To be fair, EVERYTHING is more expensive than beans (50¢ a lb Chicagoland cooked), rice ($33¢ a lb cooked), and broccoli $1 a lb frozen)
To be fair, EVERYTHING is more expensive than beans (50¢ a lb Chicagoland cooked), rice ($33¢ a lb cooked), and broccoli $1 a lb frozen)
How do you beat traffic if everyone does it?
deleted by creator
The one that got me most was Thumping, the standard operating procedure for killing baby piglets. They grab them by the back of the head and smash them into concrete until they’re dead, depicted ~6 minutes into Dominion
For me it was thumping, the industry standard way of killing piglets by grabbing them by the back of the head and smashing them into concrete until they’re dead. That or the CO_2 acidifying every mucus lining in a pig’s body, chemically burning them alive while they suffocate to death because people get enjoyment out of it
Nah, don’t you understand? I’m literally designed to hunt and kill animals, just like other predators.
This gun? Well how else am i supposed to kill them? I don’t have any sort of claws or sharp teeth or anything designed to kill animals for sustinence
What do you mean why am i cooking the meat? I’ll get sick if i don’t, just like every other predator on the planet. Plus, i couldn’t even chew it if it were raw.
And all that is assuming natural = moral, which, if your moral code is equivilant to a lions, is not compatible with society. But it’s convenient to not change most people’s behavior, so they’re cool ignoring the logical conclusion of that argument.
In that case it should be in your logs. I believe the default is /var/log/dmesg.log*, depending on how many rotations have occured since the error
You’re only showing us part pf the error. There should be more above the list pf modules loaded that will provide useful information
dmesg > dmesg-out will give the entire dmesg log as a text file, and you can cut out the irrelevant parts
How does cutting peer review time help get more content? The throughput will still be the same regardless of if it takes 15 days or a year to complete a peer review