hypocrite
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Here are some examples of activities or uses that typically require that amount of water:
Using 500 milliliters (ml) of water is relatively common in everyday life. Here are some examples of activities or uses that typically require that amount of water:
- Drinking Water: 500 ml is equivalent to about two standard glasses of water or a typical small bottle of water that people might drink.
- Cooking: Many recipes involve boiling water, such as making pasta or rice, where 500 ml might be a starting quantity.
- Handwashing: A brief hand wash, depending on the faucet flow rate, can use around 500 ml of water.
- Brushing Teeth: Leaving the tap running while brushing teeth for two minutes could use about 500 ml or more of water, though turning it off saves water.
- Showering: A very short shower using a water-saving showerhead might consume around 500 ml in a few seconds, as shower flow rates often range from 6 to 12 liters per minute.
- Watering a Small Plant: Many houseplants require about 500 ml of water per watering, depending on their size and type.
- Coffee or Tea Preparation: Brewing a couple of cups of coffee or tea uses around 500 ml of water.
These examples help illustrate how everyday activities can equate to this seemingly small quantity of water.
By ChatGPT
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It’s only wrong when YOU do it! The psychology of hypocrisy | Dean Burnett
“Humans are prone to the principle of least effort, often known as the ‘path of least resistance,’ which means they’ll go for whatever option requires the least work. Hypocrisy allows you to appear principled without having to be so, which is much easier than adhering to strict principles.”
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“The middle class is like a buffer between the capitalist ruling class and the proletariat, often serving the interests of the former while believing they are defending the latter.”
— Karl Marx
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“The upper class keeps all the money, pays none of the taxes. The middle class pays all the taxes, does all the work. The poor are there… just to scare the s**t out of the middle class.”
— George Carlin
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“The problem of the working class is not merely the problem of ‘poverty’; it is the problem of being despised and neglected by the middle classes, who may sometimes ‘help’ them but never truly understand them.”
— George Orwell (from Road to Wigan Pier):
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“Perhaps the most critical piece of evidence for the theory of hypocrisy as false signaling is that people disliked hypocrites more than so-called ‘honest hypocrites.’ In a fourth online study, the researchers tested perceptions of ‘honest hypocrites,’ who — like traditional hypocrites — condemn behaviors that they engage in, but who also admit that they sometimes commit those behaviors. ‘The extent to which people forgive honest hypocrites was striking to us,’ says Jordan. ‘These honest hypocrites are seen as no worse than people who commit the same transgressions but keep their mouths shut and refrain from judging others for doing the same — suggesting that the entirety of our dislike for hypocrites can be attributed to the fact that they falsely signal their virtue.’”
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“The modern Democratic Party is not the party of the poor, but of the professional class — a class that sees itself as a progressive force, but often promotes policies that benefit itself rather than the truly needy.”
— Thomas Frank (from Listen, Liberal)