Former manufacturing engineer here. Every White Mystery batch is basically a one-of-one. It’s just a way to use up the leftovers from different flavor batches before the dye is added.
Working at a McDonald’s right out of high school, had an old man come in asking for a “Big Mac with extra Big Mac”.
Do you mean with extra sauce?
“No”
Did you mean an extra patty?
“No”
Did you want 2 Big Macs then?
“You don’t know how to do your job” and walks on out.
@AmaliaSolaris And make it multiplayer. A co-op thing where two players make moves on the real time map clearing out objectives. Maybe even make it vs compatible as well?
The Boise, Idaho area was hit with one of the worst summer storms ever recorded yesterday evening. Some areas had more than 8 inches of hail in less than an hour.
@ihyomeo As an Idahoan, i see news at least once a week that a “local man charged with sexual assault against a minor” and half the time its church related. This isn’t going to be used to shoot their preachers, but trans people they are trying to associate as child sex pests for existing
LISTEN: Jacob Rockwell was fined for running a red light in Pensacola, Florida.
Only thing is Jacob wasn’t in Florida, he was in Alabama.
He sounded off at a local city meeting recently and his concerns go beyond just one citation.
While throwing Fortuna to see the new cutscenes, every. single. one. of the crew won their 1v1s. I’ve seen one sometimes get the win 1 out of every 10-15 runs.
They never even asked me to help them. They are just built different.
I love this game so much #StarFox
A Justice Department lawyer just signed a memo saying disabled Americans have no right to live in their own homes. In the same document, she admits no court in the country agrees with her.
Read that again. A government official wrote down, in black and white, that her own argument is wrong by every legal standard of the last thirty years, and she made it anyway.
Here is what it means in plain terms.
Right now, 8.4 million people get help that lets them stay in their own homes. Aides who help them dress. Care that lets them work, see friends, raise their kids, sleep in their own beds at night.
This memo tells states they can cut all of it.
And if they cut it, where do those people go? Into nursing homes. Into institutions. Into facilities where someone else decides when you wake up, what you eat, who your roommate is, whether you go outside today.
A lawyer who has visited people locked in these places said their whole world shrinks to one hallway. That is the future this memo is opening the door to.
Keeping people in their own homes is cheaper. In one case, home care cost under $7,500 a year. The nursing home would have cost close to $50,000. The cruel option is also the expensive one. They want to spend more money to make people's lives worse.
So why?
Because last summer Trump signed an order to deal with homelessness by force, by sweeping people off the streets and committing them. He said it out loud during the campaign: the mentally ill belong back in institutions.
The only thing standing in the way was the law that says people deserve to live in their own communities.
This memo is how they get around it. And it landed the same week Republicans slashed Medicaid, giving every cash-strapped state the perfect excuse to start cutting.
A think tank drew up the plan. A lawyer wrote the memo. A president signed the order. Three signatures, and millions of people could lose the right to their own front door.
We are about to spend the summer celebrating 250 years of American freedom.
Some Americans are about to find out it doesn't include them.