Chef's kiss!
This is just a recycled George Carlin bit.
It's been a few years, but last time I was there, (some) bars in Berlin still has large smoking sections.
Yeah, picking up useful skills is a good one, no matter what happens. I've started gardening a bit, but most of my time is still taken up working what in the end is still a non essential bullshit job (when though I enjoy it most of the time). That need, that trap is what keeps all of the rest going. But I agree, we do what we can to minimize our impact and maybe Even have some positive influence.
This is a bit more political/ideological than my own thinking in this general direction, but on the whole I agree. I often think "why do you all want to own so much junk?" I've been getting more and more anti consumerist over the years, and it's become kind of a point of pride not to but things, and start at the top, at "reduce*.
I only use it in a desktop browser with ublock. It's tolerable, but they keep taking things away...
Replace Falcon with Starliner. Boeing is big enough to fuck up twice.
Thanks for taking the time to answer!
What's the typical reaction to that? Bring honest like that doesn't sound like a winning strategy, unless you pass it off as a joke maybe.
I hear Aquaman is looking to boost his real estate portfolio.
We had this in Switzerland for a while, but it wasn't very popular.
I semi recently discovered train hopping channels. Mainly Gifgas, but there are a few related ones that cross over into urban exploration (shiey for example). Especially the train hopping is something I would never do myself, and I guess that's why it's so fascinating.
The only way to regulate my intake is not to buy them.
Miles Tek does that in the later books, IIRC. strap a lasgun to a shield generator, instant pseudo nuclear bomb.
Edit: I guess the difference is that they are dropping the whole package, not just the lasgun.
"No, not like that!"
Summers lost to fire and smoke. Biblical floods. Dying forests. Retreating coasts. Economic turmoil and political unrest. It’s going to be a weird century. Here’s what it will look like—and how Canada can get through it.
The optimistic note of the last sentence of the abstract doesn't really survive reading the article...