Vinyl chloride isn’t a bleach and isn’t used for cleaning of any sort. So it’s a poor metaphor if that’s the case, and I hope they find a new and better one.
Not saying there isn’t dioxin or that it isn’t a permanent pollutant, just that the metaphor is an extreme stretch, just because chlorine is in the manufacturing process, doesn’t make it something you’d use as bleach or as a cleaner.
You are correct. It's a terrible metaphor and that's why they picked it. It works for [them], but the normies only see unbelievable piles of poison, and start to panic. This allows for a flurry of follow up messages like the one contained in the tweet above. I don't know what it says to [them] but there's an awful lotta 9999s in there. Those sorta numbers make sense for prices, but not for pounds.
It does when it’s talking about certifications for weights of material being stored or produced. That’s how those weight limits are written and enforced. “9,999,999” if it’s for instance up to 10 million pounds. Literally means up to but not including in some industries, which is why there are so many 9’s. Not arguing the overall point but those 9’s do make sense for weights.
Ok. It's a poor way of counting (what about 9,999.1 pounds?) but seems plausible for it to be worded that way.
I still suspect the tweet is a message. Possibly just to push the hashtag #VinylChloride for certain conversations concerning the number 99 and Tom Brady's number 12. Hopefully some good will come of it.
Technical matters by their nature have potential to be, and almost always are confusing to those who are not in that industry. You can have 9,999.9999999999999 repeating forever and it would be fine, until it hits 10, then it’s not, this makes the rules very clear, everything up to that 10. I only get upset when social media posters weaponize peoples confusion of technical matters and warp negative headlines around them, knowing it will generate clicks and attention. By all means continue digging as you are, but do so well informed on what’s truly nefarious and what’s just confusing industry numbers and jargon.
Vinyl chloride isn’t a bleach and isn’t used for cleaning of any sort. So it’s a poor metaphor if that’s the case, and I hope they find a new and better one.
Not saying there isn’t dioxin or that it isn’t a permanent pollutant, just that the metaphor is an extreme stretch, just because chlorine is in the manufacturing process, doesn’t make it something you’d use as bleach or as a cleaner.
You are correct. It's a terrible metaphor and that's why they picked it. It works for [them], but the normies only see unbelievable piles of poison, and start to panic. This allows for a flurry of follow up messages like the one contained in the tweet above. I don't know what it says to [them] but there's an awful lotta 9999s in there. Those sorta numbers make sense for prices, but not for pounds.
It does when it’s talking about certifications for weights of material being stored or produced. That’s how those weight limits are written and enforced. “9,999,999” if it’s for instance up to 10 million pounds. Literally means up to but not including in some industries, which is why there are so many 9’s. Not arguing the overall point but those 9’s do make sense for weights.
Ok. It's a poor way of counting (what about 9,999.1 pounds?) but seems plausible for it to be worded that way.
I still suspect the tweet is a message. Possibly just to push the hashtag #VinylChloride for certain conversations concerning the number 99 and Tom Brady's number 12. Hopefully some good will come of it.
Technical matters by their nature have potential to be, and almost always are confusing to those who are not in that industry. You can have 9,999.9999999999999 repeating forever and it would be fine, until it hits 10, then it’s not, this makes the rules very clear, everything up to that 10. I only get upset when social media posters weaponize peoples confusion of technical matters and warp negative headlines around them, knowing it will generate clicks and attention. By all means continue digging as you are, but do so well informed on what’s truly nefarious and what’s just confusing industry numbers and jargon.