"West Makaha" doesn't and that version's better anyway
"West Makaha" doesn't and that version's better anyway
Every "originalist"/"textualist" is this way. It's an inherently dishonest position based entirely on finding any excuse to push reaction through the judiciary.
Almost half of it is "look on the bright side"
There's a reason is called libertarian-alert
Did you see the byline?
Brandon J. Weichert, a National Interest national security analyst, is a former Congressional staffer and geopolitical analyst who is a contributor at The Washington Times, the Asia Times, and The-Pipeline. He is the author of Winning Space: How America Remains a Superpower, Biohacked: China’s Race to Control Life, and The Shadow War: Iran’s Quest for Supremacy. His next book, A Disaster of Our Own Making: How the West Lost Ukraine, is available for purchase wherever books are sold.
This guy's whole thing is fearmongering about the Fall of The West to get even more military industrial complex funding.
You would probably enjoy Delicious in Dungeon, then.
The ecology and autism are also important
I never saw Fighting Foodons, wasn't it like a gag Pokemon ripoff?
Delicious in Dungeon is about cooking and ecology (and being autistic) in the setting of a classic tabletop dungeon delving roleplaying game type fantasy world.
I hear from dub watchers that Delicious in Dungeon has a good dub.
It's also just a very good show.
Has the bullying worked yet?
Cool, another chance for the Supreme Court to overturn long-standing precedent in favor of kkkristianity.
Haupia pie for Hawaii, that shit slaps
Play Saints Row The Third instead, the best GTA game of all time
I heard PS4 emulation for bloodborne specifically is basically there.
Mariner had a whole relationship with another woman on screen but she's also been shown to be into dudes as well.
I haven't been to Hainan specifically but I have been to China a couple times and loved it.
Technically no but practically yes. ARM, RISCV, and Loongson are all at various stages of emerging as competition but none are really ready for end users at this point except Apple's ARM machines, which I wouldn't recommend unless you specifically want to be locked in to Apple's ecosystem.
For historical patent reasons, only Intel and AMD are allowed to make chips using the x86_64 architecture that pretty much all desktop software is intended to run on.
I don't understand why it's so difficult.
Folgers