I'm in the US, so no seasons are available at all for me, but it looks like season 5 might not be available for anyone, yet: https://www.whats-on-netflix.com/news/will-yellowstone-season-5-come-to-netflix-where-to-stream-it-elsewhere/
doughless
My house is over 30 years old, and the studs are 24" apart. Frustrating when I need to hang things built for 16". 😭
Unfortunately, a tie means it doesn't set precedence, and Justice Barrett likely won't recuse herself on the next case.
Judge Howell, probably. 😭
Even then, he was still lying because he added the disclaimer "if she wasn't my daughter."
They could use loginctl enable-persist if they want a user service to run at boot. I use it for my home nas server, just to make it slightly easier to manage my non-root services.
That'll be 2,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,001 rubles.
The only 7-seater available in 2018 was the Model X. Yes, it was clear he was an asshole as far back as 2018, but he was still a huge proponent of mitigating climate change (in hindsight it was clearly a grift for him), so at the time I thought it was a net positive. I used up a lot of my savings to afford it, so it would be difficult for me to switch to anything that isn't a gas car.
I switched to EVs in 2014, and went fully electric in 2018. My problem is that there still isn't a good alternative I can use for long distance trips for my family of 7. I'd love to switch to something like the Kia EV9, but I almost have my current car paid off, and can't afford another $80k car. I'm conflicted, because I don't want to switch back to a gas car, and I believe my current power company is on track to be 50% sustainable/renewable in 5-10 years. I feel like it could take me years as opposed to months to find a replacement EV that works for me.
Yes, it was definitely a product of indoctrination from my dad, who was a chiropractor (my grandpa was also a chiropractor); he was very knowledgeable in other medical areas like anatomy, so it was difficult for me to realize he was wrong about this.
Though, I did write an argumentative paper for high school English about why vaccines were less effective than we thought, and should not be worth the risk. I even used statistics from the same measles outbreak I was part of as proof, because 50% of those who got the measles were vaccinated. Of course, I was too dumb at the time to realize that 50 people from a vaccinated pool of 200,000 doesn't equate to 50 people from an unvaccinated pool of 10,000 (I don't remember exact numbers anymore, this was almost 30 years ago).
She said she was planning to get our first child vaccinated, and if I had a problem with that, I could raise my concerns to the pediatrician. I'm non-confrontational enough that I didn't push the issue any further, but I was still terrified that our first child was going to suffer from a vaccine injury.
I think me being scared about my son was enough to get me to look more closely at how research like Andrew Wakefield's had to be faked to get the results he wanted and that no one else could duplicate his findings, and one of those replication studies was even performed by an undergrad student that I realized had no "big pharma" incentive to lie about it. By the time our second child was born, I was already anti-antivax.
Oh man, I had almost forgotten about when you had to write different ways to read the XHR response depending on which browser you were trying to support.