Personally, I don't watch her vids, but I did see Gundam's Quality Content stream last week which had her as a guest. If you're that curious, you could skim that stream; iirc, she talked a bit about her past, something about being married for 6 years but it didn't work out etc.
Here's an article on it. If you ignore the AP's typical leftist downplaying and peruse the text, you'll see where they admit that it includes refugees and asylees who've been given the stamp of approval. It'll also include Obama's DACAs, when the subversive politicians inevitably allow them to legally own firearms.
The Lost Years series of TOS novels were good, covering the events before the first Star Trek movie.
Additionally, I remember Death Count and Shell Game as being particularly enthralling.
I recently finished Atlas Shrugged, and am currently reading Star Wars Dark Forces: Rebel Agent.
When I think of Sweden, I always tend to think of grenades.
Hand Grenades and Gang Violence Rattle Sweden’s Middle Class.
The first thing that came to mind was the demoralization angle, and upon browsing the article, that seems to be the author's point. Gaining power by committing evil publicly seems to be right in their wheelhouse.
Probably the best line in the article: "It's like, 'Wow, I have a Black princess that looks like me and [this] really helps us relay the message that, you know, swimming isn't just like people drowning, and [Black people] can do it too," says Tucker.
Had a brief look through my bookmarks, and found a few archives I had saved. Warframe Moderator’s Authoritarian Censorship Spawns Community Backlash. Warframe Chat Mod Controversy Erupts Following Server 69 Censorship. Warframe Player Was Temp Suspended By Staff For Joking About “The Big Gay”.
I'm looking forward to seeing Shin Kamen Rider next month in theaters, directed and written by Hideaki Anno of Neon Genesis Evangelion fame. Apart from that, the next Mission Impossible movie looks like it might be good; they even ditched JJ Abrams' Bad Robot Productions.
These days, mostly No Man's Sky when I get the time. I still need to get back to finishing Recettear and Diablo 1 Belzebub though.
Well, there's no maid cosplay, but Kyle Dunnigan's got you covered on Trans Trump.
Offhand, Glenn Youngkin comes off as a RINO, and frankly seems like a bad choice to laud in this type of article. What does it matter if the winner has an R next to their name, when they're inevitably going to stab you in the back when it counts...
When reached for comment, Pool fervently denied telling Johnson about a "race war" and called any suggestion he had "insane," citing his content and mixed-race heritage.
Well, citing his heritage certainly sounds like Tim. The entire piece reads like the Daily Beast went grievance shopping for people Tim's screwed over throughout the years, and amped-up the hyperbole. Guy's too palatable/effective at reaching the normies with the basics, so he's a threat to some of their propaganda. Overall, as hit pieces go, it is a fairly amusing bit of character assassination.
Rather surprising they'd bother to link to Tim's email responses. You'd think they wouldn't want the chance for their audience to see that Tim shares some of their asinine views, like "The Capitol Rioters deserve prison and I look forward to their convictions" and "Also please include I think we should abolish the police and prisons and we need a green new deal."
Well, I recently finished Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy, and I'm currently playing through Control: Ultimate Edition.
Pretty sure I don't have to lead with anything, given that you should be able to parse a press release for the actual letter they sent, particularly when they link the letter in brackets which say 'Click here to read the letter from Jewish organizations to the White House'.
But hey, if you want to talk numbers, let's talk numbers: 20/49 are national organizations, and of the state/regional/local, only 12/49 are the local chapters of Bend the Arc. If you like, let's exclude those 12 local chapters, so only 37 national/state groups of indeterminate size, yet who claim in their letter to represent millions, are advocating for the subversion of US immigration law on the basis of their religion/history. Precise enough for you?
Let's see, DC released some comics, although I can't really remember most of them being remarkable, apart from the In Valen's Name series, which was rather good.
As for the novels, a couple of trilogies were written after the series ended, all of which are worth reading and continue the story/fill in some blanks: Legions of Fire, Technomage (best read after watching Crusade), and Psi Corps. There were numbered standalone novels as well, but they were of dubious quality and mostly non-canon, apart from The Shadow Within (best read before the Technomage trilogy), and To Dream in the City of Sorrows (covers Sinclair's journey after the end of Season 1). There are also some canon short stories floating around the internet as well.
It's been a while since I last saw it, but I remember liking it a great deal at the time. The game show episode definitely stands out as one of the more unique oddities of the anime. I might give this one a rewatch fairly soon.
I've been re-reading Stephen King's Dark Tower series; currently I'm up to Book 3, The Waste Lands.