some. The whole mining industry has been slumping for a very long time. Discoveries of new significant deposits are not only down, but new additions to PM reserves fail to add as many oz as are produced each year. If you consider that it takes years or decades between prospecting, exploring, drilling, permitting, more drilling, and construction of a new mine, there could be a very big lag between the price going up, and any significant new supply entering the market. I'm no mining expert, but I've heard it could be at least a 5 year lag for new mines (not counting any already in the pipeline). That pipeline isn't exactly flush given the insanely low prices over the last 10 years. Some people say that if the price goes up any significant amount, a flood of silver will come in from old coins, silverware, jewelry, etc, and correct the problem. In 1980 when silver hit $50, there truly was a giant rush of silverware and old coins, that impacted the supply demand fundamentals significantly, but I don't have the exact numbers. In 2011, when silver hit $50/oz again, the amount of silver recycled, went up about 50%, from around 100M oz to 150M oz, but that increase was only a small fraction of the mine supply (over 800M oz), so the broader supply demand picture didn’t really change much. There’s still a lot of silver in coins, silverware, jewelry, etc, but if it didn’t come back into the market at $50 in 2011, why would it come out of hiding now, for less? Also, although there are still lots of old silver teapots and spoons, they don’t make a lot of new silverware and every year that stockpile shrinks as old spoons get melted down. Much of the silver used in the “silverware” portion of the current demand pie, is used for electroplating, and that silver is never getting recycled. Over the past few decades, some of the supply demand imbalance in the silver market has been compensated by governments eroding their silver stockpiles. Many countries used to make coinage from silver, so they had to keep stockpiles, both functionally for making coins, but also as a strategic and central bank asset. Today, the US, Canada, UK, and most other developed countries, have sold the effectively all of their silver reserves decades ago. The US government had 350M oz in 1970, and around 50M oz from 2006 to today. All they hold today is working inventory for coin sales. Those coin sales are also a one way street out of the large scale investment markets, since nobody melts high premium coins to make low/no premium 1000 oz bars. https://preview.redd.it/3zeflwowq9vc1.png?width=855&format=png&auto=webp&s=cbf7489b61108b10c6f0c5dca71ab69f82fa76bd Silver is found in the earths crust at about a 14/1 ratio to gold. Current mine production is about 8/1, and existing stockpiles of investment grade product are not known well enough to compare, but I’ve heard estimates ranging from 3/1 to 1/1. The current price is 84/1. Gold is at or around it's all time high, but silver is a bit over half it's nominal all time high, or less than a quarter of it's inflation adjusted high. If you take a longer view of value over time, gold and silver have historically been valued along the lines of their production and naturally occurring scarcity, from 10/1 to 15/1. This ratio held for thousands of years. If you look at an inflation adjusted chart of silver prices going back hundreds of years, silver prices were usually many hundreds of today's dollars. From 1720-1900, the silver price never dipped below $100, and was as high as $500, in today's dollars. For most of the last 3000 years, an average skilled labourers days wage was 0.1 oz of silver. https://preview.redd.it/2ctdisz1r9vc1.png?width=890&format=png&auto=webp&s=4a257fb3ee70cb5d994b976e5c4f4dd40ddf5ec9 Demand The most important thing to understand about the demand side of the silver equation, is how it’s changed over time. For thousands of years, silver was money. Before the industrial and digital age and the silver consumption it introduced, pretty much all the silver ever discovered was still around, and the demand driver was that it became money the moment it was found. That’s a pretty simple demand case. If you were a prospector in the 1700’s, you could walk into a bar and spend silver or gold you found in a creek that day. If you spun some wool, or raised a cow, you could barter, or you’d have to trade that for silver or gold (the only money) before you could spend it. Over time, more and more uses for silver started to appear. This is when silver gained its hybrid, monetary and industrial status, and this status is really key to understanding silver in the world today. Today, the majority of silver demand comes from industry, and that demand is quite inelastic. If a company makes smartphones, and the average phone uses $0.35 worth of silver, you don’t stop making phones when the price of silver quadruples, and your $800 phone now needs $1.40 worth of silver. Silver is used very broadly, since it’s found in alloys used in most electronics. Because of that broad industrial usage, and the difficulty recovering such small quantities, about 80% of the silver consumed is never recovered. If you have a gold watch, someday that watch will break, and the gold will probably end up in a gold bar. If you make a cell phone, one day it will break, and most will end up in a landfill. https://preview.redd.it/md93xmjfr9vc1.png?width=629&format=png&auto=webp&s=4a7db7799a4092eef462bde40fa37f70f088c421 Also, industry demand is almost always hard to substitute. Silver is the most conductive element, most reflective element, and has natural anti microbial properties. These properties are elemental and irreplaceable. I’m sure if people could easily use copper instead, they probably already would have. There is a natural trend called thrifting, where a single product, like a solar panel, will use less silver per unit, as manufacturing becomes more and more efficient, but that effect only occurs when higher quantities of production drive that efficiency, and you don't get the per unit drop until you start increasing total volumes. It's also important to consider that although silver is only more conductive than copper by a small amount, in electronic applications, performance is measured in billionths of a second, so being a bit better means a lot. Silver’s industrial demand is highest in fast growing sectors like electric vehicles, solar panels, and electronics. EV’s use significantly more silver that gas cars, and also use lots in their charging infrastructure. The average solar panel uses 0.6 oz of silver, and 5G networks are expected to increase silver demand significantly as they roll out. The trend is clear, the future needs silver, and things that haven’t been invented yet, will probably need the irreplaceable properties only silver can offer. The other side of silver demand is its monetary or investment demand. At the core of this demand is silver’s historical role as a store of value, as well as people like me thinking it's undervalued. Silver’s monetary history revolves around it having the key properties of money: durability, portability, divisibility, fungibility, uniformity, limited supply, and acceptability. It’s worth noting that every element on the periodic table that meets these characteristics is already considered money. If you eliminate all gasses, all the elements that are reactive and non durable, all the elements that are too abundant to be portable (lead, iron, etc), or so scarce that there isn't a pound on earth, the elements that aren’t easily divisible (fungible), at the end of all that, you are left with only the precious metals. You can make the case for copper and nickel, but those have been used for money as well. So, we’ve established that silver is a store of value based on inherent qualities. That makes it a safe haven investment, since people look to stores of value when the future becomes uncertain. For decades now, the world has been lulled into a false sense of security by the US dollar global standard, coinciding with a period of particularly low inflation. A key driver of that period of low inflation, is deflation in prices of consumer goods, due to globalization. To oversimplify, the west keeps printing more and more money, but China keeps cheaply producing more and more products. This has kept inflation contained in localized asset bubbles (stocks, real estate, art), and most people haven’t seen it affect their lives much (until recently). That could change quickly. The low prices we’ve grown accustomed to, probably won’t keep dropping as we keep printing more money. To oversimplify, once China already produces everything, there’s nothing left to bring down to offset the printer, and if production moves back onshore, you get the reverse effect, huge inflation regardless of QE/QT. Another way to look at the inflation question is to ignore money printing, as modern economists often do, and just look at price inflation. More people with more money means higher prices. Well, most people don't have more money, but a small minority has a vast amount. So, we basically only see inflation in what those people want (stocks, real estate, art). Those people can't really go buy all the tomatoes in the world, unless they just plan to sell them again, but precious metals by their nature are concentrated wealth, so my theory is that we'll eventually see that 0.1% group piling into anything they can, and they definitely can with silver and gold. They just aren't paying attention just yet. Silver is barely on the radar of the 1%, let alone the 0.01%,.... but that could change quickly. For years, pretty much every country in the world has been printing money like crazy, and the only thing that makes it not look crazy, is the fact that everyone else is doing it, and currencies are only valued relative to other currencies. People call this the race to debase, and ends when the value of all currencies end up going down through the floor (into de basement lol). Inflation has gone from a non issue in the minds of the world, to the issue of the day, and that’s unlikely to change any time soon. Much of the developed world has forgotten about gold and silver, with academics referring to it as a barbarous relic or a pet rock, and the biggest pools of money, hedge funds, pension funds, endowment funds, and the uber rich, collectively own less than 1% of their portfolios in gold, and around 0.08% in silver. Over the last few decades, the fund average allocation to gold was 1.5% to 2%, so just a return to the average would be a massive inflow of money into the space. For the masses, the percentages are probably a bit higher than for funds, but as a share of all wealth in the west, precious metals are a microscopic rounding error, even today and even with all the attention we give to the space. It’s just not on most people’s radar yet and that should be encouraging. Note: the difference in what I stated above and this chart below is central banks holding gold. https://preview.redd.it/8wtr08o5s9vc1.jpg?width=1819&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=019923b80d7f3e88b6e715df2dc58ddfcf3e92a4 Scarcity is an incredible driver of behaviour. There are a lot of companies who really rely on silver, and who currently use just in time inventory, so they keep ordering constantly, and they can’t keep their operations going for long without new inventory. If I recall the toilet paper aisle in March 2020, when people start to sense a shortage, they tend to stock up. Unlike toilet paper, this won’t just be driven by fear and need. This would be driven by fear, need, want and greed. Imagine if toilet paper were a target of huge speculators that could easily and cheaply, house many years of global production, and suppliers couldn’t easily ramp up production, to respond to the shortage. It probably would have left a whole lot more desperate people, willing to pay a whole lot more. Silver is a market that probably deserves more demand than it’s getting, but in reality has so little demand that the biggest funds and investors barely notice that it exists. Even this tiny demand has been enough to clean out existing stockpiles and create a shortage. The sleeping dragon in this situation is that industrial users need to buy, regardless of price or market conditions. Prices may rise, shortages may grow, and then industrial users would have to compete with a larger and larger group of investors for scarce supply. At some point, some large investors will understand this and try to front run those industrial users. As this starts to unfold, it will bring silver more and more attention from more and more investors. Paper and Leverage Comex open interest (OI) is the amount of contracts trading at any one time. It's the best measure of size of that market. LBMA is a more opaque market, so we just have to assume it's relatively similar in structure, even if the scale is different. Every month, contracts expire and most close their contracts in cash or roll to the next month, but some take delivery, shrinking OI and inventory. Lately, there has been a trend, where the Comex silver inventory is shrinking quickly. Right now comex open interest is about 175,000 contracts for 5000 oz. That means that OI is 875M oz, and registered inventory is around 46M oz and eligible is around 245M oz, so there's roughly 33% the silver in vaults as their are contracts. The more contracts get delivered, the lower OI gets and the lower inventory gets, but the ratio also shifts. At 875M to 290M, it's around 3/1. If another 200M oz gets delivered that number drops to 675M to 90M or around 9/1. One way to think about it is this, for every contract that takes delivery, at least two other contracts will never be able to take delivery, or the seller will have to scramble to find any bullion it can at any price. Here's where it gets really interesting, Registered is around 45M oz and eligible is 245M oz. Registered can be drawn for delivery, but eligible only meets the requirements, so it could be delivered in theory, but only if the owner wants it to be. If registered is draining aggressively, who is going to want to put up their eligible silver? If you think of those numbers without the eligible, its 875M to 45M or 20/1, and if just 20M gets drained, now it's 855M to 25M or 30/1. As soon as the math become clear to everyone, it all just disappears and people try to figure out the next way to get inventory. The reaction will be predictable, comex will try to change the rules on the fly to cap the price and keep inventory, but that will draw massive attention, and may drive people to question if the paper contract they hold really is the same as the bullion. Maybe a few folks get red pilled into losing trust for markets and market makers, and want some wealth they can hold in their hands. Physical demand increasing creates this problem for the exchanges, but then uncovers a new one. The leverage means that there's a whole lot of people who think that they own silver that they really don't. As more move to physical, less and less is left behind. Summary This is a small market, with growing and inelastic demand, and an existing supply demand imbalance, that has been eroding available inventories for years. It’s currently in short supply (in an investable, deliverable form), and that shortage is getting worse by the day. The silver market is historically prone to wild spikes, and this time, a large spike up in price would actually be reverting to a more normal historical price (over the very long term), in terms of the ratio with gold, and in absolute inflation adjusted price. The physical price diverging from the paper price may force the Comex and LBMA to make more deliveries than they are basically built for, dry up any available inventory, and may cause a large number of leveraged paper contracts to owe physical metal they have no way of obtaining at anywhere near current prices. Industrial users need hundreds of millions of oz per year to operate their businesses, and historically rely on just in time inventory. If they are forced to wait to get inventory, they may start to see a shortage ahead. Some may decide that the risk of not getting product or having to pay much higher prices is too great, so they need to take some of the dwindling inventory for themselves. The more scarce it becomes, the more industry will want to stock up. Speculators will get wind of this, and further compete for the last scraps of bullion. This situation looks to me like a big bonfire, soaking in the gasoline of paper leverage, that may ignite anytime. I’ll be sitting by with my marshmallows, waiting to sell into a market that might look much different than when I bought. Congrats to anyone who made it to the end of my rant. Happy stacking! |
2024.04.18 08:05 cabage-but-its-lettu Chainsaw economics w/dennis chainsaw. ft.ARM TOWER!
ARM TOWERRRR! submitted by cabage-but-its-lettu to Chainsawfolk [link] [comments] We all know that dennis can regenerate lost limbs by pulling the cord on his chest. Theoretically speaking he could grind up his arms and wither sell it as ground pork or consume it with his sister. The reason for it to be sold as pork is pretty simple. One people don't generally like to consume other people and 2 it is said that human meat has an uncanny resemblant taste to pork. Since dennis is saving up for his sister lets see how much money he could get per arm (I'm talking the whole ass arm yo). denji is 6 foot tall the which mean he weighs around 160-190lb we can put him in the high middle as he is buff but not the bulky so 180lb. the average muscle mass for a male at his age is around 40-44% again assuming since he is beefed up we will go on the high-end. so 44% of 180 gives us 79.2lbs of meat to work with. the whole arm is about 5.7% of the body, since we calculated everything but the meat out already we can assume that 5.7% of 79,2 is about 4.51lb per arm. The USDA currently prices ground pork at an average of $9.5 per pound. This means if dennis were to cut of his arm and ground it in to ground meat he could sell it for $42.88. now then he cant regenerate forever so he's gonna need some blood to be able to regrow his arms. the supply cost of fresh whole blood is around $200. so to break even he would need 5 arms which from the damage we've seen him take should be no issue. He could also get the blood through other means, after all it doesn't have to be human blood. If he did it with pork blood he could get a whole gallon for $17. note I did not adjust for inflation. In addition most of my data was gathered from within the USA. I also only did like 20-35min of research. next time I may do calorie input to see if dennis and nayuta could thrive on ground arm meat. also make ARM TOWER taller perhaps WORK CITED: Allison, R. (2018, May 16). Weight of Human Body Parts. Human body part weights. https://robslink.com/SAS/democd79/body_part_weights.htm Gallon of Pork Blood. (2023, September 15). Gallon of pork blood. J&J Packing Company, Inc. https://pork2go.com/product/pork-blood/ Ideal Weight Chart. (n.d.). Ideal Weight Chart. Staying Well. https://www.bannerhealth.com/staying-well/health-and-wellness/fitness-nutrition/ideal-weight Lio, J. (2022, May 17). What is muscle mass and how to measure it?: Bowtie. Bowtie 專欄網誌. https://www.bowtie.com.hk/blog/en/muscle-mass/ Raised Pork Report. (2024, March 29). National Monthly Pasture raised pork report. National Monthly Pasture Raised Pork Report. https://www.ams.usda.gov/mnreports/lsmnprpork.pdf İndelen, C., Uygun Kızmaz, Y., Kar, A., Shander, A., & Kırali, K. (2021, April 26). The cost of one unit blood transfusion components and cost-effectiveness analysis results of Transfusion Improvement Program. Turk gogus kalp damar cerrahisi dergisi. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8167483/#:~:text=In%202018%2F2019%2C%20the%20blood,209.09%20for%20fresh%20whole%20blood |
2024.04.15 07:15 wsppan Today In Phishstory - April 15th