I never understood this... Poison ivy isn't a misunderstood anti-hero, she's a villain. She's not a villain because she wants to save the world from pollution or climate change.
She's a villain because she's a mass-murderer and terrorist.
The Senate Democrats also reintroduced the bill on its own, and let the Republicans vote against it. This was absolutely a political move on their part, letting the GOP tear itself apart arguing about whether they should've voted for or against it. They're taking advantage of the existing tensions and divisions within the party to weaken them.
After learning the answers, this gay test is only valid for certain model-years. I stopped watching cartoons just a bit before that show aired, but I'm also gay af.
Illness, death, and antisocial behavior. All of these were threats we evolved to handle, people who are "a little bit off" in one way or another, who might endanger the group or individual. This, and that our pattern seeking brains don't like it when something doesn't easily fit within an existing schema, even more so if it lies just outside of our existing preconceptions.
Obviously, I can't say that these definitely are the reasons why we experience the uncanny valley, but I think it's probably a better explanation than... Skin walkers? Or whatever else the meme would be implying.
Still, it's a cool premise for a horror story at least.
I assume you mean that we let Israel strike Palestine? Yes, that's been true, but neither Hamas, nor the Palestinian Authority, or any other Palistinian group, have nuclear capabilities. That's the concern with Russia, that they will respond with a tactical nuclear strike, or worse. Whether that fear is founded or not is a different question, of course.
I remember when it was just an app to post funny pictures, back in middle school, then it slowly devolved into one of the worst cesspits of the internet.
Yes, but probably only about as much as every other garbage social media trashsite like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, etc.