Everyone hates on lawyers, until they need one...
errorgap
Yeah, I could see neck guards becoming required equipment after this. Safety regulations are built on blood
$35B could have built some nice transit infrastructure. Just saying
I could see maintenance costs increases being not insignificant over time. Parts/appliances had gone up notably, as has materials and the cost of people to do the work. There's also some issues with receivables which may end up needing to be written off, and deliberate damage over time. Generally, these do need to be accounted for on a going-forward basis.
That said, none of these should have increased nearly so much as the cost of property and overall rents. They should account for a reasonable increase over time, instead what we see is increased to cover the cost of the mortgage on additional rental properties etc
Yeah but he's on the wanted list because it's terrible behavior for a bear. He didn't even try to pay!
Yeah not sure exactly what a union even has to be "sorry" about in regards to a bunch of evil pieces of shit doing terrible things oversees
I think there was also some threats of beheadings more recently
They could, but that's still going to take a lot to balance the scales. It should be part of an overall plan for housing affordability
Slumlords and overpriced rentals can be storage issues though. It can be a nice place, but if you're paying $2k+/mo for a 1b1b that's way too fucking much even if it's in good condition
I've never used that particular software so I couldn't say. Unless you're sending over the internet this method should be fairly safe though
This feels like a crappy situation to be in. Governments up the chain have obviously dropped the ball if we're bringing in refugees without actually having solid plans to support them, sponsors etc.
Meanwhile increasing amounts of citizens are suffering from homelessness due to the housing crisis.
If they think that "denying refugees" is going to spur racism and xenophobia, what exactly do they think will happen when citizens are turned away because the shelters are full of refugees the governments didn't adequately plan for?
I'm wondering when this will simply be a feature of game engines, along with AI character generation, terrain/map generators, and AI-driven dialog.
I'm really on the fence about it since it really could put extra life into games where it just isn't normally feasible to make all NPC's unique, dialog etc so you end up with a lot of "I took an arrow to the knee" type dialog.
For smaller studios - or independent authors - the ability to generate high quality content with code could also be a real boon.
I'd still rather not see big studios just go with AI instead of real humans for design and acting though. That just leads to cookie-cutter bullshit and games that feel stale