I just can't imagine why people think it's a Nazi salute...oh wait,
spamfajitas
Judy Woodruff was forced to publicly apologize because Trump and Bibi said they didn't talk about delaying it, but I still think she was right:
https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-accused-crime-benjamin-netanyahu-call-ceasefire-hamas-1942248
I mean, I'd trust unnamed sources over these two guys any day.
I don't know about culture glorifying it or it being a huge percentage of people, but it's a real problem. Just one example: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/10132391/Riot-after-Chinese-teachers-try-to-stop-pupils-cheating.html
The list missed the disappointment that was Age of Empires Online. Because who doesn't love microtransactions and live service in their RTS? Apparently it's still playable on a fan server.
The fun fact about Methylene Blue that always is a hit with students is it also turns your pee a green/blue-green color.
This is pretty cool. I just saw an article about a D&D-themed pinball machine that's being made and immediately my mind jumped to wondering just how difficult it is to maintain these things. It'd be fun to own one but I have no idea how many other businesses are out there like this one.
It's definitely dumb, but it has been around for a very very long time: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taoist_sexual_practices
Bonus gross points for the Age of Partners section.
I think he'd probably prefer the phrase "Amerika über alles" instead, based on his reading preferences.
There's also mint jelly that goes relatively well with lamb. I guess mint chutney is also somewhat similar.
I think Webfishing did it pretty well.
The game offers a bunch of goofy cosmetic player titles like "Good Boy" and "Shark Bait" as well as serious ones like "Bi" and "Pan" that cost something like $5 in game currency.
Someone complained that there wasn't a "Straight" title, the game dev agreed and added the title for $9,999.
Pretty sure Hawaii still has their publicly-funded healthcare option. I know a number of communities across the US had much smaller free insurance programs that mostly died off when the ACA passed. Some of them might still exist as heavily means-tested shadows of their former selves.