"What are these aluminum cans for? I work in a recycle facility and we recently got hundreds of these unlabeled aluminum cans. They are 5.5” tall and 2” wide, with a push on top."
A: "Coronavirus test kit component, mostly used for pipette tip disposal. Could be a biohazard, and I definately wouldn’t be holding that with your bare hand, but I’m also doubtful a lab handling biohazards would be so careless as to recycle them. Probably these were from expired kits."
and that's whyMarie Curie has 6 feet of concrete over her coffin.
Keep on Keepin' on....
Even your average household cleaners can be very dangerous, especially if old, decayed, or mixed with other cleaners. We used to unknowingly use a lot of deadly materials (like asbestos) in every day things, and there are plenty of remnants laying around. Even today’s “safer” household cleaners, pesticides, weed killers, vermin poisons, etc contain chemicals that can be easily be deadly. Ingesting, smelling, getting fumes in your eyes, or touching unknown substances like this is just plain dangerous. It’s basic safety and common sense.
lol, some things you can taste exactly once. Wouldn't lick something i find in an old plastic bag in a house I just moved to
luckily for us the problem with your existence will solve itself soon.
Does it depress anyone else that people like Mack think like this? I get "to each their own" but holy hell you're on a whole new level... I really hope you dont reproduce...
are you taking students on your advanced idiocy class ?
You're right, thank you.
#17 Looks like part of a crimping tool used to attach lugs to wires.