I don't know what people find so confusing about this. This is the business mindset. If you're not growing your failing. Empires get bigger by taking more land. Therefore the American empire must take more land. It's not rocket science. It's a child's view of 'winning'.
Lol the Pentagon isn't afraid to fake evidence to support an invasion. Remember the aluminium tubes? Remember yellow cake uranium? I remember.
Hello. I've watched multiple invasions happen in my lifetime. We all knew it was going to happen every time.
We were just getting into it when we had someone collapse on the footpath outside our house, he was unable to walk and was calling for help. We had to go perform first aid and call an ambulance. Didn't feel like fucking after that.
Australian companies like Alumina won't have any problems selling their product elsewhere. But feels weird that nobody is talking about how this broke AUSFTA. Are there no consequences for backing out of fully ratified international agreements?
The idea that 70% of lottery winners lose all their winnings isn't true. It's based on a fake statistic.
The news loves to highlight the cases where that's true because it reinforces the cultural notion that wealth is tied to morality.
It really looks that crazy
Tape is rad for long term storage
I remember hearing a good quote along the lines of 'Peripherals do not sell consoles. By their very nature their sales market is pre-existing console owners."
Plus Yosuke Okunari also said "Sega had devoted much of its game development capabilities to the 32X (and much of its hardware stock, since the 32X used the same chip as the Saturn) during the 1994 year-end sales season." Which ruined Sega's capacity to support manufacturing and game development of the Saturn.
Interesting seeing this after the flurry of positive articles he's been receiving over the last month.
Paying more for good quality tools to fix things properly can seem like a luxury initially, but they're worth it when you're 10 years down the line and still able to use the same set as if they were brand new.
It's very popular in the UK.