Have We Really Dumbed Down This Much?!

15 Funny Clothing Tags That Made Me Laugh Out Loud
 
Some of us are still smart enough to keep the average up.
That's true but the media doesn't like us. Just when Covid 19 was at it's peak. All the media screamed about was COVID,COVID, COVID. It sort of ignored that some people were still getting heart attacks, strokes, cancer, etc. Oh yes, smart folks are still around but for some reason we are not "sexy" enough for media to take much notice. I think there is a price for this and society will have to pay. Perhaps it is already with all the mass shooting going on in the USA?
 
I read a report somewhere a few months ago that stated the average American IQ is now 99, down from 110 in the last 20 years.
Keeping in mind different methods of testing (who and what was tested and what test was used), it is possibly better or potentially even worse than that. This site has lots of variation in data, but it is interesting - https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/average-iq-by-country.​

Personally, since US youth are given technology at such an early age (i.e. lots of 3 year olds with I-Pads, etc.), I don't doubt it. The tech has become a cheap baby-sitting service and, in my view, a mind-numbing addiction for our children.
 
@hollydolly said: I know, it constantly amazes me.. I saw on a packet of peanuts recently.. Warning: may contain traces of nuts...
Peanuts are not "nuts", they are legumes. So if one is allergic to "tree nuts", which the warning is about, it helps to know this.
I doubt that many folks are aware of that distinction. It would be useful if it said: "Allergy Warning: Peanuts are legumes, but this product may also contain tree nuts." This would help protect the 40% of people who are allergic to both.

"In the U.S., plain-language labeling on packaged foods is required for 18 different tree nuts. These tree nuts are not the same as peanut (only 40% of children with tree nut allergies have an allergy to peanut),...

https://www.foodallergy.org/living-food-allergies/food-allergy-essentials/common-allergens/tree-nut
 
Label: Never operate your speakerphone while driving.



Label: Never operate your speakerphone while driving.​

Product: Jabra Drive 'N' Talk

"The 2010 winner of the annual Wacky Warning Label contest, which challenges Americans to find the most ridiculous warning labels in the country. The Jabra Drive 'N' Talk is a Bluetooth speakerphone accessory for cellphones to be used in the car. The Drive 'N' Talk carries this contradictory warning label: "Never operate your speakerphone while driving." So should it just be called the "Talk"?"
 
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I read a report somewhere a few months ago that stated the average American IQ is now 99, down from 110 in the last 20 years.
Why am I not surprised..

A couple of years ago, I needed to check out some "Pre-K" info for a work project.. One thing it said was most children start at 3 years of age, but some places accept two-year-olds and even one-year-old kids.

The other alarming info: Pre-Ks that are all about academics.. The way one place worded it, they didn't want children to 'waste their days' with 'mindless imaginative play'...

In other words, stop little kids' creative minds from developing... :mad:
 
@hollydolly said: I know, it constantly amazes me.. I saw on a packet of peanuts recently.. Warning: may contain traces of nuts...

I doubt that many folks are aware of that distinction. It would be useful if it said: "Allergy Warning: Peanuts are legumes, but this product may also contain tree nuts." This would help protect the 40% of people who are allergic to both.

"In the U.S., plain-language labeling on packaged foods is required for 18 different tree nuts. These tree nuts are not the same as peanut (only 40% of children with tree nut allergies have an allergy to peanut),...

https://www.foodallergy.org/living-food-allergies/food-allergy-essentials/common-allergens/tree-nut
I think that anyone with at least average intelligence knows this.. at least here in the UK
 
yep I say exactly the same..:ROFLMAO: my husband taught me that....
Does work except when there's faucet handles oddly placed like the inflow for water to my water heater. The pipes are in narrow space between the heater and wall in a corner just as one enters our small bathroom. For some unfathomable reason the cutoff valve, while at a convenient height for most adults is facing away from the position you can reach it from, so we have to think in terms of the handle's right not ours. Thankfully its only been necessary to deal with when we replaced old water heater
 
Does work except when there's faucet handles oddly placed like the inflow for water to my water heater. The pipes are in narrow space between the heater and wall in a corner just as one enters our small bathroom. For some unfathomable reason the cutoff valve, while at a convenient height for most adults is facing away from the position you can reach it from, so we have to think in terms of the handle's right not ours. Thankfully its only been necessary to deal with when we replaced old water heater
I have a very oddly places tap under my sink, it's the one needed to attach the garden hose... but it still adheres to the rule of righty tighty... :ROFLMAO:
 
There are definitely left hand threads, but mostly in automotive, and machinery applications where you have something rotating in a clockwise direction you will often find it has a lefty on thread to prevent it coming off. Table saws are one example and lug nuts on vehicles (not all) especially heavy trucks is another.

I have a very oddly places tap under my sink, it's the one needed to attach the garden hose... but it still adheres to the rule of righty tighty...
 
I have a very oddly places tap under my sink, it's the one needed to attach the garden hose... but it still adheres to the rule of righty tighty... :ROFLMAO:
This one does too, but it since it faces away from us the instinctive turning right movement to shut off doesn't work.
 


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