of all the posts, this is the one with the perma on it
good shit
It was the first one I saw ):
Reminds me of this WKUK sketch:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uyNJZ-2Dod4
Its okay to have no opinions on every issue.
Like there has to be a balance on moral issues. You can't just go all out on every moral issue, otherwise, you'll just suffer some existential crisis.
Example: 'Single use Plastic straws are terrible! But I also have plastic all over everything at home, I must remove all traces of plastic from my house!'
And it can lead to say the metals in phones being mined by kids from developing nations.
At this rate, you might as well live in the jungle and grow your own food.
Concealed carry in the united states should be reciprocal amongst states similar to a driver's license.
A return of the medieval bards would be most welcome in modern times, especially considering how problematic procrastination can be. Then again, i suppose learning their methods of motivation is similar to rediscovering Greek fire.
But we literally have tons of musicians. Technically the folks that for example play music at subways are modern bards.
True, though the bards were known for their power to motivate people. Considering such power, it's likely to assume that behind the most influential warlords of medieval Europe was a resourceful bard.
Twitter can be capable of toxic racism,whether it be from the Left or Right.
Its totally okay to live with your parents if you don't have enough money to rent or own your own place.
Provided its close to your school/workplace .
And unless your parents are really toxic.
The whole idea of needing to be independent in western culture means you must be away from your family is pretty dumb. It should be a luxury.
Me and my siblings are all adults in our 20s and the three of us still live with out mother. It's much more sustainable to pay her rent every week than to try to find an apartment in Dublin. There are people renting our beds for €800, not rooms, beds. Fuck that shit. I may only have a bed and a corner for my PC, but that's already twice as much space as a lot of people I met in college.
When everyone chips in we can afford the good internet and TV package. Well worth the hour and a half commute to college in the morning.
Open carrying of guns in the US is just a dumb rule. I know guns are already deeply rooted in US culture. But to have someone walking around with a gun? Why?
If a foreigner or tourist who's only idea of US gun culture is the news of gun violence/crime, they have a very likely chance they're gonna call the cops, thinking you might be a gunman/terrorist. And then, unnecessary panic, police drawing guns on you, and if they are more understanding, explaining the situation to both sides, or you getting arrested to make sure everything is fine.
Hell If I go over to the US and I see some guy open carrying I most probably am going to call the cops if it doesn't seem obvious enough to me.
I mean, you should probably know the culture (including the gun culture) of the place you're going to. Also, I'm sorta sure that most tourism-heavy states somewhat limit open carry (except states like Texas where you come for that).
Open carry is actually pretty restricted in a lot of states.
Besides Texas and most of the flyover states, you'll be hard pressed to find places where the conventional image of open carrying is allowed.
That being said, I don't think open carry of long guns is really necessary. Defensively speaking, it's a terrible idea, and it really only serves to alert people to your presence.
However, I am a firm believer in concealed carry and believe it should be a national system to remove the labyrinth of outdated reciprocal laws between states.
CC is such an elect thing unlike driver's licenses. If we really gotta have it I'd rather it be something figured out at the federal level.
That's more or less what I'm suggesting, since it would be challenging to orchestrate national reciprocity without federal intervention.
However, interstate commerce regulation and driver's licence reciprocity was handled completely at the state level, so it is possible.
I'd like to see a unified process where any citizen could apply, and should he/she be approved, receive a permit valid nationally.
This would still preserve state's rights to regulate magazine capacity and allowed ancillaries / attachments.
Like why though. It's not like criminals walk around with guns in holsters, the criminals hide it in the glove compartment/waistband. If someone has a gun on their hip in an actual holster I can almost guarantee you they have an open carry license. All that would happen if you call the cops on someone carrying is they would swing by, walk up to the guy, be like "Hey man you got a license?" "Yeah" "Ok then sorry to bother you we just got a call from some tourist and had to check it out."
The Pokemon Trainer himself should be a Smash Bros character, with punches/kicks for standard/strong/areal A button moves, with the actual pokemon taking the form of specials and smash attacks.
You know what, Fallout 4 is a trash game. I liked playing 3, 1, and New Vegas, but 4 is just a dumpster fire. I bought it and the DLC for $60 as one of the games to christen my new computer with, but I have barely enjoyed a minute of it and really don't feel like finishing it. Difficulty is screwing, you can be one shotting raiders with a 10mm pistol and then get nuked out of nowhere by some jerk in power armor who takes forever to kill. The story is boring and contrived, it's like a worse version of Fallout 3 with a less interesting setting to break down. Leveling takes forever and every upgrade is so minuscule there's hardly any perceptible growth as you level. The map is trash, the story urges you towards Diamond City, but all the lower level stuff is in your start area, and you'll end up woefully underprepared if you head straight south. And why the hell does this game take sometimes *minutes* to load the wasteland on an SSD? The settlement system is just dropped on your with minimal explanation and you have to either go through some woeful trial and error to find all the systems, or spend lots of time online reading just how the whole thing is supposed to work. And the UI is set up for a controller so it's tedious to go around a delete everything around you for resources, the ground isn't fall and so isn't condusive to the building mechanics. It's just a trainwreck. The only thing I feel it has going for it is it only crashed on me once. And from reading through the update history of this game, a lot of quality of life features weren't even present at launch.
I don't get how people enjoy this game, or how it even has an 84 on metacritic. It's bad, it's a bad RPG, it's a bad shooter. Bethesda Softworks needs to get their act together because the effort they put in for such an unpolished return is ridiculous.
Well shit, I really didn't need to read this while I'm questioning if I should keep replaying Fallout 4 or not
After spending some time in Fallout thread, while F4 is not exactly hot garbage, it's widely considered to be a poor game. So this doesn't feel to me as too unpopular of an opinion.
funko pop figures are fugly
Everyone says that dude
But everyone buys it
These new thread icons suck
When I first say the "Sad" icon for a second I thought the tears were eyes.
I think the ones that aren't faces are alright
the new icons are much more bearable if you use a dark theme
Acai bowls (those instagram looking fruit bowls) taste fuckin terrible
wait a minute did they change the thread icons again
because before there were like icons made in paint
but now they look like they were made in a decent drawing program,very nice
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