I remember the day Firefox came out... It will always hold a special place in my heart.
I was this kid. I ran out of the room before the trex got out of the paddock. I couldn't watch the movie till I was in my 20's...
Without knowing the exact model it's difficult to know for certain but you can buy off brand refill kits with chips. The printer may intentionally degrade quality with the aftermarket chips (and may never reset itself even if you return to official toner)... HP is just a terrible company.
Your inability to follow the argument is probably the problem.
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Your logic is fundamentally flawed. In several ways. I see several people arguing with you ineffectively because they assume you are arguing in good faith or have a coherent position... Neither of which I am convinced you possess.
In the US (and most of the world) it is a fundamental right of bodily autonomy that any individual is not subjected to any forced medical situation in the support of another person's life, regardless of that person's age, gender or relationship with the other person. Even if we agreed on when personhood happens (I assume we disagree on it) at no point must one person give up their bodily rights for another. If you provide a special case for pregnancy then we are in a discussion of if your inconsistent belief structure is valid.
It makes sense when you realize they are truly stupid and have been taken in by a con. They get into situations they don't understand, people say magic words they don't understand and they get put in jail. Someone comes along and explains it in such a way only an idiot would believe about magic words and they want to get out. They don't actually understand the words they are using or the context/concepts thar the words that are being used against them represent... And suddenly here we are.
Just to be crystal clear, the major branches of Buddhism and Hinduism do believe in supernatural entities and many if not most believe metaphysical nonsense. The idea that "Buddhists don't actually believe this" is mistaken. Many or most absolutely believe it.
Clearly the answer is no.
You are correct, and I should have worded my example differently.
They lack the belief (as opposed to active disbelief).
Why should I repeat myself?