I’m not agreeing with the other guy, or that I don’t, I’m just saying your comment doesn’t follow from his unless the FSM guy claims to be a new prophet of the same God.
- 0 Posts
- 8 Comments
Does he claim his teachings are a new revelation from the god of Abraham?
It’s not that strong, vibration and a little force in the other direction that is easily overcome, especially when you’re turning hard to move quickly.
You have to oversignal in modern BMWs or the wheel vibrates and tries to correct the other direction. Forced merges, lane splitting, any deviation from straight down the middle even when it’s obvious that you have to do that thing, the car bitches at you if you don’t signal.
Yeah, I have zero in my house now. I have over 1k on my ereader, in my pocket, and on my tablet. Even when I read physical books I never had this many, every time I got to a couple hundred I’d take them to Goodwill for others to enjoy. My reading list is so long, it’s not like I’m likely to reread anything. Every book I reread is one other book I won’t get to read before I die.
I see bookshelves like this these days it’s like someone with a lot of vinyl. They’re either old (old to me and I’m almost 50), or just into an old format for some reason. Nothing wrong with that, it just doesn’t mean the same thing it used to.
You can do that, won’t even hurt. A car battery is capable of providing a lot of amps, but you can’t push current, you can only pull it, and a car battery is only around 14 volts.
I wouldn’t do it across your chest though, unless you’re sure your heart is healthy, and maybe not even then. Even low current can fuck with your heart.
square@lemmy.zipto
memes@lemmy.world•Don't forget the long hair shed EVERYWHERE on EVERYTHING
132·2 months agoGet a shower drain with a removable catch basket, even if it means having tile work done. It will pay dividends in the future lack of plumbing bills.
Unless you rent, then encourage her to brush her hair in the shower.

Russia has been one big slow societal collapse since forever. In The Big Book of Russian History every chapter starts with “and then somehow things got even worse.”