jp182
Noah Porter
jp182

The people in Destiny who enjoy PvP, casual PvE, Raids and these mindbender puzzles are pretty much four distinct groups in the community. I don’t see why that’s a bad thing.

I know you hedge on this by saying usually, but private is not always the costlier option. I went to a small, private college in the midwest. At the time, total cost was right around $40k a year for tuition, room, and board, but the amount I was actually responsible for in the end was about $10k. This was less than

“It’s dumb that they just brought back Palps after not mentioning him in either of the previous movies. Like we’re supposed to believe that he was like just off-screen the entire time.

Vouchsafe is God. I think I’ve used that gun more than almost any other. 

Maybe I don’t dodge all that often, or maybe it’s high enough to use whenever I want/need to...what’s it matter?

I don’t give a damn if it is seven years old. If I won the $237 million Powerball jackpot tomorrow night, one of my first orders of business would be putting together my own Gone in 60 Seconds list of 50 cars (to be acquired legally, though), and a Lexus LFA would sure AF be on there. I think I’d name her... Rebecca.

I haven’t logged on to Destiny 2 for a long time, so I don’t know how much stuff is priced.

I have the same ads and I don’t even play D2.

But that would mean I have to take responsibility for how I feel and that my own actions have an effect on things. I dont like that and would rather blame big-bad someone else for not designing a game just for me!

I mean, what’s the alternative? For years, gamers insisted that it was fine for people to be able to pay for cosmetic stuff as long as it wasn’t P2W, and now that devs are taking that at face value, it isn’t. Personally, my feeling is that as long as you know up front what you’re getting for your cash, it’s fine.

Fewer people will pay for the higher class, or use miles/cash to request an upgrade, if they know there’s a chance they could get it for free. That appears to be the airlines’ rationale.

The standard of education in Oil is massively higher and the work itself far far more automated. Even the lowest skilled jobs in oil require massive amounts of skills that if not as well paid elsewhere are still in demand.

I saw it as a social commentary. For most of history, the only way for a non-royal woman to hold on to any power she had acquired was to _not_ have child. Children could wreck your body (beauty) and gave you responsibilities, a weakness to be exploited, and a shitload of social expectations, reasons to be ostracized

“...she’s sterile because that’s just how magic people be.”

Your answer to mooshank’s question is incomplete and doesn’t work when a more respectful salutation is involved. “Thank you, Sir/Ma’am” carries more weight than “Thank you”. “Yes Sir/Ma’am” has respect that “Yes” can not deliver. Sir has been used in the past for both genders; perhaps urging that is a better idea than

What a cesspool of attempted projective control. Where is common courtesy and consideration toward those confused by the cross-currents of passing fancy and tradition?

I was reading on a Reddit thread where one person said their organization had switched to saying “Honored guests...” which is gender neutral and still maintains a certain level of formality.

now this is the correct suggestion. The 911 will be avenged..MadMax style!!!

You buy another parsh, but maybe it’s a Cayenne. Preferably a salvage Cayenne, for reasons that will become apparent soon. Oh, and definitely spring for the tow package.