Thank you, it's frustrating seeing (almost) everyone call them AI. If/when actual AI comes into existence I think a lot of people are going to miss the implications as they've become used to every LLM and its grandmother being called AI.
Was raised going to church each sunday, but approaching confirmation age I realised I couldn't mesh faith with my understanding of the world. That was it for me really, I'm quite open to the idea of god(s), ghosts, magic or other forms of the supernatural, but until there's actual proof, I can't believe in it.
Buy concert tickets if you want to support musicians, streaming income doesn't really factor into it afaik.
Oh damn, didn't know he'd written more than the original 3. I absolutely adored Garth Nix when I was younger, the keys to the kingdom series too. Might have to revisit and add the last two abhorsen books to the collection.
Weasley vibes.
Fun fact, there's around 2% of people that don't produce smell when they sweat. The smell comes from bacteria that eat a certain chemical in sweat, and the folks don't produce it, i.e. no bacteria or smell.
It might be more catharsis than unwinding, but dark souls/sekiro. I've been through them enough times that it's just comfortable.
For trebuchets at least, they were only siege weapons, took a long time to both assemble and fire. Though I must concede they were better than melee weapons for knocking down walls.
It's not a debate skill issue, it's an education issue. What bad faith actors do when pretending to debate is just real-time trolling, they're not interested in debate, and debating lends legitimacy to their idiocy. "Don't feed the troll." People need to educated enough that they themselves walk away from disingenuous debates and stop listening.
Responding with violence when your beliefs are disrespected is trying to enforce your beliefs on others.
In French (and probably many other languages) first person plural is more polite. People in England started defaulting to "you" as it was a safer bet socially, and "thou" fell out of use.
English also used thorn (þ) before for "th" but printing presses didn't, and substituted "y", which I suspect contributed.
Many internet-goers like to give pedantry a hard time, but I just want to let you know that I love it and all the niche facts it brings.