The Picard ManeuverM to TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name • edit-21 month agoI'm with McCoy hereimagemessage-square259arrow-up1743arrow-down120file-text
arrow-up1723arrow-down1imageI'm with McCoy hereThe Picard ManeuverM to TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name • edit-21 month agomessage-square259file-text
minus-squareAwkwardLookMonkeyPuppetlinkEnglish7•1 month agoI think that makes both Rikers equally fake, not real.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•1 month agoBeg to differ. The Queen gives birth to twin boys. It’s a stormy night and the midwife isn’t sure which is older. They are equally the ‘real’ king. Two counterfeit dollar bills are equally fake.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•edit-229 days agoThis is a semantics argument. The way the person you’re talking to means it, two things being equally fake also means that they’re equally real, because they are both just as real as the other (that is, not).
minus-square@HackworthlinkEnglish2•1 month agoIf one counterfeit dollar buys a soda, does it matter who’s king?
I think that makes both Rikers equally fake, not real.
Equally fake and equally real are the same thing.
Equally fake and equally real are equal?
Beg to differ.
The Queen gives birth to twin boys. It’s a stormy night and the midwife isn’t sure which is older. They are equally the ‘real’ king.
Two counterfeit dollar bills are equally fake.
This is a semantics argument. The way the person you’re talking to means it, two things being equally fake also means that they’re equally real, because they are both just as real as the other (that is, not).
If one counterfeit dollar buys a soda, does it matter who’s king?
This one Trinitys