drak0bsidian
drak0bsidian OP t1_jdd8pb4 wrote
Reply to comment by Accomplished_Job_225 in TIL of the Pig War, a border dispute between the US and the UK, around Vancouver Island (present-day Canada) and Washington State. The only casualty was a pig, owned by an Irish farmer, which was shot by an American farmer for eating his potatoes. Both countries deployed military troops. by drak0bsidian
No worries. Figured you misread. And to your point, while he was born in a Dutch colony in South America, it became British shortly after.
drak0bsidian OP t1_jdcpevs wrote
Reply to comment by Accomplished_Job_225 in TIL of the Pig War, a border dispute between the US and the UK, around Vancouver Island (present-day Canada) and Washington State. The only casualty was a pig, owned by an Irish farmer, which was shot by an American farmer for eating his potatoes. Both countries deployed military troops. by drak0bsidian
Governor Douglas was not the farmer . . .
drak0bsidian t1_jcfhlrg wrote
Reply to comment by romeozor in TIL that only Nintendo's founder knows what their name means. by johnmyster
Nᴉuǝ-ʇǝu-po¡
drak0bsidian OP t1_ja973yu wrote
Reply to comment by Crustyonrusty in The fence is five feet tall, and not doing much by drak0bsidian
She doesn't, either, but she has respect for food in the barn.
drak0bsidian OP t1_ja9310b wrote
Reply to comment by mr-photo in The fence is five feet tall, and not doing much by drak0bsidian
<cue Mitch Hedberg>
drak0bsidian OP t1_ja8novz wrote
Reply to comment by Halogen12 in The fence is five feet tall, and not doing much by drak0bsidian
True!
drak0bsidian OP t1_ja87u4w wrote
Reply to comment by Wet_Side_Down in The fence is five feet tall, and not doing much by drak0bsidian
Obviously, this is a cat.
drak0bsidian t1_j6ezrw5 wrote
Reply to comment by Own_Comment in It Ends With Us Recent Criticism by hmacias25
We are the 1%!
drak0bsidian OP t1_j642b3r wrote
Reply to comment by ahsataN-Natasha in After 30+ years, 'The Stinky Cheese Man' is aging well by drak0bsidian
I don't remember the first time reading it, but I have a memory from middle school and credit it as introducing me to 'weird' fiction. So good!
drak0bsidian t1_j1rxs3w wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that it's a common misconception that Tennessee Williams choked to death on a bottle cap and that his death report was corrected several months later (in August 1983) to say that he died from a toxic level of Seconal (a barbituary). by [deleted]
Your title says it's a common misconception (a subjective statement) that his death report was corrected to say he died of a barbituary. (Which is not a word. You wanted to say barbiturate.)
drak0bsidian t1_j1bo6ka wrote
Reply to TIL for their size, barnacles possess the longest penis of any animal (up to eight times their body length). by AliensLoveMonkeys
I remember doing a project on barnacles sometime in middle school, and this was my 'fun fact,' to be included for extra credit. I had classmates including their project's animal penis size in their presentations afterwards.
drak0bsidian t1_iyel1h3 wrote
drak0bsidian t1_iy7s9jm wrote
Reply to comment by BrokenEye3 in TIL that the Scotichronicon chronicles a Scottish history starting with its founding by Scota, daughter of an Egyptian pharaoh by yuje
TIL about all this. Thanks.
drak0bsidian t1_iy7ndxb wrote
Reply to comment by J-in-the-UK in TIL that the Scotichronicon chronicles a Scottish history starting with its founding by Scota, daughter of an Egyptian pharaoh by yuje
>But much like the English tale of Gog and Magog, it's entertaining.
What's the English tale? Gog and Magog are from the Torah and other biblical texts.
drak0bsidian t1_iu7mwyv wrote
Being a Jew from Maryland, I do take pride in my home state's early acceptance of religious tolerance, even if it just started with accepting different sects/denominations of Christianity (unlike the other Colonies and early States, which didn't accept Catholics and sometimes other Christian groups).
Plenty of sins in our history, but a good amount of progress, too.
drak0bsidian t1_iu7lzxw wrote
Reply to comment by AllbotsAllday in TIL Jewish persons could not hold public office in Maryland until 1826 by synonyco
>Lived in MD.
Born and raised.
>This is what is taught in state history lessons.
I went to public school grades 2-12 in a county with plenty of Confederate flags and the delusional beliefs to go with them, and I have never heard this. And especially being Jewish, I feel I would remember learning this.
drak0bsidian t1_iu6m9gk wrote
Only you can answer this, but IMO four months is not enough time to differentiate between the first and second readings. Spend more time reading other books on your list, growing and changing as a person, and maybe in another year or two pick it back up.
My favorite books I re-read about once every two or three years. By now there's no more 'deep thinking' that happens, but they're comfort books for me and re-reading them keeps them fresh in my mind for when I'm asked for a recommendation. Sometimes I do get something different from them if I've had major life changes in the interim, like moving, starting a new job, something tragic, etc.
drak0bsidian t1_iu1mrlp wrote
> Neither book has ended with much of cliff hanger or contained a huge conflict.
That's why. Chambers isn't writing a saga - she's giving cozy snapshots into a fictional world. There's minimal conflict and no real villains, and the focus is on the goal of the adventure, not the journey. They're short, sweet, and to the point. Like if Tolkein just skipped to the eagles, LoTR would be the length of a newspaper article.
> Additionally I believe writing such a short piece of work gives her the opportunity to make it as well written as possible, all quality no fluff.
100%
drak0bsidian t1_itvac26 wrote
Reply to Petition for a stoppage on all, "I actually don't think Colleen Hoover is a literary genius" posts, and similar thoughts by [deleted]
But everyone needs to hear my opinion wherein I agree with everything that's already been said! My opinion is fact!
drak0bsidian t1_iss2iys wrote
Reply to TIL about some US Marine named Charles Brown who received the Medal of Honor in 1872, but deserted in Shanghai before he could receive it. by dragoniteftw33
And less than a century later, the Flying Ace came along. Doghouse and all.
drak0bsidian t1_islmp3o wrote
Reply to TIL artist Salvador Dali illustrated a 1969 edition of Alice in Wonderland, with only 2,700 copies printed. It included twelve illustrations and a front-cover etching signed by Dali himself. Signatures of Dali can be spotted throughout, such as the melting clock found at the Mad Tea Party. by PianoCharged
I see rhinoceros!
drak0bsidian OP t1_jdwloqf wrote
Reply to Allow Me To Make a Gentle Plea For More Space Horror by drak0bsidian
Before people jump down my neck, I am not the author. It's just the title of the essay written by someone else.
(Although I do agree with their argument . . .)