I remember when plastic bags became a thing. We were encouraged to use a plastic bag to save a tree.
balisada
I always wondered about the sanity of girls who joined ISIS. Do they realize all that they are giving up? And what exactly they are selling themselves into?
Many years ago, before identity theft was a thing, my mom (who live with me), had our mail stolen. That day was the day that Oregon was sending out our "kicker checks", those are refund checks from the Oregon Dept of Revenue, and also the day that my mom's bank sent out her bank statement.
We found out because I got a letter from the Oregon Dept of Revenue that my kicker check was cashed at a different amount than it was issued. I did get a replacement, but I pointed out to the Oregon Dept of Revenue that the kicker check did have my social security number on it. They agreed and stated that will be the last year that will be a thing.
My mom fared worse, since she had a bank statement that was stolen. The thief went to an office supply store where they sold paper check templates and used the bank account number that the bank helpfully included in full on the bank statement, and printed out fake checks and wrote several at WalMart. To this day my mom is banned from writing checks there.
I never did get the police to care. Identity theft was not a thing at time. They flatly stated that they were not going to even write a report because I was getting a replacement check, so there was no crime.
That never did make sense. If my car gets stolen and the insurance company gets me another one, the thief, if caught, will get charged with something.
Cops will often not do jack shit if it means they have to actually get off their fat mattress and work.
After reading the article, I was quite surprised to learn how often it happens. You would think that people would be more aware of their proximity to the road, because they are standing on it.
It was probably a good idea that they paid the legal bill before he took over.
So I wonder what their end game was if they simply beat her up. Did they honestly think that she would simply give them a better grade and not mention all her injuries to anyone?
I like the map. It makes me want to know what is in all the other buildings, lol.
The guy hid in an alcove and didn't even try to help kids evacuate. I have no idea how the jury reached the conclusion that they did. The New York Times article said that prosecutors had not proven beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Peterson, who did not testify, should be considered someone “responsible for a child’s welfare.” If the school resource officer is not responsible for a child's welfare, just what is their job?
If folks are looking for an organization that they have heard of (although I do remember going to ready.gov in prepandemic times), then the American Red Cross has a page about emergency kits. They even have a quiz you can take. I didn't take the quiz.
https://www.redcross.org/get-help/how-to-prepare-for-emergencies/survival-kit-supplies.html
They have Civilization VI on the list. I found that setting up a Civilization game on my steamdeck to be rather difficult and did not try to progress to the actual game due to already difficult setup.
I play Civ VI on a tablet sometimes and often have to play with my ApplePencil. I wonder if their numbers can differentiate between playing on steamdeck and playing on PC or simply group them together?
I think I will give Civ VI another try on my steamdeck to see if the actual gameplay is better than the setup.
Edit: Apparently roman numbers are hard. Its VI, not IV.
Khajiit each and every time. I don't know why. I just got a steam deck and started Skyrim after not playing a while and tried to select something else, but Khajiit was the only thing that seemed right.
I got tired of the stealth archer, so I am trying a mage. It's pretty fun. Hard, but fun.
Yeah. Piling stuff on another belt so we can bag it ourselves is the norm here as well. I find it fascinating that I will simply pile everything into a haphazard pile on my side of the cashier, but when the cashier scans it, he/she usually piles it up into a very nice and tidy organized group.