“I wanna drink some milk, but it’s so flimmin-flammin hard to open.”
I hear you and am guilty of it myself. I feel like it’s due to the anonymous nature of the internet. I think everyone immediately falls into the category of “peer” before putting a touch more thought into who the actual person (bot/ai) is that wrote the reply. Add that to the fact that most Americans see themselves (as a country) as the king of the world.
Maybe you can try typing with an accent, but I think that’d probably just be seen as a racist American.
Current AI is a glorified predictive text keyboard.
That dude is WAY in to Simulation Theory.
I assume you are referring to supplying weapons to Israel, in which case, do you think Trump (who called Biden a ‘Palestinian’ as an insult during the debate) will be the better choice and stop supplying weapons to Israel?
Jesus Christ! And I thought the Uvalde police were bad!
And that moment lasted as long as the theoretical “now”.
(“Now” never happens because the moment your brain registers that “now” has happened, it’s already “then”)
Since when has not experiencing something, or even having any knowledge of something, prevented the internet from expressing their opinions about it?
So you’re telling me that somewhere at LEGO they actually have a bag of assholes?
Dude, that’s not what melon-baller means.
Everyone is beautiful in the dark.
Mike’s Hard Lemonade dehydrates the victim to the point that the next time they pee it comes out like toothpaste.
*Robocop’s Fleshlight
I’ve found that the reaction to the word “moist” is highly dependent on the context. For example, a cupcake described as moist sparks a feeling of deliciousness, while some potting soil described as moist gives me a sense of completeness or stability (plants typically need moist soil to grow, so it’s a good thing). However, a bus seat described as moist triggers a feeling of revulsion.
Context is key.
Enumclaw checking in.
I like to do it in song:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wmKHHdqwVes