It’s guns all the way down.
It’s guns all the way down.
Technically, what he’s doing is election fraud.
Satan Sauron is a baby that lives in the sun.
You say that as though he isn’t one of them.
They did a fantastic score for the Watchmen tv series as well.
Indeed, friend citizen. Would you like some Bouncy Bubble Beverage?
Not even land borders. It’s missing France-Brazil, UK-Spain, and France-Netherlands at the very least.
The iron content in beaver teeth is concentrated at the front surface so that they are self-sharpening as they wear down.
It seems like you’re making some assumptions about what he did or did not do with the chocolate.
Well, not always: Plural ‘they’ is a borrowing from Old Norse ca. 1200 AD, and the earliest attestation of singular ‘they’ is about a century later.
But, yeah, you’d think 700 years of continuous use would be enough to make it uncontroversial…
I’ve been having a good time with Heart of the Machine, in which you play as a nascent AI figuring out how to survive in a sprawling cyberpunk city.
Hmm. I wonder what the nature of Owlcat’s relationship with GW is? Was the recent Rogue Trader game part of an ongoing licensing deal or just a one-off?
Pfft, catapults. A trebuchet can launch a 90kg advertisement over 300 meters.
The sound of scientific discovery is less often “Eureka!” than “Huh, that’s funny…”
He did specify a large 3D printer. So it might be 2 or even 3 feet in length.
It’s amazing how often things are similar to what they are.
First I misread the headline as “transgender cows” and then you’re in the comments talking about straight people insulin.
I think it’s time for bed.
Jojo Rabbit featured Jewish Maori Hitler and was very well received.
Oil is corrosive? Doesn’t it usually prevent steel from rusting?
“On two occasions I have been asked, – “Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?” … I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question.”
—Charles Babbage, on his analytical engine, 1864