In the US the politicians are chosen via (fair) primaries.
Is there a place called "US" where this is true? Because it's absolutely not the case in the United States.
I mean, yeah, you can win a primary, but it's hardly a fair contest. The elites are still the ones who decide who gets funding and endorsements.
His other comment is also a 100% mind-reading sperg-out.
I really don't follow Candace much so maybe I missed the part where she claimed that she wanted people to be killed and lose their jobs, but I'm pretty sure that never happened.
(the "dungeons" in TOTK were a joke, among other things)
What? You thought "look in correct direction to figure out where you need to go on the map that's pretty clearly marked, then go there, then flip a switch" was weak? You weren't excited by opening a chest and finding ... some arrows or Zonai parts?
I just played through Majora's Mask again and am nearly done with Minish Cap and they both just make me sad at the state of video games today. Don't get me wrong, both BotW and TotK did some things extremely well and are impressive technical achievements, but they didn't even bother to try to do any of the things that I care about in a Zelda game.
A reference to people discussing topics regarding actors that have any link, tenuous or otherwise, to Judaism. In this case Israel's sacred status as "our most important ally" while they use all of our aid money and (stolen) military technology to blow up Palestinians.
Well you can, and they're trying to. We'll see how successful they are, but if their support doesn't collapse over this (spoiler: it won't), it'll be swept under the rug and forgotten forever.
I don't even care about the thousands of children (I also don't actually believe the official numbers. By the time this is over the death toll will probably be around 6 million, depending on who you ask). The children would grow up to be as terrible as the parents.
As far as I'm concerned, let them fight. Both sides are awful. I don't care if Israel "wins" -- I just want to quit sending them both money.
Ian Smith goes on the Hodge Twins podcast and discusses running for office and how AIPAC interferes in our elections, among other things, including "if a man enters a woman's bathroom they should have their ass beaten on sight."
Hodge Twins put on a pretty good show in general. They get more laughs out of me than pretty much everything else I watch, combined.
I've been meaning to hook up the PS1 and play through Symphony of the Night again.
Also, Eternal Darkness for the Gamecube.