this post was submitted on 18 Aug 2023
270 points (97.9% liked)

internet funeral

6894 readers
2 users here now

ㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤart of the internet

What is this place?

!hmmm@lemmy.world with text and titles

• post obscure and surreal art with text

• nothing memetic, nothing boring

• unique textural art images

• Post only images or gifs (except for meta posts)

Guidlines

• no video posts are allowed

• No memes. Not even surreal ones. Post your memes on !surrealmemes@sh.itjust.works instead

• If your submission can be posted to !hmmm@lemmy.world (I.e. no text images), It should be posted there instead

This is a curated magazine. Post anything and everything. It will either stay up or be lost into the void.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] funnystuff97@lemmy.world 20 points 1 year ago (4 children)
[–] j4yt33@feddit.de 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Water pressure crushes a submersible's hull but not his body when he exits the sub. Makes sense

[–] mindbleach@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You could finger-gun this guy in the back of the head and he'd still go nuh-uh, you didn't get me, I teleported.

Dude is just fully incapable of imagining a situation where he's fucked. He's the protagonist of reality. Legitimately thinks he could fall off a skyscraper and land on his feet. Which is a million times less ridiculous than this submarine, where incomprehensible pressures forced the interior contents to the size of a gumball in a matter of microseconds.

Every human being in that tin can briefly occupied the same cubic inch. You can't shrug that off. Not even a blue whale is "built different" enough to survive those pressures, let alone the force of having those pressures applied all-at-once. Especially when pV=nRT, meaning the air temperature inside the cabin - and inside its former occupants - was raised several thousand degrees. Not for long, though. That glowing-hot paste of organic matter was immediately slapped against a wall of ice-cold seawater, sluicing it through cracks in the opposite end of the wreckage, leaving a small cloudy region surrounded by pitch darkness.

To which that guy would say, "I'd have dodged."

[–] nawapad@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 1 year ago

So called skill issue

All available evidence suggests I survive everything.

[–] mindbleach@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

That dude's personal fable is a straight-up Damien Hirst title.