House flies start producing potent methamphetamine in their wings, which means the whole world has uncontrollable access to it.
House flies start producing potent methamphetamine in their wings, which means the whole world has uncontrollable access to it.
My favorite Yes song is the intro to the game Solstice by Tim Follin. (It’s not a real Yes song).
This proof is partial though. This assumes there is only 1 way of obtaining lead. What if lead appeared from fusion in stars younger than that.
Pretty sure it’s Adam Driver
Sorry, I don’t know much more than that. The group chat I mod for is transitioning to matrix from discord. We’ll probably checkout xmpp once we are mostly done, but we don’t want to alienate users so we use repost bots and its going slowly.
Just take note that Matrix was originally developped by Amdocs, an israeli multinational with ties to the state intelligence. They made a foundation to pursue further development, but apparently the staff is the same. It might not mean much, but many people don’t know about it.
Matrix is probably the best but keep in mind that all messaging apps can have their metadata collected somehow and here’s an fyi for matrix itself: https://hackea.org/notas/matrix.html
Not related to the movies themselves but I remember from the original Spider-Man run in the first 100 issues, Spidey goes to a prison riot and understands the guards are the abusers and supports the formation of the inmates union iirc
Super Metroid. The game really opens up if you spend a bit of time learning alternate routes and sequence breaks. Many of them are kind of easy too. Besides all that, I just feel weirdly cozy in the depths or outside in the rain. It’s also a shortish randomizer if you go outside of the vanilla experience with like 100 places to check.
I don’t think you can achieve a spiral orbit in an area with so little friction, mostly devoid of dust and gas, else the earth would be on one of those too…
Cant access the article, here’s a dumb AI summary “The article by David Fickling on Bloomberg Law discusses China’s electric vehicle (EV) subsidy system. Fickling argues that China can’t reduce its EV subsidies because it isn’t actually paying them in full. While the Chinese government provides financial incentives to encourage the growth of the EV industry, much of the support is being delayed or deferred, and in some cases, the payments are not made at all. The article highlights the gap between China’s ambitious EV targets and the practical realities of its financial commitments, pointing out that many EV companies rely on the promise of subsidies, even though the actual funds have often not been disbursed as expected. This reliance on delayed payments could undermine the sustainability of the industry and the broader transition to electric vehicles.”