GrouchoMarxism
Groucho Marxism
GrouchoMarxism

@ilos: It's a good thing large numbers of people in the real world never, never regularly use "figuratively" in the sense you use the word "literally" for and the word "literally" in the sense you use the word "figuratively" for, or your argument using completely different, not even tangentially related words in the

@rwp140: the point ———

@mrsultana101: You literally can't tell that language changes over time, and that words, no matter the wishes of the most strident pickers of nits, can acquire multiple entirely opposite meanings that depend greatly on context.

@Steffen Larsen: I figuratively explode with anger when people can't tell that language is a malleable, living thing answerable to no grammatical authority, and that words' usages can vary greatly in a matter of even a few decades, or come to mean entirely opposite things in different contexts.

I can't tell if this is a step up or down from Teeth.

:D I want this!

Hey, I just finished the unit covering soaps and detergeants in my chemistry class today! Neato.

This is... This is brilliant, but it's actually vaguely sinister.

@cmdrfire: I find that a bit funny, given that I'm going to go into engineering in college myself, though perhaps since I'm going to major in environmental engineering the ethos of "Try a lot of things; Keep what works" resonates with me more.

@deafblindmute: Zombie Blackbird Mutation: Coming soon on SyFy

@mordicai: A lot of professions require experience and teamwork that can't be condensed into a package of upgrades— bodily or genetic— that could be given to any old joe or just distributed among everyone. And professions are also something that attract people passionate about the work involved, in even the strangest

@OgilvyTheAstronomer: The bobble-head style for some of the characters is a little offputting, especially when they're right next to characters with normal proportions, and sometimes the rough quality really feels more like it's a draft, but other than that I like it.

@cmdrfire: I'm not talking about stark science, but rather body-modding. If you don't know what can be done, and insist on not finding out, then too bad if someone else decides to. This woman may not be making big contributions, but they're certainly contributions to the understanding of how a person can change one's

@Ceropegius: I don't know, I don't have any right now because I use it to make my own coffee-Oreo ice cream and for the sake of my health I don't indulge in it frequently.

@alex.wifiguy: Oh, I'm aware of how coffee works— I was trying to say "I saw that other people said coffee made their pee smell, and the same thing happens to me!" a bit more tactfully.

This is pretty. Makes me think of another post-apocalypse webcomic you might want to check out, called dead.winter, which as you may have surmised has its apocalypse predicated on zombies. Good webcomic that mixes humor and action, with some pretty good art.

@mordicai: I can foresee there being a general set of implants, but not ones that the population at large will share, since they typically wouldn't need them (one exception being those whose freedoms or abilities could be restored by implants). Rather, I think the general set of implants/modifications will be a sort

@Hotscot: I'll concede that I went too far in my response to you, but I still think people like this woman, in the right or not, form the vanguards for strides forward for the species. Though some of them are a little out of it.

@ManchuCandidate: They call him a fun guy, but they can't detect the pain lurking beneath his lumpy surface.