MaskedMadman
MaskedMadman
MaskedMadman

Yes, those Mossad killings are totally secret, untraceable. That's why people on the internet know all about them.

The screen grab posted here is incomplete, and the absence of the context cut out makes it very difficult to make sense of the photo. The complete graphic at the source site is easier to follow — still not the clearest representation, but better than how it is butchered here.

Most of the advice my dad has given me has been terrible, but this one nugget was good: When you're young, you're broke and can't afford to do anything anyway, so have your kids young. You'll get by, and as you advance and make more money, times get better, and the lean times become cherished memories/instructive

They are strong now.

I think it's actually the other way around — pixellating it makes it seem even more dirty by making it taboo. They probably did it for that reason, to add to the comedic effect. In essence, I think they saved her otherwise limp joke by making a big deal of it.

...which means more work for the accountants and managers tasked with moving the funds into, around, through and out of those havens. That's job creation!

Regarding the stats point — I know this seems like a minor issue, but I'd love to see tech- and science-oriented outlets like Gizmodo stop using terms like "magical" and "wizard" to describe mathematics and its practitioners. It subtly reinforces the anti-intellectual attitudes that keep us our culture from embracing

Doesn't seem so complicated. Run a spur down from Kinakuta.

I generally agree with your reasoning, but these are the same reasons I enjoy the NBA and am bored by men's college basketball. Yet I can't help but notice that most fans are head over heels for the college game.

This is really helpful — does this approach work for removing DRM from Kobo-sourced ebooks as well?

Reaction at ESPN is mixed. Hoppes is outraged that Highsmith didn't use Wikipedia. Schrutebag thinks the 11-year-olds should be happy to have their work noticed (but not credited). Reilly wants to know if the 11-year-olds a) live in their mothers' basements and b) wear dental appliances of any kind.

So do dictionaries! Those 2 sources seldom agree.

The markings on the underside resemble a traditional Nine Men's Morris board — a game dating as far back as the Roman Empire. COULD ALIENS HAVE TAUGHT US SOLVED GAMES?!? /vonDaniken'd

I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser Gate. A Tundra towing a retired space shuttle across a bit of overtaxed infrastructure. All these moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to Kinja.

Isn't this also why we're always told there are no grey elephants in Denmark?

How did this not end up in The Bloggess' hands?

Word is those things could carry a substantial amount of gold, undetected, all the way to the Philipinnes. At least that's what Arethusa told me.

I did a search for this book and found 2 different books, by different authors, with similar titles. If you happen to remember, could you specify the author? I'm interested. Thank you.

But then your wife can hear you talking to her.

I felt that Prometheus was already thematically linked to Blade Runner in the examination of the relationship between flawed creators and superhuman creations. In each case, humans created beings that, by design, exceed our capabilities, because they were made to do the kinds of jobs that we can't do. Yet those