Depends. They do save on space, which is why it's so weird that most US people have them and europeans who generally have much smaller homes usually don't.
I used to be really into mutual ribbing-based humor. What I learned was that it's pretty fun, until you misjudge the situation. IMO it's not worth it overall.
That was rather insightful. And I definitely need a primer on writing good commit messages, and possibly on what a good version control commit is in the first place.
And TIL you can actually use some kind of markdown in git commit messages!
How many current Tesla drivers have bought their car when it was still excusable to doubt that Musk is far-right? It would be pretty wasteful to trash your car, secondhand market is probably dead, and many of them might be in too much financial trouble to just eat the cost of buying a different car.
Medicine (i.e. research into cures for illnesses we can't cure yet) seems like just about the only thing that's worthwhile. Most of our modern issues aren't really about not having the right technologies, but about billionaires being greedy.
Yeah, but at that point it's not a red flag anymore. If everyone plays video games, it doesn't have predictive value anymore until you get into specifics genres or even specific games/franchises.
Like speaking with hot potatoes in your mouth, which is ironic since it's usually our natives who are called "potatoes" (by immigrants, not americans).
It's pretty easy to understand if you consider that black americans were brought into the country as slaves, wealth is generally inherited (even if just through socialization, connections etc. and not actual inheritance), and americans and the american state continue to be both racist and classist. Even if black people were treated as equals nowadays (which they are not), they would stay disadvantaged due to the US's lack of social mobility.
What about products from companies that are owned by US companies, though? e.g. Kraft, Mondelez. They own a lot of regional brands, such as Germany's Milka.
Depends. They do save on space, which is why it's so weird that most US people have them and europeans who generally have much smaller homes usually don't.