You know what's funny? I mentioned going down to Save On Meats to get a sandwich and you didn't even know that it had closed permanently during the pandemic. You were telling stories like you were from there and you were lying. You've probably never even been there. I have. I've walked those streets. My cousin works those streets. You're afraid of outrageous stories you've read online, probably in the extreme right wing echo chamber. How utterly fucking pathetic
Selfish entitlement. That's how it came about. What if one of those children they infected dies? Then what? Oh, it was just inflation? It's worth it for my freedumb? A small price to pay?
Parents of children who attended the original daycares that shared a kitchen ignored public health instructions and put their children in other daycares before they tested negative and remained symptom free.
"Any involvement of a foreign government in the killing of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil is an unacceptable violation of our sovereignty. It is contrary to the fundamental rules by which free, open, and democratic societies conduct themselves," Trudeau said.
Had you read, and more importantly understood, the two links I posted you could have answered your own question.
You asked whether gravity was a law or a theory.
Gravity is neither a law nor a theory. Gravity is a fundamental reaction that causes any object with mass to be attracted to any other object with mass.
The law of gravity is a formula used to predict the effect of gravity.
The theory of gravity is our collected knowledge on the subject of gravity and includes the law of gravity.
So, the law of gravity is one small element of the theory of gravity.
That is a complete and correct answer to your question.
Now, unless you have a clear understanding of the difference between the idea of a theory in common parlance and the idea of a theory in science and how a law in science relates to a theory in science (which you would have if you had read and understood the two links I provided) you're not going to understand this, despite my explaining it a third time, and you're going to continue to argue with me instead of saying, "Oh! I get it now. Yes, I was wrong. Sorry, and thanks for the explanation."
What's most distressing about this is the fact that these new daycares that don't share the same central kitchen are having infections because parents from the ones that do ignored public health orders and put their kids in other daycares before the test results came back to show that they were infected.
So these entitled assholes have infected other peoples children.
I love the confidence with which you're wrong and it's clear that you're trying very hard to sound smart but while I can explain this to you, and have more than once, I can't understand it for you.
"The biggest difference between a law and a theory is that a theory is much more complex and dynamic. A law describes a single action, whereas a theory explains an entire group of related phenomena. And, whereas a law is a postulate that forms the foundation of the scientific method, a theory is the end result of that same process."
A theory is a well-substantiated explanation of an aspect of the natural world that can incorporate laws, hypotheses and facts. The theory of gravitation, for instance, explains why apples fall from trees and astronauts float in space. Similarly, the theory of evolution explains why so many plants and animals—some very similar and some very different—exist on Earth now and in the past, as revealed by the fossil record.
Don't forget the tracking chips. We all carry tracking devices with us anyway. I'm typing this on mine.
I used the, "They wouldn't want to kill the sheeple" argument a few times. Their brains went into shutdown and they couldn't answer.
Another conversation ender is, "I put on the mask months before the mandates because it was the right thing to do and kept it on for months after the mandates because it was the right thing to do. You put the mask on when you were told to and took it off when you were given permission and you call me a sheep?"
As Canadian citizens that have a Section 6 right to return to Canada. You know, the same Section 6 right that the fucking tantrumists thought was being taken away because no country would take them during the pandemic because they weren't vaccinated
I'm not even slightly angry. I'm quite happy, actually. I just landed in Vancouver.