I bought the game after the badwater addition. It's an early-game problem IMO -- you'll probably only see 2-3 bad tide events before the beavers can get a mitigation system in place
elephantium
Is it not an ID because of that? I don't see the relevance of mentioning address here.
Edit: oh, proof of residence? I went back and re-read the GP. It makes more sense in that context.
United States ID card
Passport seems like it sorta fits, but it's hardly universal.
Better a high horse than a Trojan horse, though
Interesting! So the part we pick is and eat is like a strawberry more than, say, lettuce.
Naively, it's easy to think: it grows in the ground, therefore, it's a plant. There's a lot more than meets the eye, though.
Mushrooms are the closest things we have to aliens
Star Trek: Let's figure out how to hook up the translator to Data so we can talk to them. Real life: Let's see whether they're tasty.
Mushrooms are closer to animals than they are to plants
How? At first blush, this seems absurd.
Disclaimer, it's been a while since middle school biology class where we might have talked about this subject.
In fact, I do prefer to buy generics. There are dozens of us!
Broken in Firefox
Sure, it's hypothetically possible that it would slow down the mega corps. I wouldn't be holding my breath, though. IDK, call me a cynic.
Pretty much any housing changes will need to be written to be bulletproof, otherwise they'll loophole the ever-loving shit out of it.
I do see one problem with this type of regulation -- if you say "no more than 3 homes per entity", the "homes 4 rent" megalandlords will just create thousands of "homes 4 rent asdf" shell companies to get around the limit. I foresee tons of cat-and-mouse accounting shenanigans trying to dodge this sort of requirement.
A simpler method would be to increase both the property taxes and the homestead exemption, tuned so that individual homeowner pays about the same.
Limiting Airbnbs would help, too. Require city or county licensing for all guest accommodations, maybe, and have a set number of licenses?
Also, I don't want to try to kill off all housing rentals. Think about college housing, about people moving halfway across the country for a job, people who've just gotten divorced... there are lots of circumstances where it makes more sense to rent for a time than to pony up $$$ to buy a house or a condo. In a functional market, this would be, say, 10% of housing, and you wouldn't have the absurdity of "I pay $3000 in rent because the bank doesn't think I'll pay a $2000 mortgage".
Ha, I was tempted to make basically the same comment. I'm super weary of people mixing the two up!