M27235
M27235
M27235

This kind of reminds me of my late granny and my aunt (her daughter). Both firmly believe(d) that fresh bread would make them sick. Now my granny had quite a lot of siblings and it is my believe that her parents told them so because older bread doesn't taste as good so you would want to eat less and it can be sliced

A good swing with a machete could probably disable a chainsaw.

Flaws: Late stage terminal cancer patient.

So probably better to not drive them after sunset.

Makes you wonder what the Krim is. And Donbass. Austria or Sudetenland?

I think in this particular instance he's talking about chemical weapons, though it's quite hard to tell for sure. He was a soldier in WWI so he would probably know them first hand. They were not used in the European theater of WWII however, so that's good I guess. Not in warfare, anyway. It doesn't exactly come to

This is horrible. But I ... can't ... look ... away.

So all that about the anti- fascist protective wall was a lie? Nooo!

Never noticed that. Then again, in CivV I mostly played Gandhi myself. Which would make him a major threat to anyone's peace.

Yeah, assuming that the PS3 can't do anything else while it downloads. Which may or may not be ridiculous depending on downloading habits of British gamers. As a PC user, at least, I can do plenty while Steam downloads.

It also assumes that the computers are on not only just for torrenting but for torrenting your specific file and your file only. That's just ridiculously egocentric thinking.

Well, yeah, except for all that tech that we have no idea how to make. Plus, launching all those raw materials would be expensive.

We can't say for sure what the message is in regards to Kaliningrad (though the newspaper itself recent shed doubt on Moscow's claim to the region).

I assume that number is some kind of theoretical limit. Also probably for multiple tarps, just moving around the vibrator.

99.9%? Hardly. Egyptian agriculture was highly efficient (by the standards of the time) and allowed for quite the population "overhead". Which is pretty much a requirement for what we now call a civilization. Besides, that theory on its own doesn't cut it at all. After all, those farmers could have done something

That one's easy. Look at the numbers. Nothing out of the ordinary ever happened there.

Yeah, I sometimes think stuff like that, too. Here's the thing, though: steel is really quite strong.

Clearly we were smart enough to kick out your ancestors.

Flat Earth, such nonsense! Obviously the Earth is round - a hollow sphere with the universe in its center and the ground around that. All evidence to the contrary relies on the ridiculous assumption that light moves in a straight line.

Don't argue with a fool, he'll take you down to his level and crush you in his home field.