squalor-old
squalor
squalor-old

If someone's going to rob me, I'd rather not be at gun- or knifepoint.

@LoganSix: There are multiple definitions of "shelter," of course. But the the most meaningful definition notes a shelter's security. A tree is not secure, and I don't consider a tree a structure or a building.

So in 1997 she was only a cyborg, not the android she is today. Her face was so scary in that video.

@Pookiewood: That it was not. Their relationship was an allusion to Miyazaki's My Neighbor Totoro.

@lankysob: Amateur. My friend actually licks the scuffs off.

@Moonshadow Kati: The two episodes featured some of the best production and storytelling I'd ever seen on South Park, but they didn't have as many of the absolutely hysterical moments other, funnier episodes have had.

@drummrx: I'm partial to "Chocolate Salty Balls (P.S. I Love You)."

@Pookiewood: I think you missed the allusion their relationship made. It was amazing.

@Brian Esser: "Government of the people, by the people, for the people."

@Brian Esser: All right, you all-powerful, all-knowing being.

@Graviton1066: Is that what he was like when you met him?

@Brian Esser: I came here to talk about tech, not to change some obstinate-minded person's opinion.

@Brian Esser: Who said people should "expect" to live in houses? A shelter, i.e. a house or apartment, is a need, but, yes, it's not a right.

@LoganSix: By definition, a shelter has to be safe. A tree is not safe. Certainly houses and apartments aren't indestructible, but they're much safer than a tree and, therefore, are kinds of shelter and, therefore, are a need.

It's like a shining diode to analog.