It must be exhausting always rooting for the antihero.
It must be exhausting always rooting for the antihero.
I thought it was guacamole at first, by that’s kind of primed by me making guacamole yesterday.
We drank the blood of some people, but the people were on drugs, and now I am a wizard.
Seen the Wu-Tang one in my neighborhood (small southern city).
Gay is in. Gay is hot. I want some gay. Gay it’s gonna be.
A vote for Bart is a vote for anarchy.
Bleeding head good, healed head bad!
Induction ranges are as good as gas, but they’re also new and expensive. Coil element ranges are not as good as gas, because they are slow to respond to changes.
You absolutely can get used to a coil range and do good cooking on them, but it’s disingenuous to say they’re as good as gas, and it hurts our argument for phasing out gas ranges to say that they are.
It’s impossible and probably not worthwhile to distinguish between Dead Internet caused by intentional destruction vs Dead Internet caused by click farming. The same system that would support intentional destruction is the one driving the click farming.
Absinthe is generally bottled at 120-140 proof (60-70% ethanol).
Land and houses aren’t private property unless you’re renting them out. If they aren’t a financial asset, they’re just personal property.
Businesses are an interesting question? The Federation, or at least its core worlds, doesn’t use money (by the 24th century). The only business we see onscreen, on a Federation core world, as far as I can remember, is Sisko’s Creole Kitchen. If there’s no money, why does Joseph Sisko run it? My guess is to maintain the tradition of Creole cuisine, to perfect his skills as a chef, to meet and interact with guests, and to preserve an historic New Orleans building by keeping it in use. Is it private property? Does he own it? He owns the business in some abstract sense, but the building? Probably not. I’d expect he holds it in trust in some kind of legal arrangement with the city, but there’s really no onscreen evidence.
Post to the #MastodonForHarris hashtag for the meta.
PSL candidates are on the ballot in my Republican state for the first time this year - via another (local) party.
I eat almost no processed food other than giving my kids breakfast cereal and lunch treats, and a grocery trip that I’m used to costing $80 costs $120, consistently, week over week. Maybe food prices aren’t continuing to skyrocket, but higher prices are locked in, and wages aren’t catching up.
The other thing is that I expect Biden to spend a lot of time and money campaigning in states that don’t matter to him electorally, as payment to his intra-party supporters. For example, South Carolina is solidly Republican and there is zero chance of Biden winning its electoral votes, but he will spend time campaigning there purely for the prestige it gives Jim Clyburn.
The main problems I see are that for Biden to win, he needs not just the core “Blue No Matter Who” vote, but a broader coalition. In 2020, that included young people, and politically unaware people who were upset about COVID. In 2024, he’s doing everything possible to alienate the youth (via support for genocide, and violence against protesters), and the politically unaware people are upset about the economy. Trump isn’t any more popular than he was in 2020, this is entirely an own goal on the Biden campaign’s part.
All Constables Are Boneless
Comics-accurate Wolverine.