The biggest, flattest, thinnest sheet you can make.
The biggest, flattest, thinnest sheet you can make.
It’s not just about if her wins, it’s about what those states might try to pull if they lose.
That’s your own post that you made at the same time you made this comment. You wouldn’t be shilling now, would you?
Every player on the same switch plays on the same island. Only one player can actually play at a time, but another can join on a separate controller and act as a sort of sidekick that can fish and pick vegetables and such. My husband and I like to split of the gardening across the island then take turns helping each other with our respective sections.
Animal Crossing sorta has 2p mode. The second player can’t walk too far from the main player and has more limited gameplay options, but it can be fun to run around and fish together.
Such as?
Finally got RDR2 and holy shit this game is amazing
Oh that’s Ohkay, yoo know we all have days like thiat
Removed by mod
A lot of it isn’t actually money. The US keeps a massive stockpile of weapons and equipment in storage in Isreal. The government hands over the keys to a few trucks and some parts, then writes it off as $X value in military hardware.
Buy the cheapest thing that’ll get the job done, then if/when that breaks, buy the best you can.
As far as I’m concerned, HL Alyx IS HL3
I use emojis to tag people on Connect so I know who the clowns are
Funny you should ask
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2015/04/30/vietnamese-see-u-s-as-key-ally/
Yet four decades after the controversial war, the Vietnamese public sees the United States as a helpful ally and even embraces some of the core tenets of capitalism.
Today, the Vietnamese view the U.S. in a positive light. About three-quarters of Vietnamese (76%) expressed a favorable opinion of the U.S. in a 2014 Pew Research Center survey. More highly educated people (89%) gave the U.S. especially high marks. Young people ages 18-29 were particularly affirmative (89%), but the U.S. is seen positively even by those who are old enough to have lived through the Vietnam War. Among those ages 50 and older, more than six-in-ten rated the U.S. favorably.
The bricks are throwing me off, but it could be the camera quality.
Are we sure this isn’t a dream?
based