

I believe the benefit is making the situation more dangerous and unpredictable, which increases the gravity of the concessions Europeans are willing to make just have it all stop.
I believe the benefit is making the situation more dangerous and unpredictable, which increases the gravity of the concessions Europeans are willing to make just have it all stop.
What are those older than 45 years?
Gasp! …Legendary earths?
I’m Battle for Wesnoth, after clearing a map it showed a statistic about how lucky you’d been in your dice rolls. Which really meant how often you’d rerun dice rolls by saving and loading. When it said something like “370% above average luck”, I realized that, oh shit, the game knows?!
That’s what’s shown for Rainbow 6.
No, so try to keep it short.
“The ice taps back”
When I take off, well, I know I’m gonna be
I’m gonna be the drone who takes off towards you
When I blow up, yeah, I know I’m gonna be
I’m gonna be the drone who blows along with you
If I get jammed, well, I know I’m gonna be
I’m gonna be the drone who gets jammed next to you
And if I reach ya, yeah, I know I’m gonna be
I’m gonna be the drone who’s reaching down to you
[Chorus]
But I would fly six hundred miles
And I would fly four hundred more
Just to be the drone who flew a thousand
Miles to fall down on your door
I’m not the OC, but the Japanese have two good words for related things that are not quite as rare as you’d expect: Hikikomori and Jōhatsu.
Why would you be happy about their money going to even less deserving people?..
The Anglo-Portuguese Treaty of 1373 was signed on 16 June 1373 between King Edward III of England and King Ferdinand I and Queen Leonor of Portugal. It established a treaty of “perpetual friendships, unions [and] alliances” between the two seafaring states, and remains the longest-standing treaty still in effect today.
And they were both built in France.
It can also be pronounced like “strih-neen” (which is more in line with the way it’s pronounced in almost every other language).
No, it’s just a distraction.
What ads do you mean? If it was a link to Twitter, I’d understand, but this is to Deutsche Welle.
From a page about geometric percent decreases, explaining that that kind of graph represents an unchanging loss of a percentage of the measured value every interval:
The sequence 100, 50, 25, 12.5, … is a geometric sequence. The common ratio is 1/2. To go from term to term, you keep multiplying by 1/2 (i.e., dividing by 2).
The graph of the sequence 100, 50, 25, 12.5, … is shown below:
And after that?
That’s a strange veer towards a completely unrelated topic… But anyway, considering that roughly 1 in 100 people are Mormon in the US, it’s not that surprising that 1 in 550 of the land also is. It’s surprising they’re trailing so far behind the average actually.
EDIT: oh wait, you mean the church owns it. Yeah, ok, that is very weird. But Mormonism is a very weird thing by definition…