AMA Ask the right question and you might get an interesting answer

 
Sandtrap
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Rockets on my X
No strings on me this morning, apparently. I've got little to no restrictions going for me. That includes good or bad. Ask away.

Shoot for multiple questions if you like.
Last Edit: October 04, 2015, 06:56:47 AM by Deadtrap


 
Elegiac
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Is this the right question?


 
Sandtrap
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Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.


 
gats
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You will find out who you are not a thousand times, before you ever discover who you are. I hope you find peace in yourself and learn to love instead of hate.
where is upendi?


 
Elegiac
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Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?


 
SecondClass
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"With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably."
—Judge Aaron Satie
——Carmen
What accomplishment in your life made you the most proud of yourself?


 
Sandtrap
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where is upendi?

I don't even know what the fuck that is.


 
Sandtrap
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What accomplishment in your life has made you the most proud of yourself?

Haven't got one. I'm never proud of myself. I always look back at something finished and spot what I did wrong. I'm never satisfied. If I did something, there was a stupid mistake in there somewhere. I always think of the best approach at the end of things.
Last Edit: October 04, 2015, 06:49:56 AM by Deadtrap


 
Sandtrap
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Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.


 
SecondClass
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"With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably."
—Judge Aaron Satie
——Carmen
What accomplishment in your life has made you the most proud of yourself?

Haven't got one. I'm never proud of myself. I always look back at something finished and spot what I did wrong. I'm never satisfied.
You've really never done something that made you proud of yourself? That's bleak.


 
Sandtrap
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What accomplishment in your life has made you the most proud of yourself?

Haven't got one. I'm never proud of myself. I always look back at something finished and spot what I did wrong. I'm never satisfied.
You've really never done something that made you proud of yourself? That's bleak.

Nothing that lasted long anyway. Here's the flowchart of how feeling proud of myself works.

>I spot the one thing I mildly like about what I did
>I then spot the million failures and what I did becomes rubbish

That and the fact that I don't like pride too much, I think.


 
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"With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably."
—Judge Aaron Satie
——Carmen
Damn, man, that's sad. Too much pride of course isn't good, but having some measure of it is good for your esteem.


 
Sandtrap
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Damn, man, that's sad. Too much pride of course isn't good, but having some measure of it is good for your esteem.

It's not like I can change that. I don't even know if I want to. Being honest here, I think it's the one thing that keeps me on my feet. Never being satisfied means that I never stop. If I didn't have that sort of self loathing factor pushing me along, I would have given in a long time ago.


 
Elegiac
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Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?


 
Sandtrap
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11,704 posts
Rockets on my X
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.


 
SecondClass
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"With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably."
—Judge Aaron Satie
——Carmen
Damn, man, that's sad. Too much pride of course isn't good, but having some measure of it is good for your esteem.

It's not like I can change that. I don't even know if I want to. Being honest here, I think it's the one thing that keeps me on my feet. Never being satisfied means that I never stop. If I didn't have that sort of self loathing factor pushing me along, I would have given in a long time ago.
That actually makes a good amount of sense. We all need a driving force.

Since you're light on them here, I'll ask another question. If you could change one decision you've made, what would it be?


 
Sandtrap
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Rockets on my X
Damn, man, that's sad. Too much pride of course isn't good, but having some measure of it is good for your esteem.

It's not like I can change that. I don't even know if I want to. Being honest here, I think it's the one thing that keeps me on my feet. Never being satisfied means that I never stop. If I didn't have that sort of self loathing factor pushing me along, I would have given in a long time ago.
That actually makes a good amount of sense. We all need a driving force.

Since you're light on them here, I'll ask another question. If you could change one decision you've made, what would it be?

Tough one. My memory doesn't go back that far or that precise anymore. I think, though, on more recent events, letting myself essentially bleed out all over the place when I got my shit news about my tumor from the doc was a piss poor decision.

Both on here and on Bungie.net. In fact, I'd say that letting myself bleed out in general was a fucking poor move. I ended up getting messier and messier in mental state because of it and I probably alienated every last fucking person around me who might have called me a friend or had any sort of healthy interaction with me.

Feel free to ask more questions if you like. I get the feeling that you're going to be the only one asking the interesting shit for the most part.



 
Elegiac
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Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?


 
Sandtrap
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11,704 posts
Rockets on my X
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.


 
Elegiac
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23,675 posts
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?


 
Sandtrap
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11,704 posts
Rockets on my X
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?

Faster heart rate, more energy expendature in their actions. A body of that size spending so much energy needed to keep itself alive is going to burn out faster than something that lives an easier going lifestyle.


 
Elegiac
| Knight of the Limits
 
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23,675 posts
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?

Faster heart rate, more energy expendature in their actions. A body of that size spending so much energy needed to keep itself alive is going to burn out faster than something that lives an easier going lifestyle.
Do you think we should genetically engineer birds that live longer?


 
Sandtrap
| Mythic Sage
 
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11,704 posts
Rockets on my X
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?

Faster heart rate, more energy expendature in their actions. A body of that size spending so much energy needed to keep itself alive is going to burn out faster than something that lives an easier going lifestyle.
Do you think we should genetically engineer birds that live longer?

No. You try to modify the natural system as it functions and you create a domino effect. The stronger the modification, the stronger the domino effect.

Longer living birds with no slowed reproduction abilities would lead to a population explosion, over consumption, and then collapse, which then put more strain on other species that revolve around the consumption of those birds in some form.


 
Elegiac
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23,675 posts
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?

Faster heart rate, more energy expendature in their actions. A body of that size spending so much energy needed to keep itself alive is going to burn out faster than something that lives an easier going lifestyle.
Do you think we should genetically engineer birds that live longer?

No. You try to modify the natural system as it functions and you create a domino effect. The stronger the modification, the stronger the domino effect.

Longer living birds with no slowed reproduction abilities would lead to a population explosion, over consumption, and then collapse, which then put more strain on other species that revolve around the consumption of those birds in some form.
Do you think that with longer lifespans a significant number of birds could develop epilepsy, thus preventing the population explosion?


 
Sandtrap
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11,704 posts
Rockets on my X
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?

Faster heart rate, more energy expendature in their actions. A body of that size spending so much energy needed to keep itself alive is going to burn out faster than something that lives an easier going lifestyle.
Do you think we should genetically engineer birds that live longer?

No. You try to modify the natural system as it functions and you create a domino effect. The stronger the modification, the stronger the domino effect.

Longer living birds with no slowed reproduction abilities would lead to a population explosion, over consumption, and then collapse, which then put more strain on other species that revolve around the consumption of those birds in some form.
Do you think that with longer lifespans a significant number of birds could develop epilepsy, thus preventing the population explosion?

No. Epilepsy is a slow development. Not only that, but it takes time to kill. You don't just have a seizure and a fall over dead. It takes time for it to completely break down your system.

Let's say it takes 20 years for a bird to pick up epilepsy once it reaches old age with it's new altered lifespan. In that time, it could have had multiple batches of eggs and reproduced a few hundred more of itself. And that's just one bird.



 
Elegiac
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23,675 posts
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?

Faster heart rate, more energy expendature in their actions. A body of that size spending so much energy needed to keep itself alive is going to burn out faster than something that lives an easier going lifestyle.
Do you think we should genetically engineer birds that live longer?

No. You try to modify the natural system as it functions and you create a domino effect. The stronger the modification, the stronger the domino effect.

Longer living birds with no slowed reproduction abilities would lead to a population explosion, over consumption, and then collapse, which then put more strain on other species that revolve around the consumption of those birds in some form.
Do you think that with longer lifespans a significant number of birds could develop epilepsy, thus preventing the population explosion?

No. Epilepsy is a slow development. Not only that, but it takes time to kill. You don't just have a seizure and a fall over dead. It takes time for it to completely break down your system.

Let's say it takes 20 years for a bird to pick up epilepsy once it reaches old age with it's new altered lifespan. In that time, it could have had multiple batches of eggs and reproduced a few hundred more of itself. And that's just one bird.
What lifespan would you suggest for birds, in order to have them live longer, but not so long that epilepsy won't stop them from reproducing? Keep in mind that we're talking about an avian form of epilepsy that comes on stronger and quicker and is coupled with a mild form of tourettes.


 
Sandtrap
| Mythic Sage
 
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ID: Sandtrap
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11,704 posts
Rockets on my X
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?

Faster heart rate, more energy expendature in their actions. A body of that size spending so much energy needed to keep itself alive is going to burn out faster than something that lives an easier going lifestyle.
Do you think we should genetically engineer birds that live longer?

No. You try to modify the natural system as it functions and you create a domino effect. The stronger the modification, the stronger the domino effect.

Longer living birds with no slowed reproduction abilities would lead to a population explosion, over consumption, and then collapse, which then put more strain on other species that revolve around the consumption of those birds in some form.
Do you think that with longer lifespans a significant number of birds could develop epilepsy, thus preventing the population explosion?

No. Epilepsy is a slow development. Not only that, but it takes time to kill. You don't just have a seizure and a fall over dead. It takes time for it to completely break down your system.

Let's say it takes 20 years for a bird to pick up epilepsy once it reaches old age with it's new altered lifespan. In that time, it could have had multiple batches of eggs and reproduced a few hundred more of itself. And that's just one bird.
What lifespan would you suggest for birds, in order to have them live longer, but not so long that epilepsy won't stop them from reproducing? Keep in mind that we're talking about an avian form of epilepsy that comes on stronger and quicker and is coupled with a mild form of tourettes.

I wouldn't. Not my field of specialty, and not our network to tamper with for no reason. I don't mind birds. I like a few of them.

But they're birds. I ain't gonna put too much thought into that one. No more birds pls.


 
Elegiac
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23,675 posts
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?

Faster heart rate, more energy expendature in their actions. A body of that size spending so much energy needed to keep itself alive is going to burn out faster than something that lives an easier going lifestyle.
Do you think we should genetically engineer birds that live longer?

No. You try to modify the natural system as it functions and you create a domino effect. The stronger the modification, the stronger the domino effect.

Longer living birds with no slowed reproduction abilities would lead to a population explosion, over consumption, and then collapse, which then put more strain on other species that revolve around the consumption of those birds in some form.
Do you think that with longer lifespans a significant number of birds could develop epilepsy, thus preventing the population explosion?

No. Epilepsy is a slow development. Not only that, but it takes time to kill. You don't just have a seizure and a fall over dead. It takes time for it to completely break down your system.

Let's say it takes 20 years for a bird to pick up epilepsy once it reaches old age with it's new altered lifespan. In that time, it could have had multiple batches of eggs and reproduced a few hundred more of itself. And that's just one bird.
What lifespan would you suggest for birds, in order to have them live longer, but not so long that epilepsy won't stop them from reproducing? Keep in mind that we're talking about an avian form of epilepsy that comes on stronger and quicker and is coupled with a mild form of tourettes.

I wouldn't. Not my field of specialty, and not our network to tamper with for no reason. I don't mind birds. I like a few of them.

But they're birds. I ain't gonna put too much thought into that one. No more birds pls.
Do you think that future generations looking back on this conversation while researching extended lifespans in birds would feel a sense of closure at the end of the exchange about birds, or would they feel that questions had been left unanswered?


 
Sandtrap
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11,704 posts
Rockets on my X
Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?

Faster heart rate, more energy expendature in their actions. A body of that size spending so much energy needed to keep itself alive is going to burn out faster than something that lives an easier going lifestyle.
Do you think we should genetically engineer birds that live longer?

No. You try to modify the natural system as it functions and you create a domino effect. The stronger the modification, the stronger the domino effect.

Longer living birds with no slowed reproduction abilities would lead to a population explosion, over consumption, and then collapse, which then put more strain on other species that revolve around the consumption of those birds in some form.
Do you think that with longer lifespans a significant number of birds could develop epilepsy, thus preventing the population explosion?

No. Epilepsy is a slow development. Not only that, but it takes time to kill. You don't just have a seizure and a fall over dead. It takes time for it to completely break down your system.

Let's say it takes 20 years for a bird to pick up epilepsy once it reaches old age with it's new altered lifespan. In that time, it could have had multiple batches of eggs and reproduced a few hundred more of itself. And that's just one bird.
What lifespan would you suggest for birds, in order to have them live longer, but not so long that epilepsy won't stop them from reproducing? Keep in mind that we're talking about an avian form of epilepsy that comes on stronger and quicker and is coupled with a mild form of tourettes.

I wouldn't. Not my field of specialty, and not our network to tamper with for no reason. I don't mind birds. I like a few of them.

But they're birds. I ain't gonna put too much thought into that one. No more birds pls.
Do you think that future generations looking back on this conversation while researching extended lifespans in birds would feel a sense of closure at the end of the exchange about birds, or would they feel that questions had been left unanswered?

Again, I'm not going to bother thinking too hard on that one. And I'm not going to care either. I asked you for no more bird posting. Don't put me to sleep here. I'm trying to stay awake.


 
Elegiac
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Is this the right question?

No. It's a rather boring and irritating question that leaves me with fuck all room to work with.
Okay, sorry man.

What about this? Is this the right question?

No. It's more irritating now because I backtracked on the first statement and didn't want to offend after realizing that I might have. Then I got to your second part.

Let's not take that road.
What road?

The one that involves asking questions that have the substance of a sack of potatoes. Surely you've got something to ask of me with more merit than that.

Assuming I can remember all the bits and pieces, I have things to say. And I feel like saying them for once.

But I don't like exclaiming things out into the open on my own spontaneously because it's jarring for everybody involved.
Can birds get epilepsy?

I believe so. Cats and dogs can. I don't see why birds couldn't.

However, birds have drastically shorter lifespans than cats or dogs so their chances of developing a condition like it is minimal.
Why do birds have shorter lifespans?

Faster heart rate, more energy expendature in their actions. A body of that size spending so much energy needed to keep itself alive is going to burn out faster than something that lives an easier going lifestyle.
Do you think we should genetically engineer birds that live longer?

No. You try to modify the natural system as it functions and you create a domino effect. The stronger the modification, the stronger the domino effect.

Longer living birds with no slowed reproduction abilities would lead to a population explosion, over consumption, and then collapse, which then put more strain on other species that revolve around the consumption of those birds in some form.
Do you think that with longer lifespans a significant number of birds could develop epilepsy, thus preventing the population explosion?

No. Epilepsy is a slow development. Not only that, but it takes time to kill. You don't just have a seizure and a fall over dead. It takes time for it to completely break down your system.

Let's say it takes 20 years for a bird to pick up epilepsy once it reaches old age with it's new altered lifespan. In that time, it could have had multiple batches of eggs and reproduced a few hundred more of itself. And that's just one bird.
What lifespan would you suggest for birds, in order to have them live longer, but not so long that epilepsy won't stop them from reproducing? Keep in mind that we're talking about an avian form of epilepsy that comes on stronger and quicker and is coupled with a mild form of tourettes.

I wouldn't. Not my field of specialty, and not our network to tamper with for no reason. I don't mind birds. I like a few of them.

But they're birds. I ain't gonna put too much thought into that one. No more birds pls.
Do you think that future generations looking back on this conversation while researching extended lifespans in birds would feel a sense of closure at the end of the exchange about birds, or would they feel that questions had been left unanswered?

Again, I'm not going to bother thinking too hard on that one. And I'm not going to care either. I asked you for no more bird posting. Don't put me to sleep here. I'm trying to stay awake.
Do you think that I would be justified in saying that my previous question wasn't about birds?