Meh, I'm for solar and wind power.
Craig, I don't mean to be rude, but the numbers simply don't add up. You can't produce enough energy, even if you plaster the country with windfarms and ring the coast.
I'm not certain I'd want to equate Navy with Army bootcamp. In nay case when the hell are matelots going to encounter a situation they have any individual effect on?
i've actually had sleep paralysis. I woke up to discover myself immobilised with this huge black figure at the end of the bed. Fortunately I know that I was simply having sleep paralysis! I lay there until my control came back. Most interestingly I disocvered I was bathed in fear sweat. Obviously that aspect of things was whirring away independently.
Again, if you have problems with following orders without question then you will find you make an awful private... and a first class NCO. As an officer yu willl find that although you have a right to unquestioning obedience, you cannot command properly by drawing on it all the time. Particularly as our societies alter. However, at the final analysis every good soldier needs to be capable of accepting their viewpoint can be inferior.
Speaking personally I find it is a common negative sde-effect of modern commmercial society that we're told we're fantastic so often that we find it difficult to commit sucesfully to anything we aren't the focus of.
What I like about your plan is that all women go through that phase from 17-21 where they believe they ARE god anyway. So you have to treat them the same way irrespective.
That's your prerogative to disagree. It does, however, mean that even if our soldiers WERE supposed to decide on their own what was and wasn't legal, this chap would be sent down.
Definitely lots more side quests. And they weren't all fedex. Durlag's tower is definitely my favourite dungeon crawl ever. Although personally I really regretted not having a thief in the party who could do traps. I used Korgan buffed to constitution 20 and piled high with protection to just trigger traps. I used to imagine him grumbling incesssantly as all these fireballs and bolts spanged off him. On one occasion he totalled a group of attackers simply by leading them down a heavily trapped corridor. I laughed a great deal.
Hmmm. I'm thinking maybe this is part of the scariness inherent in the film. We fear above all the unknown. In the post-zombie world we lose most of our decision making reference points. Like your diver. But the obscure nature of the zombie threat is also like your unintelligible deep sea attacker. And ferocious like my dogs!
Of course they do. Once they have felt enough pain and suffering they will come around. People need to make their own choices in their own time. The more you force change the more resistance you will have.
Then we differ in our first principles. I do not ignore someone in pain, just because they are too caught up/stubborn to recognise it. In fact it's often the people who want your help least as need it most. However I don't generally force my help on people, and nor did this gentleman. He was trying to talk.