That's not what he said. He said humans are Digimon, not Pokémon. Pokémon are Yugiohs, duh.
Well, the human eye ruptures at around 50 PSI. I'll spare you the math, but if you can throw it at a wall so it hits over 45 mph, it'll splat. Otherwise, it'll bounce.
I think it's mostly an unintended benefit. These scams are usually run out of countries with English as a second language, so you get some grammatical errors in translation. It does increase the conversion rate, though, so they don't bother spending extra money getting a native English speaker to copy edit.
The dude could probably take out your lungs and heart with his eyes closed.
To be fair, so could I.
It's really a pale blue. If it were white, the visible spectrum would be pretty even, but you can see the graph is higher on the blue edge and lower on the red edge. There's enough green and red to brighten it a lot, but it's definitely blue.
In fact, the sun's surface temperature is around 5800K, and you can look up what color that actually is wherever you go light bulb shopping.
This shows the colors based on temperature, and the sun is firmly in the "Day White." It's called white, but you can see it's pretty clearly blue, especially next to the "Direct Sun" color.
I agree with the overall sentiment. The money you're saving in cat food is only going to lead to vet bills later on.
I'll fight you on whether or not chonkers can be cute, though.
Make sure your litter box is clean, and that your cat thinks it's clean. Cats want to be able to bury their waste, and if there's too much in the box for the cat's liking, they'll go somewhere else, and it's often right outside the box if there isn't something else they could use. It's important to understand that it's the cat's opinion that matters here, not yours: you may need to scoop it every day, even if there's only a little in it.
You may also need to move the litter box and clean the previous area, including and most importantly the place outside the litter box that gets used. Use vinegar if you can: it has a strong smell that cats don't like, but it won't hurt them like bleach can. Lemon juice works well for this, also. What this will do is make sure that this area doesn't smell like a place they have used as a litter box before.
The terms for "clockwise" and "Counterclockwise" originated long before clocks. Clockwise was originally called "Sunwise" and followed the movement of the shadow around a sundial.
Counterclockwise was "widdershins", from a Middle Low German phrase meaning "against the way."
We don't use "earthwise" because from our perspective, the earth doesn't rotate.
Well... The main villain is black.
Something about using the power of God under direction of what's presumably a traditional monarchy to fight the forces of anarchy, also.
But mostly the main villain thing.
Well, of course not. It's not called No Labor Day.
Depends on the character, to be honest. My wizard, I've gone out of my way to avoid describing her to the rest of the group because she's very bland, so nobody really can agree on what she looks like. I wouldn't describe her changing clothes, or even really doing anything that called attention to her.
My druid builds her entire wardrobe out of random trash that she finds, and it's never quite the same from day to day. For her, I'd absolutely describe exactly what she's dressed up in.
From the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, in regards to the ADA:
Essentially, if you are disabled, you have a disability, whether recognized or not. If you are not disabled, then you do not have a disability.
Under this definition, something like asthma, which is fairly common, can be a disability when it comes to strenuous activities, but isn't something that is immediately obvious to someone just passing on the street.
As far as it being ablist to assume that someone not showing signs of disability isn't disabled? No, that's silly. Not believing them if they tell you they can't run a mile because they have asthma? Still no, that's skepticism.
Ablism would be something like planning a company outing, and choosing the location up a tall, steep hill when other options were available, specifically because you don't like the fact that your coworker has asthma.