Daily Green Fact
Oxygen-starved dead zones that cannot sustain life now cover an area roughly the size of the state of Oregon. Spanish researchers also recently found that many species die off at oxygen levels well above what is now considered uninhabitable, suggesting that the extent of dead zones in coastal areas is greater than previously known. Dead zones are caused by excess nitrogen from farm fertilizers, factory and vehicle emissions, sewage and other pollution runoff.
Well I'll tell ya this Riv, even though I'm perma-ignored...
You can call me every name in the book and mock me at every turn and do your cold shoulder routine all you want, I still like you.
It's why all of the mocking is so successful, because I don't hate you.
This is such a big clusterfvck because if you knew me IRL you'd 'get' my weird humor and it wouldn't be such a big deal.
Oh well.