It was more a response to the R&M fandom at the time than the show itself, IIRC. The fandom and hatedoms both grew together in a symbiotic way until the szechuan sauce thing happened, so every meme among the fans was mirrored by the anti-fans and this was one of them.
It's a paraphrased quote from a historian that used to be on the Wikipedia page for the Land Reform Movement. I remember when it first got popular it was two or three paragraphs, but its been whittled down by time. I dunno exactly when NATOpedia got rid of it but I haven't been able to find the original the past couple of times I've looked.
They nailed most of the stereotypes but are Apple and HP really considered partisan by anyone?
I will never forget when this happened under Obama, and he said "this does not mean we are not a triple-A country".
holy shit I was not ready for that lmao
After WW2 at least, yeah.
Also underappreciated is that the worst non-war-related shortages experienced in the USSR happened under Gorbachev and were a direct result of his first privatization reforms.
hey its the thing that was extremely obviously going to happen happening
Plus pressurized pens are useful in more than just zero-g. I used to use one along with a waterproof note pad for note taking in the field. They're also not prohibitively expensive, although the ones from Fisher itself carry a pretty huge brand name markup, other companies sell them for a couple bucks each.
Long story short: an offshoot of the rationalists (the ones who are scared of a hypothetical future AI god torturing their metaverse avatar) got really extreme, insular, and cultlike. This has resulted in numerous deaths, including multiple of their own members, an ICE officer, and the landlord who owned the RV lot that they lived on. A few of the members are in jail, but I think the leader tried to fake their own death and is still on the lam. The story has Manson Family vibes, with a charismatic leader gathering a group of troubled people to their side and pushing them to do violent shit, and in this case that leader is a trans nonbinary vegan.
The games really do pay a lot of attention to accuracy - although it's worth noting that some aspects of their portrayal are disputed by some historians. For example the Christianity thing - not that Christianity wasn't a big part of medieval European life, but most peasants in most of Europe only went to church like once or twice a year for the big holidays, so the portrayal in KCD may not be as accurate as it seems at first glance.
Anyway black people and gay people definitely existed in medieval times so in that respect KCD2 is more accurate than the first one.
At its Mexican premiere on Jan. 15, the French filmmaker responded to the criticism. “The drama of the missing is something that shocks me deeply,” Audiard said. “It’s a tragedy that’s largely invisible outside of Mexico, and my goal was to generate dialogue, not offense.”
I believe that this guy really does believe what he's saying here, but he also said in another interview that he didn't study Mexico or Mexican culture before making the movie because he already knew everything he needed to know and that's just such a typical attitude for a guy like that to have. For starters, the movie's Spanish is apparently really terrible and the accents are all over the place and none of them sound like Mexican accents.
Will the commies choose to respect nature and to leave parks intact for future visitors, or a few moments of atomized self gratification? The answer may surprise you!