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Both please! Like nao. :c
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U-um... wow. Well. I'd start by hugging ya, pressing real close, then my hands would roam over your dense, tubby sides. If you're in the right mood, you may grind me against the wall, groping me all over. Once clothes start coming off, I'd probably bury my face in yer chest, then belly, nuzzling and kissing all over as I felt along your huge form, trying to feel just how big you really are, before my lips drifted lower and oral teasing would ensue. You might pin me to the bed and molest me in several ways, perhaps even enjoy these moobs of mine >//>, and then we'd probably end up doggystyle before too long. >//> And I'm leaving out the hour or three of stuffing each other if we had the means. :3
The very first time we met, though? I'd be a shy dork. >//> -
Um... um... gawd, Rolling in the Deep. :x Because I'm an angry bitter ex. >_>
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Yeah, they are. It;s easy to forget people are not who they say they are, at least, I've made that mistake too often.
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I think great friends are important even when in a relationship, but being with "that" special one provides something we don't quite find in a friend, or perhaps that we do find but which goes to a deeper level.
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Their face, including their expressions and how they react to what others say and do. I try not to stare, but it does help a lot in trying to learn a little about the person before talking with them. I'm a doofus, so I need all the preliminary help I can get when meeting people.
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The answer I would give lies in the question itself - either kind of fur would develop a different kind of "hardiness" according to their environment growing up. Ideally, they would adapt to be best suited to that environment. A bigger question arises when a fur from either area ends up in the OTHER area. Also, you have some furs who aren't satisfied or thriving well in an urban or rural area, and they try the other, and may prefer the "other" area better.
By the way, I'm assuming by "furs" you mean real people who are involved in the furry fandom. If you meant anthro characters, though, I think it would still apply - those characters are based on human people, after all (even if they're anthropomorphic but not bipedal/more human-like).
I wouldn't say either kind of area - rural or urban - is better than the other. Both have a very, VERY diverse system or overall "way of being" that can vary one's experience. You can get small-mindedness, bigotry, and ignorance in either area, in rural areas you may be more susceptible to environmental conditions, in urban areas your quality of life depends on city infrastructure and the engineering and design of buildings and utilities - a good sewage system, running water, electric grid, and so on. That, and different areas suit different people.
Personally? I'd prefer a rural but not completely secluded area, that's within reasonable driving distance to an urban area. Upstate New York looks gorgeous, and what I've seen of the British countryside in movies and such has made me want to at least visit very very strongly. -
I don't know a lot on the subject, but I did hear some things about the issue. I think the greatest benefit, if it occured, would be a shift to focusing on resolving issues on Earth, with the research and development of NASA pushing forward to help handle and actually act upon the human-caused environmental issues Earth faces. I'm just guessing that NASA would do anything like that at all. Another benefit, if it had noticeable impact, would be less tax dollars spent on the manned space program.
However, that brings me to the greatest negative consequence - we'll get that much more behind on getting people out to space. Exploring our solar system is highly significant, and at some point in the future perhaps necessary, to human development - as a society and as a civilization. If nothing else, there could be vast untapped resources on some of the planets in our solar system, or perhaps even sources of clean energy - we can look at the planets, but we still may be missing features of each. I mean, we didn't even discover water on the moon - Water on the Moon! - until last year.
Whatever we DO find, we probably won't be able to explore those planets or tap those resources for a very long time, even if there hadn't been a retreat from the manned space program. I also don't have any evidence or information to really support there could be so many resources on other planets that we could use. But humans need to explore. I don't think that NEEDS to be in space right now, but... I dunno. Though, considering the economy, maybe it's better to wait until we can support the space program. -
Well, if the cable companies get their way and end Net Neutrality, that will have a massive impact on modern society. I hope that doesn't happen! If not that, then I would predict two tech impacts, one after the other:
1) more and more smartphones and tablets means a considerably increased use of Internet access, which may well catch up to all the fiber optic cables put down when the Internet was getting really big.
Actually, the fact that the U.S. has overall much slower internet speeds than several other countries in the world may have a bigger impact soon, as a result of all the new Internet devices.
Oh, and 2) green energy/green tech. It kind of has to make an impact sooner or later - oil will run out, and before it does it will probably reach prices so high hardly anyone could buy it. -
Home cooking, which is an honest answer. Aside from that? Hm... A dinner at Yerba Buena here in Puerto Rico. Also, since we're on the topic of food, my sister has made me an AMAZING German Chocolate cake from scratch twice now. <3
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Wired, for creating a successful, working Transmogrifier.
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I'm working on being the person I'd want to look like, but as for what's not possible but would be amazing? Rito. :3 He embodies a lot of my personal physical ideals. ...but I'd have to move to a non-tropical (i.e. NOT HOT) environment first. >_> Him bein' a husky and all.
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A forest in Indiana, where we went on a class trip for Environmental Science. It was the first temperate, storybook-esque forest I've ever been in. On that note, I'd also include the small patch of forest, Christy Woods, that Ball State owns.
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Neil Gaiman, Michael Cera and HERE SHE IS, Diiiiiiiiiana Wynne Jones!
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Animation, which I want to try on my own at least. For something more out there? Sculpting and programming.
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Not any yet, but I discovered Mika (a few years behind) yesterday! Lollipop~
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Rito’s Bio
A furry (with a plump husky character), but a lot more than that, which is best detailed in more characters than this short "bio." :3

