6309 pts · March 28, 2014
The worst of course being the Isle of Man which is colour coded as if it were a part of England
The graphic is incorrect as the image of "Great Britain" shows many islands (e.g. Skye, Anglesey, the Orkneys, etc) that aren't GB
Went there last summer, along with Clovelly and Bude. I loved it down there.
Well, for a start it's inside the grounds of Tintagel Castle on an island / peninsula with only a bridge for access
What is the purpose of the 2A then? As you've said, a ban on guns won't prevent criminals from owning guns [to use against the government]
Ghostbusters? Red Dawn? Ca$h? The Huntsman movies (plural, lmao)?
Ah, but as Banchels has established, anti-gun laws won't prevent people getting guns to fight off government tyranny, so why bother with it?
Okay, but we've established that laws don't prevent criminals from getting guns so the 2A doesn't help you getting guns to fight the G
The majority of injuries and deaths in elevators are caused by trapped people trying to escape rather than waiting for help
I believe that more crimes are stopped by civilians with guns than committed by them because the police are civilians with guns ;)
So what you're saying is, the second amendment is pointless?
They're not writing English
It's not slang, it's Scots. The word comes from Middle English and words of similar etymology are used in various Germanic languages
I dinnae ken
The fuck kindae accent is that? Cockney?
Cross contamination from shared oil means they might not be considered vegan, depending on one's viewpoint
Pretty much, aye. Naecunt, everycunt, that sorta thing are fairly common
I think it's fine, French people use it all the time when speaking ESL
My favourite is eastern / central Europeans who've lived here long enough to get that hybrid accent between Scots and eg Czech
Invernesian is my favourite accent in the world, but Aberdonian is comedy gold
Yeah but it should be 2001/9/13
You can easily fit a whole adult head inside the barrel of the Sturmtiger. Source: visited Bovington Tank Museum
#27 if you're an adult playing Jenga you should be using chess clocks, makes the game much more fun
That's actually a folk etymology ; the phrase predates fighter aircraft by several decades.
The rest are still people who define themselves by their enjoyment of a book for 11 year olds though
He wasn't killed before he got to power though
Right, but why use the French name for the country rather than the English or the country's endonym?
The fuck is "SUI"? Shouldn't it be some abbreviation of Confederation Helvetica?
Also "show don't tell". Having a bunch of mooks get owned by a monster is a cliché for a reason
Broken 5e characters have nothing on 3.5 monsters like Locate City or Pun Pun or shit like that
The worst of course being the Isle of Man which is colour coded as if it were a part of England
The graphic is incorrect as the image of "Great Britain" shows many islands (e.g. Skye, Anglesey, the Orkneys, etc) that aren't GB
Went there last summer, along with Clovelly and Bude. I loved it down there.
Well, for a start it's inside the grounds of Tintagel Castle on an island / peninsula with only a bridge for access
What is the purpose of the 2A then? As you've said, a ban on guns won't prevent criminals from owning guns [to use against the government]
Ghostbusters? Red Dawn? Ca$h? The Huntsman movies (plural, lmao)?
Ah, but as Banchels has established, anti-gun laws won't prevent people getting guns to fight off government tyranny, so why bother with it?
Okay, but we've established that laws don't prevent criminals from getting guns so the 2A doesn't help you getting guns to fight the G
The majority of injuries and deaths in elevators are caused by trapped people trying to escape rather than waiting for help
I believe that more crimes are stopped by civilians with guns than committed by them because the police are civilians with guns ;)
So what you're saying is, the second amendment is pointless?
They're not writing English
It's not slang, it's Scots. The word comes from Middle English and words of similar etymology are used in various Germanic languages
I dinnae ken
The fuck kindae accent is that? Cockney?
Cross contamination from shared oil means they might not be considered vegan, depending on one's viewpoint
Pretty much, aye. Naecunt, everycunt, that sorta thing are fairly common
I think it's fine, French people use it all the time when speaking ESL
My favourite is eastern / central Europeans who've lived here long enough to get that hybrid accent between Scots and eg Czech
Invernesian is my favourite accent in the world, but Aberdonian is comedy gold
Yeah but it should be 2001/9/13
You can easily fit a whole adult head inside the barrel of the Sturmtiger. Source: visited Bovington Tank Museum
#27 if you're an adult playing Jenga you should be using chess clocks, makes the game much more fun
That's actually a folk etymology ; the phrase predates fighter aircraft by several decades.
The rest are still people who define themselves by their enjoyment of a book for 11 year olds though
He wasn't killed before he got to power though
Right, but why use the French name for the country rather than the English or the country's endonym?
The fuck is "SUI"? Shouldn't it be some abbreviation of Confederation Helvetica?
Also "show don't tell". Having a bunch of mooks get owned by a monster is a cliché for a reason
Broken 5e characters have nothing on 3.5 monsters like Locate City or Pun Pun or shit like that