#good job op
Yk beyond my regular issues with Mailin/Finn there’s something… that feels,,, ick about this pairing to me, and I think it’s specifically in comparison to Sasha/Isi/Lou and Finn’s previous relationship with Zoe
Like,,, hmm… I can’t help but feel like this is the second time Dr*ck is basically doing a Madonna-whore trope… wherein by virtue of their goodness, the ‘Madonna’ characters gets the LI?
Sometimes you don’t have the perfect kind of water to do the job. Fortunately, you can substitute in a soda and it’ll do the trick.
- Coke:Use to break down a barrier or disintegrate something. Good for curses/hexes/removing anything.
- Pepsi: Use to “Sweeten” someone up, butter them before asking them of something. Good for offering due to high sugar content, making it sweeter than Coke.
- Mountain Dew: Give a spell a jolt of energy/power.
- Ginger Ale: Settle an argument, calm something down. Also good for grounding yourself, since it comes from a root.
- Root beer: Also good for grounding. Use in a mixture to add the element Earth to your spell.
- Cream Soda: Use as a replacement for vanilla extract, good with love-related spells and money.
- Orange Soda: Good for love, luck, and divination. Drink before/during divining.
- Grape Soda: Use to add a “sour” note to something. Good for hexes, curses, etc.
This is pretty cool. These would be great bases when concocting your own potions.
Awesome idea, I have never seen somebody use soda like this.
I just realized both op and the commenter are insane trad christains so im deleting my reblog (because im not platforming their shit – this is ALSO why im censoring their URLs I’m not going to give them traffic) and instead reposing it with the following links/information:
1) The WHO still actively hosts a guide on how to create safe milk substitutes when access to breastmilk/milk substitutes are unavailable on the Institutional Repository for Information Sharing (iris). The guide is called “Infant Feeding in Emergencies: A Guide for Mothers”. Relevant information starts on page 38.
2) Here is a link to the archived guide WITH THE CAUTION that I was not able to find out why its no longer provided by the WHO or iris. It could be that the information is out of date. I am only sharing it because I think the visuals may be helpful for people who have trouble reading written directions. Consult the above link first, then refer to this guide only if you need clarification on how to perform certain actions. Link to archive.
3) The language in that second comment throws up so may red flags. I cropped it to only the information needed to understand the context of this post because I find it immensely suspect. The repeated allusions to 2020 for no apparent reason (but I can guess why, as an infection disease scientist) come across as loaded or dog-whistely. I would advise against sharing the OP for that reason. But because the information being provided is important and not well known, I’m making this alternative post for people to reblog.
4) The implication that the WHO is censoring information based on a 404 page is a really flimsy and extreme conclusion to jump to. The “Infant Feeding in Emergencies” guide I linked above also goes to a 404 page on the WHO’s main website - but again, can be accessed through iris instead. So no, the information on how to feed infants in a food crisis is not being censored by the WHO.
5) A more likely cause for the guide disappearing is that the link broke and they didn’t fix it. If you look at the original URL it indicates the guide was posted in a subcategory on the WHO’s website about International Crises, specifically in the Middle East. If you try to type in a shortened versions of that URL (specifically https://www.who.int/hac/crises/ or the slightly modified http://www.who.int/hac/crises/en/) you’ll see that the subdomain that was present with relevant info breaks around 2020. In fact, while testing this hypothesis, I came across this information page in a November 2021 version of the URL https://www.who.int/home/cms-decommissioning (which I was redirected to automatically from http://www.who.int/hac/crises/en/):
There is no nefarious conspiracy theory. The link simply broke - as many many many many links do on the internet. The second commenters reply is proven bunk by a little bit of fact checking.
sorry for the long post, but I think the information on infant nutrition substitutes is genuinely useful, lifesaving info – but i’m not going to give more people with dangerous ideological views spouting nonsense a platform.
missing home
Someday I’ll have the real thing