You could set it to use your own DNS server, and have the server block anything not on a whitelist.
You could set it to use your own DNS server, and have the server block anything not on a whitelist.
In the context of a semi-nomadic culture that had just conquered the urban Canaanites, pigs were city animals distinct from the nomadic sheep and goats—a ban on pork would prevent cultural assimilation. Same with the ban on shellfish that would have been standard in the coastal cities.
For a parallel, look at segregation-era white Americans banning music and other cultural pratices associated with African-Americans.
So… a business card?
If n is the day the item is introduced, the total quantity is 42-(n-6.5)2.
The Harappan language—then you could decipher the script of the Indus Valley civilization.
Interesting approach—to detect fake news by simulating humans’ reaction to it rather than judging the content itself.
while Baz insists he has nothing against crows, it’s the mess they leave behind that has people crying foul.
That’s what I’m secretly training the crows for.
I doubt the falconer would have any issue with me—I’m helping to keep them employed.
I’m indifferent to squirrels… but my city has hired a falconer to scare the crows away with hawks, so now the crows symbolize the oppressed masses being persecuted by the state.
A crow-calling whistle and a small tin of peanuts.
Blood Meridian as an illustrated children’s book.
What’s the purpose—research? Tax evasion? Shits and giggles?
Ukraine should offer the North Koreans political asylum if they defect.
Not with a typewriter, though.
Yeah, that’s why we need at least… two of them.
You know that there are two unrelated words, and you’ve seen two different spellings—it’s a natural assumption that the latter stems from the former.
Why so many people would pair them up the same (etymologically unsupported) way, I don’t know… maybe we’re used to correlating words relating to art with French, and assuming that words with “ou” come from French as well (and this case just happens to be an exception).
I use “mold” for both, and regard “mould” as the British spelling for both.
But the etymologies are interesting—the verb comes from French modle, while the fungus comes from late Middle English mould. So if anything, your assumed distinction is etymologically reversed.
One issue specific to the Fediverse is that each instance and each community might have its own standard for what it considers “credible”—and part of another user’s credibility score might come from users on instances with which yours isn’t federated and doesn’t share information.
If nothing else, it’s diverting views and revenue from whatever genuine right-wing media they’d be watching otherwise.