The tweet wasn’t easily available on nitter (it wasn’t being highlighted).
The tweet wasn’t easily available on nitter (it wasn’t being highlighted).
It just so happened to be the canonical source for this piece of information. And it wasn’t being run by an antisemite at the time the linked tweet was being written.
Exactly. The good kind of failure.
Hyperloop was always a project to sabotage high-speed rail. Good thing it failed.
I alternate
I have a dad joke, but it’s yo momma.
weekend = day_of_week in (“sat”, “sun”)
As a bonus this completely sidesteps the issue of what day is 0 or 1.
Yeah, hobbit-serial architectures lack performance.
So the Fellowship of the Ring was made up of an elf, a dwarf, two humans, a maia and one hobnibble?
Apparently this is what makes someone turn neutral.
Hey, at least the number of fingers on the visible hand check out.
I liked the concepts in Sword and Mercy though. The various species and their oddities and taboos, the technology, the characters. It’s just that somehow you can feel that Leckie didn’t have as much of a clear goal in mind where the story was going.
I’ve read them too. I thoroughly enjoyed Justice, but had trouble finishing Mercy because it just failed to engage me.
Nah, must’ve been thing
Day can be seen holding the prime radiant as they leave the vault.
I think we haven’t seen the last of the castling device. Consider the following:
I think the last episode is going to reveal that it all indeed was a trap, and that a lot of Foundationers have castled aboard Shining Destiny, stranding part of Bel Riose’s crew on Invictus and the planet’s surface right before both are annihilated. Hober Mallow ends up stabbing Day, thus piercing his hide and requiring Demerzel to decant a new clone Cleon.
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One thing about the pre-Internet times I don’t hear much about is how much more centralised our media were and how, as a result, people or ideas on the fringe of society didn’t get much attention. That includes for instance how the strange ideas about vaccines or ethnic groups now spread much easier than they did before the Internet, but also how trans* people and other marginalised groups find it much easier to find and support each other and be a united front against oppression.
In summary, I don’t thing that what has been termed “the great awokening”, nor the organised opposition against it, could have taken place before the Internet. At least not at this scale.