But you don’t eat her food, why should she want to?
But you don’t eat her food, why should she want to?
Just because you changed the clocks back doesn’t mean that time actually changed.
This early in the game, I generally don’t even bother with fences, especially for chickens.
But that doesn’t mean you’re allowed to close the door! You know that, right?
Thank you so much, I’m gonna make that this weekend!
The Smithsonian tweeted the photo and credited it as coming from “Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture, gift of Joe Schwartz and family, ©Joe Schwartz”. I’m going to take their word for it.
The original is in the Smithsonian, so I doubt it.
Herkimer Street, Bedford-Stuyvesant.
Dan Snow did a short historical thing on it as well.
Umm, both of those articles are from 2020. He’s making slow progress with The Haunted Chocolatier while he continues to tinker with Stardew; I haven’t heard much about the other game.
Umm, both of those articles are from 2020. He’s making slow progress with The Haunted Chocolatier while he continues to tinker with Stardew; I haven’t heard much about the other game.
For the Raj period, there’s also The Jewel in the Crown. For the Company Rule period, there’s Beecham House.
Umm, could you please share the recipe your looking at for lentil bolognese? Please, and thank you!
Oh, cool. Do X next!
Interesting phrasing there. Orange guy “fell victim to” (was Innocent) while blue lady “was guilty”.
It’s true that we often excuse our own behavior by what we intended, and often blame others based on their behavior without knowing their intent. But that isn’t a behavior you might expect from a psychologist determined to analyze a situation, showing a bunch of his own biases.
Marvin, is that you?
That’s exactly what I was thinking.
In court, expert psychiatrist Laurent Layet, who interviewed 20 of the accused – including Pelicot three times – said they could not be described as “ordinary men…because that would be tantamount to saying that all men are capable of such acts.”
Yes, and? We choose the bear.
It’s not stupid, it’s deliberate. I had a friend who did consulting work (in a different area) with a large grocery chain, and they deliberately change the layout so you’re spending more time in the store, looking at things, because chances are that you’ll buy more. If the store becomes a little too crowded, they’ll just change the music to hurry you along.
Can you pick it up and deliver it to the new office in person?