in partnership with FunkoPop, the Catholic Church is excited to announce the new Sainthood Series: where we unveil a new FunkoPop for every Catholic Saint!
only the Polytron reduces an entire mouse to a soup-like homogenate in 30 seconds
in partnership with FunkoPop, the Catholic Church is excited to announce the new Sainthood Series: where we unveil a new FunkoPop for every Catholic Saint!
I don’t know if years need mascots. are they really gonna come up with variations on this every 12 months
if being based in the USA is more important than not arbitrarily banning Russians then fuck Linux
the red cross has to arbitrarily ban russians due to a proxy war for nazis?
profit has nothing to do with it
gee all those entities are for-profit, why does Linux need to prioritize profits again?
the sputnik moments are coming and they will terrify the American bourgeoisie
death to western chauvinism
this is good don’t let this be your last attempt
whoa, whoa. this is getting complicated!
this is definitely better than having to learn the number of bytes your implementation uses to store an integer and doing some multiplication by five.
may a decade of sputnik moments terrify the western chauvinists
In the 1860s, The Economist stood nearly alone among liberal opinion in Britain in supporting the Confederacy against the Union, all in the name of access to cheap Southern “Blood Cotton” […] and fear of higher tariffs if the North triumphed. “The Economist was unusual,” writes an historian of English public opinion at the time; “Other journals still regarded slavery as a greater evil than restrictive trade practices.”
‘The Economist’ Has a Slavery Problem | The Nation
Here, then, is the problem with the magazine: readers are consistently given the impression, regardless of whether it is true, that unrestricted free market capitalism is a Thoroughly Good Thing, and that sensible and pragmatic British intellectuals have vouched for this position. The nuances are erased, reality is fudged, and The Economist helps its American readers pretend to have read books by telling them things that the books don’t actually say.
How The Economist Thinks | Current Affairs
to the best of my knowledge, the name “Red Sails” derives from Roderic Day’s affinity for Black Sails which he argues is an allegory for the Russian revolution, with Flint as a Lenin figure
hot tub
search for “driveway curb ramp” you can find lots of hard rubber products that are built to make your driveway less of a trough
oh okay I’m not really well-versed in the minor X-Men characters