I was hoping for a much higher quality, but they’re still kind of funny
I was hoping for a much higher quality, but they’re still kind of funny
Sure thing!
holding two conflicting beliefs at the same time.
like you don’t believe in the death penalty, but you read about a child molester and want them to die.
a lot of aggregators just throw shit together, but 1440 works pretty hard on making sure their articles are simply reporting significant news from reliable sources.
as far as a collection of news, I get a lot of it from 1440, which compiles current, objective news stories reliably.
I get ideas from the posts here, but I’m pretty careful about checking multiple sources before accepting any of the articles people post here as legitimate information.
Dana, Dana, how could anyone be this right?
amazing.
cool, looking forward to it.
slub-scrbd.
“-ish” it for sure, no worries about a strict schedule, don’t want to burn out.
Cool. I like this one, I assume I’ll like the other one ones.
me and hermits get along.
because the auto industry is a huge part of the American retail market and they’re afraid this will give China a huge edge on taking over the global economy, which it totally will, but it is the fault of the USA for not supporting their domestic industries.
yup, egg soboro.
woo that toast you make sounds goood
it sounds like you were protecting the Nazi-punchers rather than the Nazis.
That’s the right call!
just like violence isn’t applicable everywhere, non-violence isn’t applicable everywhere.
back in the day, nazis used to get violently run out of shows because they tried to infiltrate the punk movement and punks said “Nazi punks fuck off” and then punched them until they left.
sounds great, except I don’t know what celery salt is.
what is that?
oh, literally celery seeds ground up with salt.
I don’t think I’ve ever cooked with it before. I’m going to have to give that a try, that’s definitely a good combination.
egg soboro right now: crack an egg in a pan, constant stirring, 8 minutes or so at the lowest heat, super fluffy, flavored textured egg curds.
better title is “perry attacks dave”.
The altercation didn’t look mutual.
very different laws in the US.
in the states, tree ownership ends at the property line.
once part of a tree or plant is on your property or in public property, it no longer legally belongs to the tree it is growing from.
If your neighbor’s tree branches grow into your yard, the branches are your property and you can harvest from or cut down those branches up to your property line.
Americans are generally pretty cool about urban foraging, in any case.
I’ve had neighbors invite me on to their property to pick fruit directly from their bushes or trees just because they had so much.
are private trees or close-packed houses not very common in Germany?
property lines are often a big problem in the states where so many have their house and property so close to each other.
this is great, My favorite foraging back in the day was a giant pear tree hung way over onto the sidewalk, I grabbed dozens of pears for months.
oh except I lived across from an abandoned orchard and seasonally got free apples while living in Portland. so that was pretty good.
My frugality this week was upcycling a pair of abandoned broken flip flops with paracord to make new huarachas, running sandals.
I also caught several ghost crabs on the beach a few days ago, enough to make dinner.
I don’t think that article is correct.
I’ve never understood subsequent realization to be integral to the dissonance itself, which already exists regardless of one’s awareness of it.
It’s like insisting that you are not depressed unless you “realize” you’re depressed.
unless by “realization” that article simply mean experiencing conflicting emotions, which is the cognitive dissonance itself.
requiring “realization” feels like putting a hat on a hat.