It's not. You can get on a boat and sail down there whenever you want.
Oh, sir. If you think I'm a big dumb-dumb for posting what I do, you could at least look into how going there works. You aren't allowed anywhere close to Antarctica as a private citizen or research team without a mountain of paperwork, fees, etc..and even then? You only get to go in a pre-designated area nooooowhere near the "south pole". There is
zero independent investigation or research going on, because they aren't allowed to do so properly.
If you decided to sail down there without going through proper channels? You'd get visited by any given nation's armed forces in a hurry and turned around. If you didn't, then they
will sink you and leave you for dead. Kinda funny how all these nations which would otherwise fight tooth and nail over land and resources suddenly all got together to cooperate for a supposedly resource-rich continent*, don't you think?
Do note: the same basic process is involved for
either pole. If you want to just ditch the no-no topic that ruffles so many feathers here (I'm not bringing it up directly cause lmao holy shit), then
at least perhaps wonder to yourself why the
North pole is also so off limits.
*See various footage of Captain Cook expeditions/interviews for references and some very, very interesting descriptions of the place.
I think department stores and workplaces use 5000k “blue/cool tone” lighting in order to manipulate people into shopping longer/buying more things in stores and producing more/working longer hours at their workplace.
5000k lighting causes increased wakefulness and can disrupt your circadian rhythm because it hinders your ability to produce melatonin. I’ve read that in places like China the lighting is even more damaging at 6000-7000+kelvin.
Interesting take on it. I've known about color temps and how they affect the mind (let alone how damaging they can be to one's eyes over time) for a good long while now, but never heard the intent behind it explained as such. Could be it?