
I would like a hard mode and to play as Zelda. I agree with what you say about everything else, I'm a bit mixed on those.
I would like a hard mode and to play as Zelda. I agree with what you say about everything else, I'm a bit mixed on those.
You're so close minded for not enjoying the things I enjoy, Alex. How dare you not like the same things I do? I guess I'm just not close-minded enough to see your side of things.
As for beer, I only drink it socially, cause it does taste like piss water, at least in the U.S., but it loosens me up. I imagine I'd hate clubbing, too. I prefer house parties or getting together at a bar.
I meant graphically ... and I remembered liking V, but I was very little.
Only job I ever quit after a day was door-to-door sales, because my anxiety crept up a lot harder than I thought it would. Otherwise, I've always given two weeks at least before not even quitting, but just going back to college too far away.
Scientific theory is a bit different than "just a theory" as it's used in colloquial terms. It has predictive qualities that have been proven to work or not disproven as expected, as Nye pointed out several times. Also, it's never posited that a theory is 100% perfect, but scientific theories are based on solid, empirical evidence available. Hence why evolution and gravity are still very strong theories (laws are actually rules within these theories by the way; scientific theories don't "graduate" to become laws as many people mistakenly think) and the UConn guy has Olum, Everett, Gott, and Stephen Hawking being very critical of his theory.
You can thank evolutionary and germ theory for a lot of modern medicine by the way, as evolutionary theory helps us understand how certain harmful things will evolve to withstand medications, meaning we need to make new ones to stop them.
As for C-14 dating, it relies on assumptions that don't work for everything, like freshwater mussels, but the idea the Earth is only 6,000 years old is still a bit nuts to me, as it can still date well within a range of 20,000 years. Admittedly, the idea that Genesis was meant to be taken literally is also a bit questionable to me. To me, it's a fable passed down first through spoken word then translated however many times into English. Having read it, it reads much more like a fable to me than a historical account, and I believe it was intended to be. I was never taught to take it literally even when I was Catholic.
Simply put, those on Ham's side do not have a good understanding of science, and that's a huge problem for our society. I swear I'll wake up one day and U.S. citizens will deny the theory of gravity because it's "not a law."
There's a reason Creation scientists are branded the way they are: they're not good scientists. Scientists are never perfect, but they don't fundamentally misunderstand science the way "Creation scientists" do.
I really want a backwards compatible PS3 myself. Check out games like this I was always curious about.
I think after the long period in the 90s where people would find only the one good song they heard on the radio per a CD, it's acceptable to try before you buy, even though I don't do it out of fear of getting caught. I'm only considering getting those Macklemore and Ryan Lewis tracks cause I doubt the rights owners would care; they'd probably encourage it, considering the circumstances.
But I have been eating pasta, which ... now that I think about it was probably also supposed to be cut out, cause I think carb cutting was the point. Dammit.
Speaking of Wavebird, I really wish I had bought one of those instead of my "R will work for some things, but not all" wireless Yobo replacement for my "you can only move forward diagonally" wired Nintendo controller and my "everything will work or maybe nothing, depends how the wind is blowing" wired MadCatz controller. Siiiiiggghhh.