underthingy
underthingy t1_jdaxqw7 wrote
Reply to comment by Level3Kobold in TIL that Al Pacino boycotted the 45th academy awards in 1973, because despite having more screen time than Marlon Brando, he was nominated for best supporting actor and not best actor. by VengefulMight
Actually by that metric the ring is the protagonist.
underthingy t1_jd71iuw wrote
Reply to comment by TobbRobb in LPT: don't assume dishonesty or malice. You and others' lives will be much happier. by Alcoraiden
Nope.
underthingy t1_jd6l64t wrote
Reply to comment by Alain_Durwoden in LPT: don't assume dishonesty or malice. You and others' lives will be much happier. by Alcoraiden
Why though? Malice is at least understandable.
Ignorance in a lot of cases in unforgivable.
underthingy t1_jb7b0uc wrote
Reply to comment by Jamma-Lam in Humans Started Riding Horses 5,000 Years Ago, New Evidence Suggests by geoxol
Except for aurochs. We made them smaller.
underthingy t1_ja4oayj wrote
Reply to comment by 2KoolAwYe in TIL there's a rock formation in Saudi Arabia about 6 meters high and 9 meters wide, split curiously in half and balanced on two small, natural pedestals. The origin of the Al Naslaa rock formation is unknown. by OccludedFug
That it contributed in some way to the current situation they are in.
Not that it was the sole cause of the destruction of the entire Saudi history as you are claiming.
underthingy t1_ja2kfgd wrote
Is this an AI generated post?
underthingy t1_ja183d4 wrote
Reply to comment by 2KoolAwYe in TIL there's a rock formation in Saudi Arabia about 6 meters high and 9 meters wide, split curiously in half and balanced on two small, natural pedestals. The origin of the Al Naslaa rock formation is unknown. by OccludedFug
You should learn how to read. That comment doesn't say what you are claiming it does.
underthingy t1_ja13xvx wrote
Reply to comment by 2KoolAwYe in TIL there's a rock formation in Saudi Arabia about 6 meters high and 9 meters wide, split curiously in half and balanced on two small, natural pedestals. The origin of the Al Naslaa rock formation is unknown. by OccludedFug
Again strawmanning.
>Our argument is that colonialism didn't directly destroy the entirety of Saudian Arabian history
I never said it did.
>You know, rebutting the original point being made, instead of the one you switched to after realising the mistake but not admitting it
I have checked back through the thread and noone made that claim.
underthingy t1_ja0y0gk wrote
Reply to comment by eggsssssssss in TIL there's a rock formation in Saudi Arabia about 6 meters high and 9 meters wide, split curiously in half and balanced on two small, natural pedestals. The origin of the Al Naslaa rock formation is unknown. by OccludedFug
Way to strawman.
I never said anything about race or class, or even called them victims.
Is your argument that European colonialism in the middle east had zero impact on Saudi Arabia?
underthingy t1_ja0x1gz wrote
underthingy t1_ja0tthk wrote
Reply to comment by HalflinsLeaf in TIL there's a rock formation in Saudi Arabia about 6 meters high and 9 meters wide, split curiously in half and balanced on two small, natural pedestals. The origin of the Al Naslaa rock formation is unknown. by OccludedFug
That doesn't mean that the destabilisation of the surrounding region caused by European colonialism hasn't affected it.
underthingy t1_ja0lc9d wrote
Reply to comment by TheCloudFestival in TIL there's a rock formation in Saudi Arabia about 6 meters high and 9 meters wide, split curiously in half and balanced on two small, natural pedestals. The origin of the Al Naslaa rock formation is unknown. by OccludedFug
Looks more like a stereolith to me.
underthingy t1_ja0kytb wrote
underthingy t1_j9e7vv2 wrote
Reply to TIL with Scallops, only the abductor muscle is eaten by humans. The rest of the meat, which is edible, may contain a buildup of toxins, and is discarded at sea. by testhec10ck
TIL only people in America are humans and everyone else is something else.
underthingy t1_j93n2ai wrote
Reply to comment by beebeeep in TIL about lipograms: written work in which a particular letter is intentionally omitted. Ernest Wright wrote his 1939 novel Gadsby without the letter "e," and his book was 50,000 words long. by class-in-a-glass
There's like 10 on the front cover!
underthingy t1_j6m6jg0 wrote
Reply to comment by blade_torlock in Walking parrots by FrankieGS
There's 2 parrots. Do you not know what a parrot is?
underthingy t1_j28930z wrote
Reply to comment by CryptoScamee42069 in TIL of the neenish tart - a type of pastry popular only in New Zealand, Australia and ... the Falkland Islands. by ScissorNightRam
In which state?
underthingy t1_j2891n2 wrote
Reply to comment by Noahed in TIL of the neenish tart - a type of pastry popular only in New Zealand, Australia and ... the Falkland Islands. by ScissorNightRam
Australian that is half kiwi here, never heard of them.
underthingy t1_j1sj7z3 wrote
Reply to comment by bridgerberdel in Quantifying the benefits of inefficient walking: Monty Python inspired laboratory based experimental study by chrisdh79
I live in Australia I always try to park in the shadiest spot.
underthingy t1_j1c4cvj wrote
Reply to This Christmas tree can play animations by seanhodgins
This Christmas tree can play animations.
underthingy t1_iuhlbl2 wrote
Reply to comment by DroolingSlothCarpet in LPT: Measure the span of your fingers for an easy “on hand” ruler. by Juanitothegreat
My hand is about 23cm from thumb tip to pinky tip when stretched out. I used it to measure things fairly regularly.
underthingy t1_it4tng4 wrote
Reply to comment by Anomaly-Friend in Aeromine says they have solved many of the problems that have long made domestic rooftop wind power compare poorly to solar panels. They claim their "motionless" rooftop wind generators deliver up to 50% more energy than a solar array of the same price while taking up just 10% of the roof space. by lughnasadh
That wasnt an argument though. Language is important and you made the same claim (it's not a wind turbine) in multiple comments.
If no one corrects you, other people might believe you and start parroting it.
>versus the conventional wind turbine.
Had you used this phrasing or similar in your other comments we wouldn't be having this conversation.
underthingy t1_it4nvxl wrote
Reply to comment by Anomaly-Friend in Aeromine says they have solved many of the problems that have long made domestic rooftop wind power compare poorly to solar panels. They claim their "motionless" rooftop wind generators deliver up to 50% more energy than a solar array of the same price while taking up just 10% of the roof space. by lughnasadh
"a machine for producing continuous power in which a wheel or rotor, typically fitted with vanes, is made to revolve by a fast-moving flow of water, steam, gas, air, or other fluid."
So it's a rotor, powered by air, that's generating power? Pretty much the definition of wind turbine.
underthingy t1_iszhqod wrote
Reply to comment by CounterfeitLesbian in TIL that in an effort to save $43.5, the Canadian Mint mailed the dies of the new $1 coin via a discount courier over using an armored car- which were promptly stolen and have never been found. This would lead to the adoption of the Loonie design as an emergency replacement. by Padgriffin
Yes we did.
underthingy t1_jdb593k wrote
Reply to comment by Sad-Faithlessness377 in TIL that Al Pacino boycotted the 45th academy awards in 1973, because despite having more screen time than Marlon Brando, he was nominated for best supporting actor and not best actor. by VengefulMight
Nah, he just sits there doing nothing.
The ring actually imposes its will on the ring bearers and makes them act how it wants.