I mean, there's still cosmetic modifications, and some of those might be slightly different (things emphasizing exhaust pipes for instance wouldn't really work, but maybe you'd see parts that suggest an exaggerated fake battery somewhere, or some clear panels placed to show off the motors or something). But beyond that, couldn't you still change the performance in some ways, for example by replacing parts with lighter weight parts? For example, since batteries are heavy, maybe someone wanting to increase top speed and acceleration and willing to sacrifice range might replace the battery with a smaller one, or remove some of the cells from the battery somehow?
CarbonIceDragon
Been awhile since I saw TV ads, but I don't remember even one for any kind of sex toy geared towards anyone tbh.
First beans and now beef? Add some tomato and spices and we'll have ourselves a chili going
To be fair, since it was specified that one must fight the animal with one's bare hands, tool use is probably cheating here
A really, really, really sick elephant, so far gone that it cannot move anyway
Cat bites can have some dangerous bacteria at least, considering how much damage the more lazy of my cats can do if you try to force him to take a pill, I don't think I'd really want to fight one that actually was fighting for all it's worth
I mean, it's got a shell, and turles/tortoises can still bite pretty bad without teeth, consider the snapping turtle.
With all the blubber, would a whale even notice a punch, especially if the force was lessened due to water drag?
I don't do origami much anymore, but I really liked it as a kid. In any case, I think the books are honestly nicer to use. You can look away without having to pause each time to make a fold, and you don't have to wait for the person in the video to finish each step. Just have to get the hang of interpreting the different types of dashed lines and what they mean to do. It does help when the book is well written and includes a small amount of text under each step to help interpret ambiguous instructions though.
The thing with comparing things to the Nazis, or to similar groups, is that they did not start with the camps and warfare. It took time for them to reach the point of being powerful enough to do that and actually going through with it, so it is still possible to make comparisons to them when things aren't at that extreme, if one is comparing something to how they (or other fascists for that matter) acted before getting to that point.
I mean, don't they have a vr headset these days? Gaming is one of the biggest consumer use cases for that, so maybe that's related?
On the other hand, I can imagine that if one has fallen into the conspiracy rabbit hole, not done anything to reduce risk like getting vaccines or masking, or even going out of your way to avoid taking those precautions, then losing some family members to covid might make doing those mental gymnastics much easier. Because if one admitted one was wrong after such a thing happened, that would also mean accepting the idea that one might be partially responsible for the deaths of one's own family members, and that is such an awful truth to accept that I can easily imagine someone desperately clinging to any belief that would make it not so, regardless of how absurd it was. Indeed, the longer one hangs on to it afterwards, the worse one's actions look once you abandon the conspiracy theory, and so the motivation to cling to that belief no matter the evidence just would get stronger.