Went to my cousins for tea and came back with a 3D printed Starship.
Hes finishing another one off for me with painted heat tiles and flickering led Raptor engines.
Hes got cupboards of them and building one twice as big for display in a local corporate HQ.
In 1988, a female Japanese macaque with a small baby was observed washing sweet potatoes on the coast of Japan's Honshu island. Other members of her troop soon followed, washing other foods like rice and cassava roots. It got rid of the sand and added a bit of sea salt for minerals and flavor. It was other females who picked up on the cultural process/ritual. The older males stayed stuck in the past, dyeing that way. Now the practice has been passed to many generations. Nationally here and now there is one phantasy nostalgic force and another that is cleareyed and forward looking to change, with a gender and age gap between them. It is just a matter of the old guys offing off.