2312 pts ยท November 9, 2013
I don't like writing about myself
Mayhaps he should go to the doc for digestive issues. Doesn't usually take this long for a turd to pass through.
Oh, the infamous Nazi Pebblefling?
Nah, Genshin uses an anime fantasy world drawing from several cultures depending on region. In this case she's just named after the real Escoffier cause she's a highly skilled chef from the in-universe equivalent of France.
There were Nazi judges working in the German legal system until at least the early 70s or so. Including one guy who had made an early career sentencing people to death now being responsible for family law.
You seem to have forgotten that the US invoked Article 5 in order to launch Operation Enduring Freedom. They specifically called on the entirety of NATO to defend them.Sweden wasn't even part of NATO at the time, only a close partner. They were not obligated to actually help and yet they did. And this is how you thank people for fighting and dying in a senseless war that dragged on for years due to failures of the US.You are a wonderful example as to why people have come to resent the US.
Also, to make this clear. I mostly mean in terms of "These are the defences that a creature has past its statblock that you also need to overcome".
I don't think the concept is bad per se as long as you don't take the 1HP part at its word. The best way to use it is to inform a DM's design for bosses and dungeons and as a guide for newer players on how to engage more capable creatures.To use a video game equivalent, it's turning the assault on a dragon's lair into the final mission of Mass Effect 2, where you spend the entire rest of the game preparing for it.
Nothing against you but both as a DM and as a player, I hate that concept and finding out that my DM uses it would be a reason for me to have a repeat of session 0 to talk about campaign expectations again.
Generally you're looking at a tradeoff between being easy to hit with, where larger calibers have an advantage due to their energy retention, and rate of fire where smaller is the way to go due to recoil management, heat management, ammo reserves and how quickly you can load rounds.
Only if it's used to load a machine gun. You shouldn't waste time things that aren't fully automatic against a moving target in a 3D space. Shotguns get a pass for tiny targets at close ranges.But generally, yes. You want larger calibers against aircraft because they keep their speed significantly better and are thus easier to hit with at range. It's part of why most militaries swapped quickly from machine guns to automatic cannons within a few years of planes becoming significant threats.
As for the other bit. Sunday, holiday and night shift extra pay is tax-free up until that portion makes up a certain percentage of your pay. Note that when working a night shift leading into a Sunday or holiday, the first 4 hours after midnight count as Sunday/holiday work too.Saturdays are considered regular work days as per the ArbZG, so anything nicer than for a regular week day there is part of a union agreement or your own contract.Not relevant to you, I know, but might help a friend.
I was speaking legal baseline as per BUrlG and ArbZG. Hence why the minimum vacation time is 24 days, i.e. 4 weeks of 6 days.Anything that's nicer than that, such as 5 days of working with 2 days off or 28-30 days of vacation, is secured through a union's labour agreement or your own contract, if your company is not part of a labour agreement. Though social norm has made the 5 day week the de facto standard, hence why only very few industries still work with a 6 day week as baseline.
Germany has 4 weeks, based on a 6 day week, so 24 days total. But it's more common to have 28-30 days. And 5 days extra if you are disabled.Also, if you get sick during your vacation you get your vacation time back if you present a doctor's note. That one might actually be EU law too.Thanks to unions, my company in particular offers 28 days baseline but you can decide between extra pay or 12 days extra vacation. Night shift also has extra vacation time as incentive next to the increased pay.
They are still full. That's how you carry your reloads.
The Dutch Air Force has ~9000 soldiers and in total, 24 F-16 and 34 F-35.All Dutch Army brigades have been integrated into the German Army. So even though they are only around 15000 actual Dutch soldiers, they have a number of joint Dutch-German units, such as the 414th Tank Battalion and the FlaRakG 1 with its Patriot batteries to shore up their numbers and equipment levels.
Not really. Poland is buying a lot of fancy weaponry but mostly because South Korea gave them a lot of very cheap loans for that gear but they still have severe problems. They are still missing a lot of infrastructur, leading to conscripts having to sleep in unheated garages, and they have neither enough plate carriers nor enough ceramic plates to supply their infantry. Ukrainian troops also recently complained about being sent to train in Poland apparently as their tactics were too outdated.
These systems also often damaged signalling equipment and points. Though those were likely also sabotaged on the way out anyway.
You are aware that coal tar, while indeed being carcinogenic, is an important petrochemical feedstock, yes...? Selling its distillation products is as basic as it gets.
The coal plants that you refer to as being "opened" are reserve plants that were opened temporarily to deal with gas imports from Russia falling away. They are already closed down again.German politicians did ask whether the shut-down nuclear plants could be re-opened instead but the operating companies said no.
Even before that it was just a joke that people then projected health benefits on. Then it was co-opted by the far right.
It's not any older person, which is what you are implying with your phrasing. It is specifically when they are accompanied by their legal guardians. Typically, but of course not always, their parents.
There were even a few positions, like the the one-drop rule, where the Nazis weren't going as far as the Americans did.Effectively, the Nazis were a lot more forgiving of someone having a Jewish grandparent here or there than the Americans were of even a single black person in someone's ancestry.The significant difference is merely that the American far-right did not have the power to initiate an extermination campaign against black people in the same vein as the Holocaust.
I'd reword that a bunch. You don't want the c-suite to be even more interested in keeping things like sexual harassment hidden so that they can keep their bonuses.
That's why they got the customer service response.
That very same Harrier, yes. They weren't that old at the time, with deliveries of the AV-8B starting in 1981. That being said, the last ones in US service are getting retired next year, which will leave Spain as the only country still using them.
In that case the operation is an abject failure because most of the stuff that has been "leaked" is stuff you've been able to find on the first page of google for years, including this particular one, and what little remains is super low level stuff meant for contractors that any semi-decent intelligence service already has. Still not great to post but doesn't warrant nearly the attention it actually gets.
It's still in service with Italy, USMC and Spain, though the former are planning on retiring the last few over the next year. Additionally, Gaijin treats all categories of classified documents the same, whether it is something that is only accessible to the populations of specific nations or top secret. And this manual is IIRC government officials and contractors only.
AV8 aka Harrier. Again some low level document that is technically only accessible to government employees and contractors but doesn't actually say anything of major importance. Same as the last few times WT forums "leaked" something.
Italy and USMC are retiring the last ones over the next year or so. UK already did. This means only Spain has them in service still after that.
Question is only which measurement they got wrong. Did they actually build it too close or is it not deep enough and so it shifted over time? It's stupidity in either case but the type of stupidity is good to know.
Mayhaps he should go to the doc for digestive issues. Doesn't usually take this long for a turd to pass through.
Oh, the infamous Nazi Pebblefling?
Nah, Genshin uses an anime fantasy world drawing from several cultures depending on region. In this case she's just named after the real Escoffier cause she's a highly skilled chef from the in-universe equivalent of France.
There were Nazi judges working in the German legal system until at least the early 70s or so. Including one guy who had made an early career sentencing people to death now being responsible for family law.
You seem to have forgotten that the US invoked Article 5 in order to launch Operation Enduring Freedom. They specifically called on the entirety of NATO to defend them.
Sweden wasn't even part of NATO at the time, only a close partner. They were not obligated to actually help and yet they did. And this is how you thank people for fighting and dying in a senseless war that dragged on for years due to failures of the US.
You are a wonderful example as to why people have come to resent the US.
Also, to make this clear. I mostly mean in terms of "These are the defences that a creature has past its statblock that you also need to overcome".
I don't think the concept is bad per se as long as you don't take the 1HP part at its word.
The best way to use it is to inform a DM's design for bosses and dungeons and as a guide for newer players on how to engage more capable creatures.
To use a video game equivalent, it's turning the assault on a dragon's lair into the final mission of Mass Effect 2, where you spend the entire rest of the game preparing for it.
Nothing against you but both as a DM and as a player, I hate that concept and finding out that my DM uses it would be a reason for me to have a repeat of session 0 to talk about campaign expectations again.
Generally you're looking at a tradeoff between being easy to hit with, where larger calibers have an advantage due to their energy retention, and rate of fire where smaller is the way to go due to recoil management, heat management, ammo reserves and how quickly you can load rounds.
Only if it's used to load a machine gun. You shouldn't waste time things that aren't fully automatic against a moving target in a 3D space. Shotguns get a pass for tiny targets at close ranges.
But generally, yes. You want larger calibers against aircraft because they keep their speed significantly better and are thus easier to hit with at range. It's part of why most militaries swapped quickly from machine guns to automatic cannons within a few years of planes becoming significant threats.
As for the other bit. Sunday, holiday and night shift extra pay is tax-free up until that portion makes up a certain percentage of your pay. Note that when working a night shift leading into a Sunday or holiday, the first 4 hours after midnight count as Sunday/holiday work too.
Saturdays are considered regular work days as per the ArbZG, so anything nicer than for a regular week day there is part of a union agreement or your own contract.
Not relevant to you, I know, but might help a friend.
I was speaking legal baseline as per BUrlG and ArbZG. Hence why the minimum vacation time is 24 days, i.e. 4 weeks of 6 days.
Anything that's nicer than that, such as 5 days of working with 2 days off or 28-30 days of vacation, is secured through a union's labour agreement or your own contract, if your company is not part of a labour agreement.
Though social norm has made the 5 day week the de facto standard, hence why only very few industries still work with a 6 day week as baseline.
Germany has 4 weeks, based on a 6 day week, so 24 days total. But it's more common to have 28-30 days. And 5 days extra if you are disabled.
Also, if you get sick during your vacation you get your vacation time back if you present a doctor's note. That one might actually be EU law too.
Thanks to unions, my company in particular offers 28 days baseline but you can decide between extra pay or 12 days extra vacation. Night shift also has extra vacation time as incentive next to the increased pay.
They are still full. That's how you carry your reloads.
The Dutch Air Force has ~9000 soldiers and in total, 24 F-16 and 34 F-35.
All Dutch Army brigades have been integrated into the German Army. So even though they are only around 15000 actual Dutch soldiers, they have a number of joint Dutch-German units, such as the 414th Tank Battalion and the FlaRakG 1 with its Patriot batteries to shore up their numbers and equipment levels.
Not really. Poland is buying a lot of fancy weaponry but mostly because South Korea gave them a lot of very cheap loans for that gear but they still have severe problems. They are still missing a lot of infrastructur, leading to conscripts having to sleep in unheated garages, and they have neither enough plate carriers nor enough ceramic plates to supply their infantry. Ukrainian troops also recently complained about being sent to train in Poland apparently as their tactics were too outdated.
These systems also often damaged signalling equipment and points. Though those were likely also sabotaged on the way out anyway.
You are aware that coal tar, while indeed being carcinogenic, is an important petrochemical feedstock, yes...? Selling its distillation products is as basic as it gets.
The coal plants that you refer to as being "opened" are reserve plants that were opened temporarily to deal with gas imports from Russia falling away. They are already closed down again.
German politicians did ask whether the shut-down nuclear plants could be re-opened instead but the operating companies said no.
Even before that it was just a joke that people then projected health benefits on. Then it was co-opted by the far right.
It's not any older person, which is what you are implying with your phrasing. It is specifically when they are accompanied by their legal guardians. Typically, but of course not always, their parents.
There were even a few positions, like the the one-drop rule, where the Nazis weren't going as far as the Americans did.
Effectively, the Nazis were a lot more forgiving of someone having a Jewish grandparent here or there than the Americans were of even a single black person in someone's ancestry.
The significant difference is merely that the American far-right did not have the power to initiate an extermination campaign against black people in the same vein as the Holocaust.
I'd reword that a bunch. You don't want the c-suite to be even more interested in keeping things like sexual harassment hidden so that they can keep their bonuses.
That's why they got the customer service response.
That very same Harrier, yes. They weren't that old at the time, with deliveries of the AV-8B starting in 1981. That being said, the last ones in US service are getting retired next year, which will leave Spain as the only country still using them.
In that case the operation is an abject failure because most of the stuff that has been "leaked" is stuff you've been able to find on the first page of google for years, including this particular one, and what little remains is super low level stuff meant for contractors that any semi-decent intelligence service already has. Still not great to post but doesn't warrant nearly the attention it actually gets.
It's still in service with Italy, USMC and Spain, though the former are planning on retiring the last few over the next year. Additionally, Gaijin treats all categories of classified documents the same, whether it is something that is only accessible to the populations of specific nations or top secret. And this manual is IIRC government officials and contractors only.
AV8 aka Harrier. Again some low level document that is technically only accessible to government employees and contractors but doesn't actually say anything of major importance. Same as the last few times WT forums "leaked" something.
Italy and USMC are retiring the last ones over the next year or so. UK already did. This means only Spain has them in service still after that.
Question is only which measurement they got wrong. Did they actually build it too close or is it not deep enough and so it shifted over time? It's stupidity in either case but the type of stupidity is good to know.