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8,000 seat TX church attendance after lead pastor (Trump's spiritual advisor) busted for pedophilia
  • Your deeply emotional desire to mulch people trying to fix themselves has been duly noted.

    In the real world, we like it when people who would do crimes never do.

    Funnily, CSA prevention experts actually find you enabling; you make their jobs harder. Why do you want abusers to hide from us, hm? Are you a CIA plant?

  • Arizona toddler rescued after getting trapped in a Tesla with a dead battery | The Model Y’s 12-volt battery, which powers things like the doors and windows, died
  • I think the point, though, is there should be a redundant system to handle failures, like a mechanical-only door handle.

    Another example: your dashboard touchscreen fails, there should still be a button to turn on the AC. Or off. Whatever makes this analogous to the safety concern about doors.

  • I’ve got a fossil fuel non-proliferation treaty baby, and I’ll write your name: Just Stop Oil paint private jets hours after Taylor Swift’s lands
  • This isn't "a few people glued to a road," this is a threat. "Fix society, or tensions will escalate."

    The way you keep minimizing these efforts tell me you either don't really understand protests or are actively trying to make them seem trivial.

    I saw you complaining earlier about them "shoving moral superiority down your throat," which is curious. It's like your biggest problem with them is just that you have to hear about it.

    I'm sure your shed is nice. We need other people to build nice sheds.

  • Animal homosexual behaviour under-reported by scientists, survey shows
  • But they don't have language

    Ant.. pheromones? Whale song? Whatever crows do to remember peoples faces they haven't seen.

    Not every animal is as sophisticated as we are, but communication in general is pretty integral to herd survival strategy.

    How does an animal know sex leads to pregnancy?

    We're not.. different. We have schools and parents and movies we aren't supposed to see yet that tell us it does.

  • :D‎
  • :D Oh wow, you just literally saved my life.

    For the record, you have to do this on PC or in browser. Mobile doesn't have the option, but it will listen when it's set elsewhere.

  • Rule
  • Oh, wow. What a journey this was.

    It starts in a pretty unassuming place: a big, black void (Final Fantasy VII) (Star Wars) (The Thing (2011) 0:00:37--0:00:38).

    As with any great horror, the first step is to lower our expectations. Put us at ease. This is done wonderfully here. It's almost peaceful. But, the wisps of forehead color that rise like flames foreshadow the nightmare to come.

    As we venture downward (The Descent), we enter a vast desert (Dune) that feels very alienating. Though we haven't gone far, the framing that seems to put us on one of Saturn's rings tells us that we're very far from home (E.T.).

    Further in and things really seem to crescendo as we fall over eerily dark hills into the lair of the desert's greatest monster: some... thing we can't even fully perceive. But we can perceive its eyes, and those eyes might be the most violent eyes my eyes have ever laid eyes on.

    From here, the narrative takes a turn: it's all about our escape. We make our way over rolling hills, sun-bleached landscapes. But it's soon after this that I think things start to fall apart. The lips were incredibly funny. Me and my viewing party spent hours staring and laughing at the lips. But, they're also a stark departure from what we've been shown so far, and I'm left not really knowing what the author is trying to say. Personally, I think it would have been great if there were another set of eyes instead.

    Things drag on, but it's not long until we're struck out of nowhere by an ending sequence right out of 2001: A Space Odyssey (2001: A Space Odyssey) that really doesn't work and fails to resolve any of the narrative threads.

    All in all, I'd give this work a 19 out of 31 and a nice slap on the bum.

  • With the recent issues of transgender people in sports, why don’t we move some sports over to a weight-class system?
  • My friend,

    Trans women are women but they aren't female.

    Female atheletes understandably feel that it is unfair to have male atheletes breaking female atheletic records

    where I said that it was unfair for trans women atheletes to play against female atheletes.

    Explain to me how I am supposed to resolve these.

    If you're not anti trans athletes, then whatever, but come on.

  • With the recent issues of transgender people in sports, why don’t we move some sports over to a weight-class system?
  • And the ones I've made can be double-checked by taking a sociology class.

    If I am to be charitable, I think you're just glazing over the elephant in the room. When a little girl is told "they're not as able," they're not as likely to continue. If only 13% of players are women at all, then yeah, duh, they won't be represented in the grandmasters.

  • With the recent issues of transgender people in sports, why don’t we move some sports over to a weight-class system?
  • What are you even talking about, then? "The problem is sex, but it isn't sex actually"?

    If trans women can play in women's leagues just fine (after hormonal treatment I think is the typical rule), what is "females don't want to play with males" supposed to mean?

    Is it just the hormonal treatment? You have to understand how confusing it is to phrase this point that way.

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    petrol_sniff_king @lemmy.blahaj.zone
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