It is also possible that a deeper, underlying trait might be the root cause driving both wind farm opposition and conspiracy beliefs simultaneously. A general disposition to distrust others, for example, could make someone highly susceptible to both phenomena.
More likely, both of these are caused by rightwing ideology, as rightwing propaganda promotes both belief in conspiracy myths and wind farm opposition.
This is not on the German youth, though, it's on the German elites. They need to provide an acceptable social contract if they want the youth to be fine with military conscription. Instead they're currently doing everything in their power to bleed the masses dry.
Hm ... why though? Did they reach the base and just lie about deepthroating even though it didn't reach into their throats? You'd think the guy would catch on at some point. Or is this just one of those incel "they have experience and that's bad" things?
True, 3 is definitely worth playing, and I could never really get into Fallout1+2 (I like isometric RPGs, but the old Fallouts are kinda clunky and I prefer my turn-based combat to be party-based). But even from my couple of hours playing Fallout1+2, it's very clear that the vibe is completely different from the Bethesda-owned installments.
Yes, my vermouth is being stored in the fridge the entire time between unsealing and drinking.
Dry vermouth is a bit of a meme in cocktail enthusiast circles. The mainstream opinion is that it needs to be as fresh as possible to make a good cocktail, and it definitely loses a lot of flavor in the first weeks after unsealing. But to me, that full punch of wormwood herb is a bit much, I much prefer the more muted flavor of fridge-aged (oxidized) vermouth. I think part of that "as fresh as possible" stance is that people used to store unsealed vermouth outside of the fridge, often for years at a time because people were drinking their Martinis with only a few drops of vermouth. And even with freshly unsealed vermouth, most cocktail enthusiasts still tend to prefer low amounts of vermouth in their Martini, which to me suggests that they don't actually like fresh vermouth that much.
Alternatively I could just try a few more different vermouth brands until I find one that I like from the start, but Dolin dry is delightfully cheap and Noilly Prat is the only dry vermouth that you can actually buy in physical stores where I live.
Same, I (probably) just picked a very low lower bound - i.e. even if the product is shit, as long as it's not broken from the get-go, it's probably going to last at least half a year. The point is that even for such a shitty product, showing ads for the thing they just bought just doesn't make sense.
Professional wine tasting seems like a scam anyway. Somehow, professional wine tasters are unable to tell red from white wine in blind tastings that hide the visual information.
Makes sense, staff has relatively limited contact with patients compared to the other patients, and outside of research, what healthy person would get themselves admitted to a psychiatric hospital on purpose?
It does point to how difficult psychiatric diagnosis is, though. Though other medical fields tend to have the opposite problem, they tend to treat patients with real medical, non-psychological issues as pretenders or people with psychosomatic issues if it's not immediately obvious that they have a real medical issue.
The biggest satellite is like what, 30 metres across with solar panels?* Earth's diameter is ~13 000 km, that's 400 000 times larger. A satellite might as well be a grain of sand.
* Biggest unmanned artificial satellite that I could find info on is the Hubble telescope, which is 13m long; its solar panels are not longer than the telescope tube.
A point is a pause, too, yet you say "point" out loud when reading a decimal number.