When my white colleagues get asked "this", it's more "are you a local boy/girl?" (just country things...). When my non-white colleagues get asked "where are you from?", they're not satisfied with a location somewhere in Australia.
Apparently, for a lot of white Australians, you need to be white to be Australian.
Given they can't seem to have a loader, I know they have to somehow trigger the Switch to know there's another game - but can you imagine having to do that several times to cycle to the game you want? The cost needed to repair the cartridge slot after too many pushes is definitely going to outweigh having just bought a Steam Deck and emulated the Switch instead.
Am I also missing somewhere that can change the alignment of comment buttons? At the moment it's right aligned, but sometimes I'm holding my phone with my left hand or using my phone two handed, and I keep hitting the blank space instead, especially as the post buttons are not aligned so the expectation would be it's the same.
Connect has a handedness option for comment buttons being off/left/right.
Yes but Boost does not show new comment counter. I'm trying to find one that will do both. Boost's UI doesn't have the customisations I'm wanting either...
How many men are committing suicide because they got someone pregnant? Feel like having women fall down stairs or just being an absentee father seems to be the preferred action...
Unfortunately there has to be almost no side effects for almost all users, as there are no (as yet) medical benefits to male contraception.
In women, not being pregnant can prevent death for some of them, regulate painful periods, etc. - it is considered the risk of the myriad side effects is worth it because at least it does some good.
For men, who do not become pregnant, not being able to get someone else pregnant is not a medical benefit for the man.
And unfortunately hormonal modification does cause problems. Lots of them.
When my white colleagues get asked "this", it's more "are you a local boy/girl?" (just country things...). When my non-white colleagues get asked "where are you from?", they're not satisfied with a location somewhere in Australia.
Apparently, for a lot of white Australians, you need to be white to be Australian.