They’re equating voting Democrat with being part of the DNC’s push to the right. At least that’s the only sense I can make of it
They’re equating voting Democrat with being part of the DNC’s push to the right. At least that’s the only sense I can make of it
He bit multiple babies in a Halloween rampage!
Sprinkles
Tucker is on record that he wants a government that loves him like a parent and takes care of him
The cap is insane, had no idea about it until I was fortunate enough to hit it and I had to ask HR if there was an error. It’s a blatant giveaway to high earners
Use two fingers to fuck the whole page up and leave the map unchanged
You can make a free account, some of the articles just require a free account and others require a paid subscription. I can read this one with my free account
Having a regular schedule of updates helps get individual big fixes or features out faster. You may not notice a difference because you may not experience the bugs that are being fixed. There may be slight changes to features that you don’t use enough to notice. There could even be features that are disabled until they’re remotely enabled. Mobile apps often run A/B tests for changes to see how those changes affect user behavior, so you might be in the “no change” test cohort when you don’t see changes, those changes may never activate on your installation if the test doesn’t pan out.
I recently convinced my team to adopt this practice so I’ve been brushing up on it. When done right it can mean a more stable app and quicker response to issues since it relies heavily on monitoring app performance, bug reports, and user reviews. Communication to users is hard since you don’t want to have every update be “fixed bugs” but it’s also unnecessary to say “fixed an issue where a batch upload job didn’t handle individual errors by retrying” for each change that may not actually impact you as a user but which impacts the business that builds the app.
If NORAD can keep us safe from Santa they can keep us safe from anything
The article dances around the idea of a debtors union using a payment strike for leverage without saying it, which is probably why it’s so vague. That’s an option that the CFPB doesn’t have, plus it wouldn’t be subject to the same bureaucratic process as a government agency. Imagine if every credit card holder were prepared to stop paying until the unions terms are met. One person trying that isn’t getting far, a big enough group would threaten to turn enough valuable debt into junk to force change
Immigrant status is just the start. They don’t care about what laws mean at all, and the crowd cheers for it.
I’ve seen people staple their arms because they couldn’t think of anything better to do. You can have an impulse that you don’t actually want to do but which you follow through on
Damn, Demodex has a looooooong butt!
Like the real Jesus would run as a Democrat. At least with the Devil you know where you stand! /s
She talked about housing costs and child tax credits. They both brought up jobs and inflation. Economic issues that affect US citizens on a day to day basis. Critique the details all you want but that is not “nothing”.
You’re organizing those things, or at least joining others who are organizing, right?
But with all the solids strained out
Does that make Ogg Vorbis some kind of twisted shipping?
Claims made without evidence can be dismissed without evidence
Mfw I’m checking for null