Well troubleshooting is about stepwise checks that confirm each level is working in turn. We can short circuit that with experience and choices that make assumptions but sometimes its best just to do it from the ground up. Mysterious situations that don’t make sense are the best place for this as it generally means…
The situation here is someone saying “What about men (in general)?”. They being shut down because that’s “whataboutism”. If they said “It happened to me too” then I doubt they’d face the same pushback.
A) There’s nothing stopping men from tweeting #MeToo.
“I must make two honest confessions to you, my Christian and Jewish brothers.
Unsolicited advice from someone who survived a very necessary estrangement from her own mother: beware of anyone who attempts to convince you that you should be able to look past this. I wish someone had told me 20 years ago that “blood is not thicker than safety.” Thank you and good luck.
Is the Facebook application space still a resource hogging behemoth? I’ve mostly weaned off of Facebook in general but even in my limited use I just use the mobile website because their apps kill my phone.
The actual Airwolf theme:
That felt fucking great to watch, I’m not gonna lie.
Try thinking of it like going to an upscale restaurant rather than a fast food chain. You’re paying for the quality of the experience, not the quantity of food or the time it takes.
People spend $18 for a 2 hour movie...why is $18 for a 3 hour game expensive?
Not that this will help me actually find the real download button.
I’m confused. The article is making it sound like we’re not getting a singleplayer campaign at all. But the reply from Goodman sounds like it’s saying we still are, just with added multiplayer to help with balancing the singleplayer.
Coming “first” to Playstation 4: this is how you both win and lose E3 at the same time
I'd wear it. I'm a fan of the design. I also couldn't possibly care less what people think of me as a result of what I choose to cover my naked form with, so that helps.
Instead of adding a Swiss Army Knife to your pockets, you can turn your keychain into a multipurpose tool. The Gerber Shard, which we've featured before, had a two-sized flathead and one Philips head screwdriver, bottle opener, wire stripper, lanyard hole, and a pry bar—and it can be carried on airplanes too. There…