Search results for "714b85f43380057c98cb9c366b14eb1e" in md5 (3)

/pol/ - Thread 514817904
Anonymous United States No.514820337
>>514820059
>70% are at least overweight? That's ridiculous
Rephrase it,

>30% of women are thin
Thats totally believable.


Weve become desensitized to fat bodies
/pol/ - Thread 514210120
Anonymous United States No.514210794
>>514210120
>>514210271
>>514210402
>>514210512
Oh shit its actually MORE:

To evaluate the statement, we need to look at the birth rates in India and Canada.

### Birth Rates
- **India**: As of recent estimates, India has a birth rate of approximately **18.2 births per 1,000 people** per year.
- **Canada**: Canada has a birth rate of about **10.2 births per 1,000 people** per year.

### Population Estimates
- **India's Population**: Approximately **1.4 billion** (1,400 million).
- **Canada's Population**: Approximately **38 million**.

### Calculating Annual Births
1. **India**:
- Annual births = Population × Birth rate
- Annual births in India = 1,400,000,000 × (18.2 / 1,000) ≈ **25.48 million** births per year.

2. **Canada**:
- Annual births in Canada = 38,000,000 × (10.2 / 1,000) ≈ **387,600** births per year.

### Comparing Births
Now, let's see how many children India produces in 6 days:
- Daily births in India = 25,480,000 / 365 ≈ **69,800** births per day.
- In 6 days, India produces ≈ 69,800 × 6 ≈ **418,800** births.

### Conclusion
In comparison, Canada produces about **387,600** births in a year. Therefore, the statement that "every 6 days, India produces as many children as all of Canada does in a year" is **not true**. In fact, India produces significantly more children in just 6 days than Canada does in an entire year.
/pol/ - Thread 514038124
Anonymous United States No.514038568
>>514038473
>>514038487
We literally just wrote the same exact post... are we the NPCs?