Story time 4 comments
lucky11
· 1 year ago
Mine was a gnome. He ran really fast, but his preferred method was jumping from the top of one sign to the next. If there were no signs any fence or pole would work.
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Kids these days 1 comments
lucky11
· 1 year ago
Kill 4k lbs of animals in the hunting mini game, have room for 2 lbs. You died of dysentery.
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Ah yes, wouldn’t want to be breaking the law 2 comments
lucky11
· 1 year ago
I suppose next you're going to tell me I can't use automatic weapons when I commit crimes.
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Edited 1 year ago
Doing it right 3 comments
lucky11
· 1 year ago
I get down playing just how horrible alot of civilizations were/are when you teach kids. The problem comes when you never get around to to teaching it later. Sure, alot of good things happened in history but if you don't teach the atrocities, in enough detail that people get a real grasp on just how bad it was, people can't learn not to repeat them.
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This kid is brutal 1 comments
Helluva guy 2 comments
lucky11
· 1 year ago
The best part is that he plays really well so it's a perfect soundtrack to read the comments.
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Edited 1 year ago
Good to know 3 comments
Fillosuffee vihlunz 1 comments
lucky11
· 2 years ago
All squares are rectangles but not all rectangles are squares. I say this because it may be that all villains are philosophers but not all philosophers are villains.
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New pick-up like just dropped 15 comments
lucky11
· 2 years ago
I find nothing wrong with "canned" answers. They, generally, can be very helpful in giving someone that's not so loquacious a good response. Plus there is the added benefit of it being less likely to insult the person you are speaking to. Can they be really corny? Sure. Sound a bit like a robot? Sure. But like you said, it doesn't mean the person doesn't actually mean what they're saying. I do think that the line seemed rehearsed. I have no real way to describe it other than it doesn't sound like something someone would say in a natural manner.
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Should've triple masked up 5 comments
lucky11
· 2 years ago
The only thing I care about is how the tire on the right actually got those bubbles. Like what is actually happening there? Bad manufacturing? Legitimate but extremely odd wear? Induced? Like how does that happen? What would need to actually do to achieve that result? Just asking for a friend.
Yeah basically 2 comments
lucky11
· 2 years ago
Now I also had to wonder about what kinds of makeup she or her godmother would have used. I had thought it might have been heavy but with some research I learned it was yes/no. Apparently, in Victorian England woman were publicly discouraged from wearing alot of makeup but at the same time encourage to wear whatever they could get away with if it didn't look like a lot of makeup. Fairly interesting article here: https://hair-and-makeup-artist.com/womens-victorian-makeup/
Almost completely useless knowledge but hey that's the best kind right? I now, a 39yr male, know more about the types and uses of makeup in the Victorian era than I did and will likely never use that knowledge again. Cheers!!
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Edited 2 years ago
Almost completely useless knowledge but hey that's the best kind right? I now, a 39yr male, know more about the types and uses of makeup in the Victorian era than I did and will likely never use that knowledge again. Cheers!!
Yeah basically 2 comments
lucky11
· 2 years ago
Okay to be fair some women look completely different with and without makeup. This likely wasn't the case in Cinderella because of when and where the story took place. It likely was the case that simply because of how cleaned up she was vs her normal appearance it would have been that the prince didn't recognize her filthy and covered in ash. The best answer I found as to why no one recognized her was, "In the earlier versions of the story she cleans the fireplace regularly and is often smeared by the ash (and cinders, hence ‘Cinderella’ which isn’t her real name, just a nasty nickname). She does the cooking, over the smoky fire. She does the cleaning. So she’s grubby, dirty, ashy and smokey. All the time, for years. They’ve forgotten what she used to look like, and she’s grown up and changed a little.
The fairy godmother cleans her up: without the smudges, and with clean hair and nice clothes, she’s not easy to recognize, especially as they don’t expect to see her there."
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Edited 2 years ago
The fairy godmother cleans her up: without the smudges, and with clean hair and nice clothes, she’s not easy to recognize, especially as they don’t expect to see her there."
New pick-up like just dropped 15 comments
lucky11
· 2 years ago
It sounds like a rehearsed answer designed to diffuse a situation. Also, politely and plainly describing any issue you have with a man is certainly going to elicit better response than vaguely hinting and getting mad when they don't fix the issue.
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The choice is yours 7 comments
lucky11
· 2 years ago
6 months? Is that supposed to be old? Pretty sure I go through, with regular use, a toothbrush every few years. They certainly don't look like that after six months.
Stolened 6 comments
lucky11
· 2 years ago
There's an MLP episode called Filly Vanilli, plot centers around about lip synching
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Stolened 6 comments
lucky11
· 2 years ago
There's an MLP episode called Filly Vanilli, plot centers around about lip synching
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Source: It was revealed to me in a dream 1 comments
lucky11
· 2 years ago
"Beauty is in the eye of the beholder" meaning it is absolutely subjective and fact checkers have no business butting their stupid noses in the subjective. Before anyone comments, yes, there are trends to beauty and common things humans tend to find attractive but none are universal. We do find beauty "standards" in societies but again they are subjective as the standards evolve and change even in those societies.