It's like the Zeno's paradox of destruction.
Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
You can't completely destroy something by decimating it.
That's right.
I wonder if they made soldiers who wanted to decimate take math classes....
If you literally decimated a big bunch of somethings, and then decimated what was left, and then decimated it some more, eventually you'd end up with fewer than ten somethings, and you'd be required to, say, massacre instead.
Well, that depends on if the somethings are discrete or continuous.
Well, that depends on if the somethings are discrete or continuous.
Good point.
But if you decimate something enough, eventually you'd need a particle accelerator to do further decimation.
You can't completely destroy something by decimating it.
Can you completely destroy something? How are you defining complete and destruction?
You can effectively destroy some things by decimating them, I'm sure. Perhaps not an Apple laptop, if you're Israeli airport security. But other things. But complete destruction is a tall order at the best of times.
Burrell, quick recovery~ma to you.
Hmm, I think in the Army, troop=soldier. I mean, I see what you all are saying but in the Army context, troops are the soldiers, not groups of soldiers. I always assumed NPR and such were borrowing the Army usage.
Speaking of troops, Joe and I had dinner with two war widows, both moms, ages 20 and 27. I enjoyed having dinner with them but feel so sad for what they have been through.
I have discovered the exact moment when Steph got hooked on Wondermark: [link]
I have discovered the exact moment when Steph got hooked on Wondermark: [link]
There can be no doubt.
Is there a Wondermark about Spider-Man and the semi-colon?