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Alexander Isak


Anorthernsoul
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14 hours ago, Howey said:

£150m would be daylight robbery if we get it. Unpopular opinion- just a fact 

An opinion is not a fact, for some people it can come across as a bit complex.

 

A fact is something that’s true no matter how anyone feels about it. For example: Water boils at 100°C. 

 

An opinion, on the other hand, is when someone feels a certain way about something, regardless of whether it’s true or not. Like: “Isak is not worth £150m.” That’s not a universal truth—it’s just someone emotionally reacting.

 

So, to put it simply:

 

Facts don’t care about your feelings.

 

Opinions are your feelings.

Edited by GrahamTaylor5
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14 hours ago, Alex said:

Imagine being thick enough to actually argue your opinion is a fact :lol: 


Unlike a Scouser to portray opinion as fact. Oh, wait.

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1 hour ago, Howey said:

Im far from clever Alex. Far from it. 

 

But I don't pretend to be. Your desperation to appear as some authority figure on an internet forum illustrates a certain lack of actual character in the real world no doubt.

 

Your day is made if someone applies an emoji to a comment you have typed. You dont even need to get dressed in the morning to achieve your aims.

Paradoxically, despite your daily achievements, you are always angry and on edge? Spitting vitriol at faceless strangers, who, lets face it, have a huge affect on your mood. You will, of course, rush to deny it, laugh it off among the faceless comrades. But when you put your phone down or switch the lap top off, you just cant shake that frustration and anger. So you pick it up again and the cycle repeats.

 

Im here for you Alex- just reach out if you need to

Bored Disinterest GIF

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3 hours ago, Alex said:

Probably educated enough to know it’s ‘per se’ I.e. in itself, rather than ‘per say’, which makes no sense. But I suppose you’d also have to be educated enough to have seen it written down, as opposed to repeating it parrot fashion to know that. A bit like how you’d need a bit of knowledge to not keep repeating the mistake of using the word ‘giphs’ because you would know it was gifs, ie graphic interchange format. Rather than just being aware of the GIPHY website. A knowledgeable person probably wouldn’t refer to a perfectly comprehensible post as ‘elvish’ either. Although I suspect that is in large part due to the reference to ‘Arabs’ by HMHM. Because that would require your being aware of football clubs (and their supporters) outwith the Premier League. 
But don’t let any of that stop you from demonstrating, one post at a time, that you’re light years away from being as clever as you seem to think you are. 

Well, I have to admit that I would have had it as "per say' as I have never seen it written down. Makes a lot more sense. Got to love the side quests of knowledge that I get on here.

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52 minutes ago, GrahamTaylor5 said:

 

A fact is something that’s true no matter how anyone feels about it. For example: Water boils at 100°C. 

 

Hate to tell you mate but that's not correct. Water boils at a lower temperature at altitude.

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7 minutes ago, AgentAxeman said:

Hate to tell you mate but that's not correct. Water boils at a lower temperature at altitude.

I did know that water boils at different points. Is it at 100 at sea level? I think it was an acceptable example.

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1 minute ago, GrahamTaylor5 said:

I did know that water boils at different points. Is it at 100 at sea level? I think it was an acceptable example.

It’s approximately 100c at standard atmospheric pressure (that’s what makes the difference - atmospheric pressure). But at sea level it will usually be at roughly standard atmospheric pressure so that’s usually the guide. Even with low pressure at sea level the impact on the boiling point is minimal I think. Altitude usually makes a much greater difference to atmospheric pressure, so it would boil at something like 70c if you were so inclined as to try and boil water on the summit of Everest. The distinction is made however because atmospheric pressure is the real reason for differences (not altitude) because you could be in a 747, flying at 10,000 metres, but it would boil at approx 100c because the pressurised cabin would be roughly standard atmospheric pressure. 
I know that was very boring but still not as tedious as this transfer window 

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2 minutes ago, Alex said:

It’s approximately 100c at standard atmospheric pressure (that’s what makes the difference - atmospheric pressure). But at sea level it will usually be at roughly standard atmospheric pressure so that’s usually the guide. Even with low pressure at sea level the impact on the boiling point is minimal I think. Altitude usually makes a much greater difference to atmospheric pressure, so it would boil at something like 70c if you were so inclined as to try and boil water on the summit of Everest. The distinction is made however because atmospheric pressure is the real reason for differences (not altitude) because you could be in a 747, flying at 10,000 metres, but it would boil at approx 100c because the pressurised cabin would be roughly standard atmospheric pressure. 
I know that was very boring but still not as tedious as this transfer window 

Saucepan Cooking GIF

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6 minutes ago, Alex said:

It’s approximately 100c at standard atmospheric pressure (that’s what makes the difference - atmospheric pressure). But at sea level it will usually be at roughly standard atmospheric pressure so that’s usually the guide. Even with low pressure at sea level the impact on the boiling point is minimal I think. Altitude usually makes a much greater difference to atmospheric pressure, so it would boil at something like 70c if you were so inclined as to try and boil water on the summit of Everest. The distinction is made however because atmospheric pressure is the real reason for differences (not altitude) because you could be in a 747, flying at 10,000 metres, but it would boil at approx 100c because the pressurised cabin would be roughly standard atmospheric pressure. 
I know that was very boring but still not as tedious as this transfer window 

 

What does it boil at per say?

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2 hours ago, Alex said:

It’s ‘effect’ 👍🏻

Have a laughing reaction to help you feel validated. Just don’t tell me you’re still in your underwear as I’ll have to promptly rescind it. :lol:

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1 hour ago, GrahamTaylor5 said:

An opinion is not a fact, for some people it can come across as a bit complex.

 

A fact is something that’s true no matter how anyone feels about it. For example: Water boils at 100°C. 

 

An opinion, on the other hand, is when someone feels a certain way about something, regardless of whether it’s true or not. Like: “Isak is not worth £150m.” That’s not a universal truth—it’s just someone emotionally reacting.

 

So, to put it simply:

 

Facts don’t care about your feelings.

 

Opinions are your feelings.

 

Is saying that this mackem Howie is a cunt a fact or an opinion? I'm erring on the former.

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6 minutes ago, Howmanheyman said:

Can one of the mods change @Howey's username to Percy but spelled 'Persay' please? :good:

 

Even got his own brand of confectionery.

 

Screenshot_20250808_115713_Google.thumb.jpg.4147db1cff9a573cbe590de3a9011c77.jpg

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17 minutes ago, Alex said:

It’s approximately 100c at standard atmospheric pressure (that’s what makes the difference - atmospheric pressure). But at sea level it will usually be at roughly standard atmospheric pressure so that’s usually the guide. Even with low pressure at sea level the impact on the boiling point is minimal I think. Altitude usually makes a much greater difference to atmospheric pressure, so it would boil at something like 70c if you were so inclined as to try and boil water on the summit of Everest. The distinction is made however because atmospheric pressure is the real reason for differences (not altitude) because you could be in a 747, flying at 10,000 metres, but it would boil at approx 100c because the pressurised cabin would be roughly standard atmospheric pressure. 
I know that was very boring but still not as tedious as this transfer window 

I mean that's all clearly bollocks. If you only opened your mind and didn't blindly follow what you been taught  you'd see that there's only one logical explanation: Denpressure.

 

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3 minutes ago, The Fish said:

I mean that's all clearly bollocks. If you only opened your mind and didn't blindly follow what you been taught  you'd see that there's only one logical explanation: Denpressure.

 

I forgot all about Wolfy :lol: was it Rayvin or maybe Andrew who found him on some flat earth forum where even they found his ideas outlandish? 

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8 minutes ago, Alex said:

I forgot all about Wolfy :lol: was it Rayvin or maybe Andrew who found him on some flat earth forum where even they found his ideas outlandish? 

 

It was me. This horrible site called Cluesforum where they literally believed all news was a conspiracy. Believe it or not Wolfy was too sane for them.

Denpressure was amusing. When you broke it down, he was just describing .... pressure.

 

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On 07/08/2025 at 12:11, Howey said:

I wouldn't be blaming Liverpool for our utter ineptitude in this window.    


Perhaps he's not a WUM, perhaps he's just a thick cunt who missed the 'y' off a word. :dunno:

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