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Is This Food Stealing Your Sight? (Watch This Before Dinner!)

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Optic Inside)
Thu Dec 11 05:06:32 2025

Date: Thu, 11 Dec 2025 04:05:27 -0600
From: "Optic Inside" <EyeHealth@nukelyt.space>
Reply-To: "Vision Guard" <EyeHealth@nukelyt.space>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>

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Is This Food Stealing Your Sight? (Watch This Before Dinner!)

http://nukelyt.space/5MResyZsTBAzskBPLktyPoDglXP5FgUdXC-BW1Lc6UfhINIIqA
 
http://nukelyt.space/I8cfNJXhCwbwL3I7HbyiUxxlGrBYigP-cGD_7yoEujrayWk8Dw

mally, a temperate glacier is at a melting point throughout the year, from its surface to its base. The ice of a polar glacier is always below the freezing threshold from the surface to its base, although the surface snowpack may experience seasonal melting. A subpolar glacier includes both temperate and polar ice, depending on the depth beneath the surface and position along the length of the glacier. In a similar way, the thermal regime of a glacier is often described by its basal temperature. A cold-based glacier is below freezing at the ice-ground interface and is thus frozen to the underlying substrate. A warm-based glacier is above or at freezing at the interface and is able to slide at this contact. This contrast is thought to a large extent to govern the ability of a glacier to effectively erode its bed, as sliding ice promotes plucking at rock from the surface below. Glaciers which are partly cold-based and partly warm-based are known as polythermal.
Formation
A glacier cave located on the Perito Moreno Glacier in Argentina
Glaciers form where the accumulation of snow and ice exceeds ablation. A glacier usually originates from a cirque landform (alternatively known as a corrie or as a cwm) - a typically armchair-shaped geological feature (such as a depression between mountains enclosed by arêtes) - which collects and compresses through gravity the snow that falls into it. This snow accumulates and refreezes, turning into névé (granular snow). Further crushing of the individual snowflakes and expelling the air from the snow turns it into firn and eventually "glacial ice". This glacial ice will fill the cirque until it "overflows" through a geological weakness or vacancy from the edge of the cirque called the "lip" or threshold. When the mass of snow and ice reaches sufficient thickness, it begins to move by a com

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<div style="padding:10px;width:602px;font-family:Arial;font-size:18px;text-align:left;"><a href="http://nukelyt.space/lcoZQQ9KbC1qBrA1kIPX2KebMEPAM0lgSgvOt07ydo07553Viw"><img src="http://nukelyt.space/8bd047d14b4b5cb918.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.nukelyt.space/Hi5wMPU-BGBIYmTenllwkCBDuPAah8P0o8cs9e3G21W5KwKzfg" width="1" /></a><br />
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Do you ever notice your <b>vision getting blurrier</b> with age, harder to read texts, road signs, or enjoy your favourite shows?<br />
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A pharmacist recently revealed a <a href="http://nukelyt.space/5MResyZsTBAzskBPLktyPoDglXP5FgUdXC-BW1Lc6UfhINIIqA" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="_blank"><b>simple daily ritual</b></a> that works from the inside out.<br />
<br />
You don&#39;t have to give up pizza, burgers, or donuts to <b>support your eyesight.</b><br />
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<b>This short video</b> explains how it works and why so many people are trying it.<br />
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<a href="http://nukelyt.space/5MResyZsTBAzskBPLktyPoDglXP5FgUdXC-BW1Lc6UfhINIIqA" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="_blank"><img alt="" http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://nukelyt.space/7c9374b99a85850696.png" /></a><br />
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Imagine seeing more clearly when driving, reading messages without squinting, and <b>enjoying TV without straining your eyes.</b><br />
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Take a minute to see<b> the discovery </b>here, it might make a big difference.<br />
&nbsp;
<center><a href="http://nukelyt.space/5MResyZsTBAzskBPLktyPoDglXP5FgUdXC-BW1Lc6UfhINIIqA" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="_blank"><b>See The Video</b></a></center>
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<span style="color:#FFFFFF; font-size:10px;">mally, a temperate glacier is at a melting point throughout the year, from its surface to its base. The ice of a polar glacier is always below the freezing threshold from the surface to its base, although the surface snowpack may experience seasonal melting. A subpolar glacier includes both temperate and polar ice, depending on the depth beneath the surface and position along the length of the glacier. In a similar way, the thermal regime of a glacier is often described by its basal temperature. A cold-based glacier is below freezing at the ice-ground interface and is thus frozen to the underlying substrate. A warm-based glacier is above or at freezing at the interface and is able to slide at this contact. This contrast is thought to a large extent to govern the ability of a glacier to effectively erode its bed, as sliding ice promotes plucking at rock from the surface below. Glaciers which are partly cold-based and partly warm-based are known as polythermal.</span> <span style="color:#FFFFFF; font-size:10px;">Formation A glacier cave located on the Perito Moreno Glacier in Argentina Glaciers form where the accumulation of snow and ice exceeds ablation. A glacier usually originates from a cirque landform (alternatively known as a corrie or as a cwm) - a typically armchair-shaped geological feature (such as a depression between mountains enclosed by ar&ecirc;tes) - which collects and compresses through gravity the snow that falls into it. This snow accumulates and refreezes, turning into n&eacute;v&eacute; (granular snow). Further crushing of the individual snowflakes and expelling the air from the snow turns it into firn and eventually &quot;glacial ice&quot;. This glacial ice will fill the cirque until it &quot;overflows&quot; through a geological weakness or vacancy from the edge of the cirque called the &quot;lip&quot; or threshold. When the mass of snow and ice reaches sufficient thickness, it begins to move by a com</span><br />
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<a href="http://nukelyt.space/f4UUwtYz8rUHex-6gMyyjsJUSsu4XeikLLXlgfFo-l77BhsJzg" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><img alt=" " http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://nukelyt.space/e19a2943359c50a05b.jpg" /></a></div>
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