Leave Wash Dc (in ref. to the below article)..................u idiots continue to ask me how i am doing? Are u that stupid.? U did see me loose consciousness in the nw new jersey ave library did u not? And if u think i am delaying this on purpose somehow u are wrong.........i want out of the USA................Adrianna can look me up when she is 18, if she wants to, and if i am still alive...................as u have given an illegal immigrant full custody..........the same woman who married me for a piece of paper and is a prostitute, and everyone knows.............and no one does shit but watch........i can tell by the stares i get on the DC metro or the number of visitors to the nat. history museum.............and i am pressing charges against everyone.............but as blacks can get away with anything..................the same with women........
Science finds the best place to hide from zombies
When the undead threaten to turn your cerebrum to caviar, where do you run? A new study confirms what you might already suspect, and even offers a specific destination.
Farmhouses, fenced-in compounds, even the thick concrete of a penitentiary. Post-apocalyptic zombie fiction has taught us that these are good options for hiding out to protect your delicious brains from the undead, but eventually the zombies typically overrun the walls.
Fortunately, science has now provided a better long-term strategy for surviving the walking dead: Head for the hills. Specifically, you should probably get familiar now with the general location of Glacier National Park so that when it all goes down, you can start heading in that direction.
A team of researchers at Cornell University was inspired by the book "World War Z"by Max Brooks, as well as by a statistical-mechanics class, to model how an actual zombie outbreak might unfold. They will present their findings, meant to be an overview of modern epidemiology modeling, at a meeting of the American Physical Society on Thursday in San Antonio, Texas.
"Modeling zombies takes you through a lot of the techniques used to model real diseases, albeit in a fun context," Cornell graduate student Alex Alemi said in a release.
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