I don’t know what rock you’ve been living under where you think base Firefox wasn’t ever improved
I don’t know what rock you’ve been living under where you think base Firefox wasn’t ever improved
Yeah, black Americans have a very distinct culture. Started as slaves, were segregated in a lot of ways, they still often have ghetto neighborhoods, they created unique genres of music with strong black identity and they still have their own entertainment catered towards them. That’s America for you.
From my experience, black people want to be called black. I’m a white kid, but was raised in a foster family with three black siblings and other black family, including some that lived in a ghetto in another city. It was the 90s and early 2000s, so we watched some BET, we watched the Boondocks, we listened to thug rap, we watched shows with black characters such as All That and Cousin Skeeter. Because it was all a part of my brothers’ culture, and they felt attached to it, and “black culture” was cool to all of us. And in anything we participated in I’ve never heard a single African-American who didn’t call themselves “black” and be fine being called that. Maybe there are some rich people like Obama or Tom of The Boondocks who wouldn’t call themselves “black”, but they seem to be of a different lifestyle and culture than that.
I’ve also sometimes made the argument in defense of “black”, that “African-American” is mildly politically-incorrect itself— not that I have a problem with the term, just the hyper-vigilant enforcing of it. Because it’s not synonymous with skin color itself, it’s a statement about where they came from. We don’t call white people “European-Americans”; and what do we call non-black African-Americans from, say, Egypt or South America? So… yeah.
Good news, but it’s not “AI”. Please stop calling it that.
That sounds like the courts are fucking stupid and ill-prepared to do their jobs.
Yeah, because you’ll off the bottom into space
Wait until they learn that the thumbs-up in some countries means what the middle finger does in the US…
I don’t know what “Figma” is but it sounds stupid.
Dude, I just had this realization on my own a few months ago. I grew up thinking weeds literally choked the life out of grass and other plants by definition. So after some thought I started saying to myself and others “weeds are just any plant you don’t desire in your yard, they aren’t a species or group, the word means nothing”
It’s “high geologist” in the same way as “high summoner” in Final Fantasy X. Meaning his career ends by him sacrificing himself. In this case probably via volcano.
Jesus. Citation seriously needed.
I agree, we need more words. We lose words all the time, too, due to assumptive abuse.
Courage is knowing you’re likely to fail but taking a chance and doing your best anyway. Stupidity is thinking there’s little to no risk when there’s a lot.
But will they
The second reform school in a row that my parents abandoned me to was an abusive Baptist one in Missouri. I wish that place were imaginary.
That’s kind of the trend for post-apocalyptic media. Nerdy adults trend towards the cynical, while hope and progress is “kids’ and family stuff”
…Bethesda is a terrible developer and producer with a few good games under its belt that make people really dedicated to it— and I don’t super blame those people. It would be like if half of Zelda games were buggy and unfun and amateur and kinda-ugly trash— and so were most of their other first-party was too— but those three or four great Zeldas and two or three good Marios made people huge fans of the company. Or it would be like, you know, CD Projekt Red making one— maybe two— games so great that people decided all their other games must be great by default even when they’re not (which, well, yeah).
Same opinion, anyone who calls anything “woke” is probably a moron; and if something is called “woke”, then it’s likely doing something good (though sometimes it’s just existing, because morons will call anything “woke” now).
I’ve been telling people for a while that I can hear it too. Nice to know I’m not the only one.