It was popularised by cooks from India living in Great Britain, but I don't believe that makes it any less Indian. Just as the chimichanga wasn't invented in Mexico, but is still considered Mexican food.
I was looking for this recommendation and would have made it myself if I didn't find yours. My therapist specifically recommended it as a natural antidepressant. Honestly, it hasn't worked well for me as my body seems to rebel against any antidepressant attempt; however I'm shocked to see this so heavily downvoted.
There is no perfect vacuum, even in deep space. In the space of our Solar System, there is on average 5 atoms in every cubic centimeter. In interstellar space, there is on average 1 atom every cubic centimeter. In intergalactic space, there is on average 1 atom every 100 cubic centimeters. It's a gradient, but much like the perfectly straight lines and flat planes in the original question, perfect vacuum is a theoretical construct that is impossible to achieve in our reality.
I've been seeing a lot more comments removed by mods lately, especially on news@lemmy.world. These don't appear to be harassing comments either, just something the mod disagrees with and wants to silence. Unfortunately, I'm not sure how to see which mod is the one on a power trip though the Voyager app.
Is that really all you said in your original comment? Mods are getting worse than Reddit around here. I can't believe they removed that just because they didn't agree.
I don't think reality is that black and white. I doubt the vast majority of ladies working in the red-light districts even consider themselves "prostitutes." Many are waitresses, bar girls, and masseuses. Technically, prostitution is illegal in Thailand. If the relationship you describe is truly just a business transaction, it seems to be in the same venn-diagram circle as "prostitution."
It's the worlds oldest profession and these ladies can make more than engineers in their country. I don't believe calling them desperately poor is fair.
It was popularised by cooks from India living in Great Britain, but I don't believe that makes it any less Indian. Just as the chimichanga wasn't invented in Mexico, but is still considered Mexican food.