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notch898b

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notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
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notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
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notch898b
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notch898b
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Marrying another introvert is great until it leads to offspring. Then the kid sucks and sucks your mental energy for dealing with people to the point you barely even want to interact with the spouse or anyone else.
notch898b
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notch898b
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notch898b
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I guess the big question is whether landlords will hand down to tenants the massive increase in mortgage costs as interest rates rose while real estate barely budged.
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
Is it impossible simply opening WF increased crime as it is a perfect shoplifting target? I saw a youtube video linked (sorry lost it, somebody here maybe point it out) where a guy bike touring SF literally pointed out how it was a perfect spot to shoplift and he constantly saw people doing it there.
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
Being near intoxicated people, whether you agree or not, is unpleasant to many shoppers and especially families. Perhaps they are misguided but it is not good for business. You can call it wrong but I will shop pretty much anywhere alone no matter how drug infested , but will alter my shopping patterns in the city when with women or children in order to reduce their exposure to areas of known heavy intoxicant use.
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
When I lived in the ghetto you could go up to a window with bars and ask for something behind the counter. I wonder if they could put all the food behind bulletproof glass with an attendant and have the attendant slide it through a prison style food tray or something? You could prepay using an industrial grade impact resistant point of sale machine on the other side, and stainless steel floors with drains could be used to wipe the grime down daily and make it easy to flush out anyone camping inside.
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
Wikipedia says it's free for foreigners and nationals, so I'm curious why they require the ID.
notch898b
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If I recall correctly we had no insurance at the time. I was able to afford to re-vaccinate my animal, as it's only $60 at the vet, I figured at least my pet would survive.
notch898b
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I encountered a bat many years ago acting erratically inside the house. It had evidently entered in my sleep.

I looked up the cost, and found out the household would be bankrupted by the shots and we would end up homeless. I calculated the danger from homelessness outweighed the risk of rabies. I guess the bet paid off, as we're now well past the 99th percentile of incubation period.
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
I mean for her yeah. The average guy wanted on a felony for stealing cars or something, could probably be fine working as an agricultural worker on a farm in Brazil or something for the rest of their life. I've met plenty of white euro looking people in South America living off the black market and frankly no one would bother to find out who they were unless their were some big reward, and usually there isn't.
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
Willful negligence resulting in death arguably is violence. It becomes obvious when the device is not a blood test but say firing a gun in the air without regard to where the bullet will land. Willfully misrepresenting medical testing is firing a gun in the air without regard to where it goes; it is totally unreasonable to believe the outcome will be anything but violent.
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
I'm not saying there is anything wrong with credit but the ol latin american method of buying a house one brick at a time does work. You may have to buy the land all at once, but even where I live (top 10 city) that's doable for roughly what a down payment costs.
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
>The indigent will have their debt forgiven - hospitals know they don't get blood from a turnip.

Lol I was taken involuntarily to the hospital. When they gave up billing me they simply turned it over to collections to let them deal with squeezing the blood from the turnip. (not mental though, fraudulent accusation by federal agents I had drugs up my ass and then dragged there in handcuffs).
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
>We live in a society where those who follow the laws are constantly punished for minor infractions like parking tickets and zoning violations, while people who do not participate in society AND completely flout the laws in every way are not only allowed to do so, there is a huge section of our population that encourages and protects their right to do so.

At the end of the day it's inconvenient to punish homeless for crimes. They have no money, they're often infected with disease, and they are often unpleasant to deal with. Meanwhile when I did absolutely nothing wrong, federal officers bragged to me what a great vacation it was to drag me to the hospital for the better part of a day on a fraudulent and fabricated search for "drugs" because they said it was better than doing their normal beat, and it paid great overtime. People say you should be polite to law enforcement, but the fact is being unpleasant/unpolite/filthy works.

Like most humans, a frightening amount of law enforcement boils down to they did it because it was easiest. Dealing with mentally ill people at their worst moments is not easy, extorting a well to do professional for going 5 over the limit is much easier.
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
I had a homeless stint. I did day labor for money and parked my tent in places where it was legal for me to stay, or where I hadn't been trespassed and wasn't marked, thus it would not be illegal unless someone asked me to leave and I didn't. In many states camping on property isn't illegal unless you've been trespassed, it is posted, or it is gated off etc.

Plenty of homeless people who don't commit crime, you just don't notice them because they aren't bothering anyone.
notch898b
·3 lata temu·discuss
It does seem frighteningly easy to lose everything and be locked up.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosenhan_experiment . After just one episode of telling professionals that they "heard voices", patients were diagnosed and forced to take medication despite never again showing symptoms or evidence of illness.

  Once admitted and diagnosed, the pseudopatients were not able to obtain their release until they agreed with the psychiatrists that they were mentally ill and began taking antipsychotic medications,
Even if they weren't ill... the only way to get out was to lie and say they were.