Well, that's human slop, and it's actually more insidious than AI slop. You know what's weird? We've had this for almost twenty years. This human slop in writing this is the first time ever that this painful writing has been addressed by someone else on a comment on the internet. I've raised it so many times, but it's the first time I've ever seen one other person acknowledge it. Like, how crazy is that? Is the last twenty years been a fever dream?
I think your only defense would be to pretend to be a bot at this point, because what you just said was completely ridiculous and embarrassing. You realize it's not a requirement that you have to post a comment when you have no idea what to say?
That's a lot of words coming from people who were against this very idea not that long ago. Before Let's Encrypt existed, 90% of you were violently against the idea. "No, that's not how it's supposed to work."
That's how it was.
How long did it take for us to get to a "letsencrypt" setup? and exactly 100ms before that existed, you (meaning 90% of you) mocked and derided that very idea
> American Indian and Alaska Native women had the highest age-standardized annual and aggregated rate (106.3 deaths per 100 000 live births), followed by non-Hispanic Black women (76.9 deaths per 100 000 live births)
I haven't looked into this study but those are populations that generally have a higher level of obesity and also smoking, alcohol & recreational drug use. They also tend to have somewhat lower access to high quality health care. All of which are correlated with increased health issues like lower resistance to infection, less resilience to physical stress, slower recovery times, increased incidence of complications, higher blood pressure, diabetes, etc. And pregnancy is basically a massive, system-wide physical stressor.
My wife is physically fit and super athletic. No smoking, alcohol or drugs before or during pregnancy (as well as zero junk food before or during). And, unsurprisingly, her pregnancy was basically ideal. She had an easier time than any of her friends, but it still kicked her ass - especially the final trimester (fatigue, poor sleep, hormonal swings, etc). She joked it felt like birthing a face hugger from the movie Aliens. Her friends who already had underlying conditions or overall weaker health generally also had the roughest pregnancies, and many of them had various medical complications. They also had higher incidence, severity and duration of post-partum depression which can be a big issue (fortunately, my wife had virtually none). Plus my wife only worked minimally and entirely by choice while having great medical care that was local and which she knew how to fully utilize.
"Definitely complicated enough for us all to keep getting paid for a long time."
read hhgttg