They'll be wearing stylish pool noodles on the tusks to minimize furniture and gonad damage.
Or we create them with softer tusks. Maybe that's better, the. They'll also be worthless to poachers.
They'll be wearing stylish pool noodles on the tusks to minimize furniture and gonad damage.
Or we create them with softer tusks. Maybe that's better, the. They'll also be worthless to poachers.
Those are closer to horse-sized, but it's a good start.
I've said this a million times before, but if we're playing gods anyway, can't we make them dog sized also?
I would totally get one or maybe two.
This is probably produced by the same content farms that generate similar news about the impending death of EVs due to miraculous advances in hydrogen powered vehicles.
Obviously there are no sources and the only images are either unrelated or AI generated.
As to you question "why does anyone read this stuff?" I believe people love stuff that confirms their hopes and are more than willing to compromise on any level of skepticism, when reading stuff that aligns with their views.
That can't be right. I keep seeing "suggested posts" on Facebook claiming that Honda and/or Toyota has made a revolutionary breakthrough with hydrogen engines, which will finally allow us to get rid of all those damned electric cars.
It's literally any day now.
This is good news for bot farms working to sow division.
I don't mind that other users have this option. I'm not worried about them. It's all the expected shenanigans of the companies that'll remove their apps from the store I don't much like.
I'm using Voyager browse and interact with Lemmy. It looks more or less exactly like Apollo and it's a webapp. There's a few small things that's not exactly as a native app, like double tapping the top of a scrolling window to scroll to top, but it's really minor. I bet most people wouldn't know it was a webapp if they weren't told.
It even works with the sharing intent so I can share to native apps. Pretty awesome.
Never forget why they're called "abrahamic religions" in the first place. The foundation tale is basically one of an abusive relationship: "Sacrifice your son to prove you love me. Ok, just kidding, I just needed to know you'd do it. Love you."
Well, if they didn't care about being flooded with machine generated trash, they wouldn't have set the limit to books you can self publish down to a mere three per day.
Of course it seems wrong when you say it like that.