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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • Cranakis @lemmy.onetoMemes@lemmy.mlcreator trolly
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    1 year ago

    The religious blame the bad things on Satan, not God. Pretty convenient. God gets all of the credit an none of the blame. It’s delusional.

    Also, what rational argument suggests there is eternal pain and suffering? Some old Mediterranean folk lore twisted through time, with more Faust and Inferno (Dante) than scripture in the current belief? I don’t see any reason to rationally believe there is eternal pain and suffering.


  • Cranakis @lemmy.onetoMemes@lemmy.mlcreator trolly
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    1 year ago

    The simple obvious answer is that there is no God. If there is, I want no part of an afterlife with him.

    “God is so moral that he doesn’t need earthly morals” is an absolutely laughable justification. May God strike me dead before I click the “reply” button, if I’m wrong.



  • You don’t have to prune at all but it is a useful control technique. Each new sucker that grows will create a new growing tip. That tip will continue to grow in that direction and any new suckers from it later will become their own vines, and so on.

    If the tomato is an indeterminate variety, pruning is more important because the plant will tend to out grow the pot if you don’t.

    You can stop any tip by pinching off the last bit of growth and it won’t affect the fruit behind it. Just leave at least one leaf branch above and below where flowers/fruit will set.

    Pruning will speed up fruit development also, useful for end of season frost concerns.

    If, however, you see “determinate” in the variety description or on the seed packet, don’t prune it at all. Determinate varieties stop at a certain size on their own.