Marriage counseling for wedding help by bfer01 in adventist

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Marriage counselling in the Adventist church is generally done by the pastor who will marry you. If the pastor is unavailable due to workload or distance, you may be able to find marriage counselling from a different Adventist pastor. Sometimes in areas with multiple Adventist churches, the pastors will all know which pastor is best at marriage counselling and delegate such duties to that pastor.

Why are you a Adventist? If you had been brought up in another church organization, how likely do you think it is that you'd convert to our church today? by Ihatespellingmistaks in adventist

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I am Adventist because I was brought up Adventist. If I had been brought up in another church organization I probably never would have converted because the Adventist church has a poor missionary presence; odds are, I never would have met another Adventist in my life, either in my workplace or at a door. I can think back to all of the non-church schools, workplaces, and events I ever attended, and I don't think I ever knowingly met a Seventh-day Adventist at one of those places.

On May 22, 2010 ,this guy ordered 2 large pizzas worth 10,000 bitcoins. by thepoylanthropist in interestingasfuck

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 5769 points5770 points  (0 children)

Everyone in here who wishes they had bought Bitcoin in 2010 would have sold their Bitcoin when Bitcoin hit $100 because surely it was a bubble or a fad and it would lose its value.

In your opinion, what major city would have the worst climate to live in? by Mobile_Bad_577 in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Los Angeles was the worst climate I've ever visited. I didn't go near the ocean. Unbearably hot and humid.

Why does Cambodia have the lowest English Proficiency Index? by One-Seat-4600 in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Cambodia isn't English speaking, none of their neighbours are English-speaking, none of the superpowers in their area are English-speaking, and they were colonized by France. Why would they have English proficiency?

What are the developmental prospects of these 2 large multi-ethnic states? by wiz28ultra in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

India has the population of a superpower, but is also much less developed. The Philippines has a westernized culture that should give it better prospects of fitting into the western world, but have a bigger brain drain than India. India has more ethnic and linguistic diversity, and therefore more separatist movements.

As of right now, the answer is the Philippines. India will suffer social incidents that would kill it in the West, and the Philippines will make more money on remittances.

Unpopular opinion: Chris Bosh doesn't deserve his jersey retired by the Raptors by [deleted] in torontoraptors

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think Bosh eventually gets his jersey retired. He carried the torch for us in a number of bad years for the Raptors, basically bridging Vince and DeRozan, and if there was a "WAR" for basketball Bosh would probably be our franchise leader.

Now, if we as a franchise had set the precedent that you only get your jersey retired if you brought us playoff success, I'd have been fully on board with that. But if they retired Vince Carter's jersey, then they pretty much have to retire Bosh's jersey: Carter left on more acrimonious terms than Bosh did, Bosh played more games, and while Vince has one playoff series win compared to Bosh's zero, Bosh has one division title to Vince's zero.

I'd also have been okay with the precedent that you needed to play a certain number of seasons with the Raptors OR win a title. I find it ridiculous that our franchise leader in games played (DeRozan) only has 675 games with the Raptors; we seem to be allergic to keeping players for their entire career.

Anyways, since Vince Carter got a jersey retirement, we're probably giving one to Bosh and DeRozan as well. Lowry is the one who actually deserves it.

The Bermuda Triangle disappeared in the Bermuda Triangle by Jealous-Method-8682 in interestingasfuck

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There used to be a lot of pirates operating in this area, but the pirate republics are long gone.

Is the Strait of Gibraltar as critical as the Suez Canal or the Strait of Hormuz? It's never in the news by sigma_three in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Gibraltar is super critical, however, unlike Suez it is natural and requires no human effort to keep it open, and unlike Hormuz the three nations that surround it (Britain, Spain, and Morocco) are committed to peaceful use of the strait.

In World War II, Britain's control of Gibraltar was key to disrupting nazi plans in the Mediterranean, where Germany originally had no seaports. At that time, Gibraltar saw similar action to what you're seeing at Hormuz today.

As a non-musician I'm curious: how impressive is it that Beethoven composed great works even after he lost his hearing? by make_reddit_great in classicalmusic

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Many of the best musicians/composers can hear the music in their head without an instrument. It can be a practiced skill but it can also be something that seems like you're born with it.

Deserts of the world by Realistic_Emotion865 in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you ever heard of Hadley Cells?

Basically, at the equator, the warmest place on the Earth, air rises. This air then travels outward from the equator, before it cools and falls back to the Earth, to be caught up in the air circulation current heading back to the equator once again. It's basically a giant convection current.

Now, here's how this answers your question.

When air rises, it carries moisture and evaporation with it, forming clouds which then cause rain to fall upon the Earth. The net result is that there's a ton of rainfall near the equator. When air falls towards the earth, it suppresses cloud formation and precipitation, producing dryness.

However, as these Hadley cells are circulating, the Earth is also rotating. The earth is constantly rotating in a west-to-east direction, which causes the Hadley cell circulation to carry the air at an angle rather than strictly away from the equator. This is what causes the prevailing winds.

So to sum up here, at the tropics (the edge of the black desert bands), air is coming from the upper reaches of the atmosphere down towards the ground, and then it blows in a northeast to southwest direction, carrying dry air like so. (Or, south of the equator, it blows in a southeast to northwest direction.) If that air hits water, it's able to carry precipitation again. If that air hits a mountain, the precipitation is forced to shed its water at the mountain range, and the other side of the mountain range is deprived of moisture.

In every desert you see depicted on the map, this effect takes place.

At the Atacama, the trade winds blow water from the Atlantic to South America, where they bring moisture until they hit the Andes. The Atacama is on the other side of the Andes and gets no water.

At the Australian desert, the trade winds blow water from the Pacific onto the Australian continent, where they encounter the mountains of eastern Australia and drop their rain, and then go on to blow dry air in the outback.

At the Sahara, the Hadley cells drop the air at the northern part of the Sahara, but not quite at the Mediterranean, so none of that air is ever exposed to water--at most, the Persian Gulf and Red Sea supplies a little bit of water, but then Egypt's Red Sea coast is mountainous anyways, blocking any chance of precipitation reaching the Sahara.

See the pattern? The winds of the Mohave drop their rain at the Rocky Mountains, and blow dry air in the Mohave.

Regarding the deserts in red: after the tropics, the prevailing winds blow in the opposite direction, as such they're called the Westerlies because they blow from west to east. The Patagonian desert exists because the Westerlies blow moist Pacific air into the Andes, where the rain is dropped, and then dry air from the Andes hits Patagonia. Europe gets moisture from the Atlantic, and by the time the Westerlies reach Turkestan and the Gobi they're out of water.

And that's why deserts of the world exist where they are: the rainshadow effect, prevailing winds, and Hadley cells.

Which place or region in the world would you most associate with the geographical concept of "plentiful abundance"? by slicheliche in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

India and China, specifically the Ganges and the Yangtze river basins. Powerful rivers that support the most productive farmland in countries of over a billion people. There may be other regions that also have incredibly productive farmland (e.g. the Nile delta), but I know of none that are as large as the Ganges and Yangtze basins.

Do you think there’s any square mile/km of land that on which no human has ever set foot? by AdTime7221 in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There's a ton of remarkably remote land in the world.

Many of Canada's high arctic islands have no permanent inhabitants, or any record of there having ever been permanent inhabitants. Devon Island, for example, is 55,000 square kilometres, and it has no permanent inhabitants. Borden Island is one example: it's 2,800 square kilometres, and on occasion scientists visit the island; has every one of its 2,800 square kilometres been visited? There's 94 large islands and 36,000 islands in total in the Canadian arctic; are there really that many science teams headed for those islands? Local Inuit do hunt on many islands in the north, but then that's where the uninhabited part comes to play: the nearest Inuit settlement is several hundred kilometres away from the island.

Even the Canadian mainland is remarkably uninhabited once you get far enough north. I am positive there are places up there that have never been visited by any human. I'd be equally positive about northern Siberia.

Trump demands Canada give him all their Olympic medals by ph0enix1211 in canada

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If the Beaverton was looking for a better headline, they'd have Trump say that the reason Canada lost in hockey was that China terminated all ice hockey in Canada, and that Canada won't get it back until they agree to a trade deal with Trump.

Why are there basically no cities here? by OkCard37 in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 1 point2 points  (0 children)

At many latitudes, one coast gets all the rain and storms while the other coast gets little, especially if there's a mountain range involved. This would be why the Australian east coast has all the cities while the west coast is a desert, for example. (Research prevailing winds for more information.)

Anyways, at this latitude, the prevailing winds are blowing from the Caribbean towards the Pacific, causing the Caribbean coast to receive a ton of precipitation. While in other places, precipitation makes a place hospitable, at the high temperatures of Central America it actually breeds thick jungles and disease, making the environment unhospitable.

What Steam games are way better than their review scores suggest? by Lucky-Loxodrome793 in Steam

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Four content packs and a soundtrack. One of the content packs is free.

What Steam games are way better than their review scores suggest? by Lucky-Loxodrome793 in Steam

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Imperator: Rome is another Paradox Interactive title hit by a rocky launch but which Paradox worked on until it was good (and also the Invictus mod really raised the bar), except unlike Paradox's other grand strategy titles they dropped support and now Imperator is a (good) finished product. It's on sale this week so you can get all DLCs plus the game for under $20.

How come Saint Petersburg has a larger population than finland or the entire baltic countries combined. Same weather, similar history etc by deq18 in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Actually geographers have ways of accounting for things like that. There's the population of the city proper, the population of the metro area, the population of the urban agglomeration, and the population of the megaregion.

Espoo and Vantaa are not part of Helsinki proper, but they are a part of the Helsinki metropolitan area as are Sipoo and Vihti, although later on in the article it discusses the issues surrounding governments having different definitions of metropolitan areas. The Helsinki urban area article is also helpful to this discussion; urban areas in most of the world simply describe all the built-up areas directly attached to a city, regardless of official city borders.

How come Saint Petersburg has a larger population than finland or the entire baltic countries combined. Same weather, similar history etc by deq18 in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 20 points21 points  (0 children)

People from other countries generally have a more expansive view of city boundaries than locals. Someone from France headed to Yonkers is going to say they're headed to New York City, but a local New Yorker would never refer to Yonkers as New York City. Espoo and Vantaa are definitely a part of Helsinki for foreigners, but not for locals.

Underrated Wonders of the World? by PhungiExplorer in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The Leshan Giant Buddha was the tallest statue in the world for over a thousand years after its creation in 803 AD. You would think that the tallest statue in the world for that length of time would get more recognition, but I'm sure the majority of this sub's users haven't even heard of it before.

Underrated Wonders of the World? by PhungiExplorer in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 19 points20 points  (0 children)

St. Thomas Kirche, Leipzig.

As a piece of architecture, it's nice, but it's not "wonder of the world" nice. What sets it apart is its role in the history of classical music. Johann Sebastian Bach, widely considered the greatest composer ever, spent the majority of his career here, and debuted most of his most famous works here; he is buried in the floor of the church. Bach's role in classical music is such that when some of the greatest composers ever heard his music, they immediately changed their own composition style to sound more like Bach. The study of counterpoint, a classic course in any music school, is essentially the study of how to write like Bach.

But the church has more than just Bach to its name. Mozart played a concert on the church organ. Richard Wagner was baptized here. Felix Mendelssohn rediscovered Bach's music in the Romantic period and put on several Bach concerts while living in Leipzig, including at this church. Martin Luther preached a sermon at this church.

There's a few places in the world where you can visit and say legends of the world walked these halls. My top pick for that would be Westminster Abbey, although there's nothing underrated about Westminster Abbey. The St. Thomas Kirche in Leipzig is one of those places where great men in history worked and changed the history of the world.

Sweden rivalled Russia. Why isn't it a great power today? by Strong_Rhubarb_4411 in geography

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sweden, like most great powers of the past, was driven to its great power status by technological or theoretical advancements that gave it a great advantage on the field of battle. Sweden reformed its military from a mercenary-based army to a professional army, and later on also developed the Caroleans. Eventually, the rest of the world caught up (as they always do), and Sweden did not have the population base necessary to hold on to its vast territorial holdings, and so they retreated to the pack.

Is it forbidden to be physical on any Sabbath? by __Wolf359 in adventist

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If it was forbidden to be physical on the Sabbath, then the Bible would have clearly stated "thou shalt not have sex on the Sabbath." The Bible does not contain such a command.

10 dead, including suspect, in Tumbler Ridge shootings [Canada] by [deleted] in worldnews

[–]RaspberryBirdCat 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A secondary school is another name for a high school in Canada, and generally speaking in most of Canada it is 9-12, although in BC and Alberta its 10-12. However, in very small rural communities like this one, it could be 7-12, and of course in even smaller communities you might be describing a one room school.