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(79 Likes) Have you ever used or used a mannequin or inflatable doll in your car to use the HOV lane non-stop?
If you go out of town and you get caught, you can reasonably argue that you are unaware of the lane restrictions, but if you are caught using an inflatable doll, you will fall down and hard. I’ve had a tinted windshield for a long time.
(73 Likes) Are you panicking for the COVID-19 coronavirus?
ng is different from the previous one. The only real consistency was that I spent most of my life on this side of midnight. (It’s now past 3 o’clock as I started typing.) Tonight is a little different, though. My mind is racing. I spent most of the day and night reading and watching everything I could about the virus. Mainstream media reporting, conservative commentary, libertarian analysis, medical research, scientific modeling and political stance – and each from sources around the world. (Although I avoid extremes and … conspiracy sites like the plague.) Intellectually – thanks to the vast amount of knowledge I’ve absorbed – I’m convinced of far less than I should have. this has happened at any time since the onset of the crisis. Therefore, much of the information put forward by what I would consider to be the most reliable sources is contradictory. While I may not be convinced of anything, I am fully conscious of my innate instincts as I process the following: 1- People are dying from this disease and social distancing will definitely save lives. Still, there has been a large divide among qualified scientists recently. One side is calling for much longer social distancing through mandatory business closures and more severely enforced stay-at-home orders. The other side says we can’t allow the fear of “death toll” to keep us from facing the difficult task of building the “herd immunity” needed to prevent this from escalating into a seasonally recurring crisis. 2 – Ultimately, right or wrong, people’s livelihoods are and will be destroyed by this current remedial action plan. The idea that “if we save a life, then it’s worth the shutdowns” is absolutely bullshit at the highest level. If this were our guiding philosophy for how we govern all human activity, we would long ago have demanded that cars, alcohol, tobacco, and sugar be outlawed – with an extremely audacious bias – as individual and combined annual mortality rates caused by these individuals alone. The four elements dwarf everything COVID-19 has in store. 3-Government cannot make things better and to expect this is the height of ignorance and naivete. The government could put a $1,200 Band-Aid on the wound, but the band-aid itself is infected with a Trojan bacterium that has historically destroyed currencies and economies and brought nations to their knees. 4 – Party tribalism and blame games are tearing us apart. “War” typically unites us against a widely identified enemy. The “war on COVID-19” has the opposite effect – because instead of identifying the virus as the common enemy, equal numbers of Americans have decided who is the longer-term threat on the ‘other side’ of the Trump divide. . (I can’t believe some of the fierce hostility I see in my social media feeds.) 5 – According to a new survey released April 2nd by the Kaiser Family Foundation, 45% of adults, 53% of women and 37% of men) say the pandemic is affecting their mental health and 19% say it has “great impact”. We’re not even close to the end of everything that caused this escalating, parallel mental health crisis, as the cracks and collapses are already occurring and making the headlines. 6 – Make no mistake about it. . . While governments are making sincere efforts to ameliorate the health and economic damage this pandemic has wreaked, there are factions within each that speak the best of “not to waste this crisis”. Their aim is to push solutions that will give them even more centralized control over every aspect of our individual lives, businesses, properties, and even our children. All in the name of safety and security, as millions are willing to surrender their rights (and the rights of their neighbors through the ballot box) to these false and impossible promises. And they will do it without question. I hate to come across so pessimistic and fearful, but every single one of my freedom-oriented nerve endings and every single strand of my libertarian DNA is on high alert right now. Bowing to common sense social distancing recommendations and knowing we can’t do it for more than a few days – before the virus does much more harm than it would do on its own – are not mutually exclusive concepts. In order to save both our freedoms and our well-being – however painful it may be in the short term – something has to give up soon.
(25 Likes) Are sex dolls and sex boots a good thing or a bad thing? Which and why?
find them useful, others will not. Will someone try to design an exploitative sex robot? Be sure. Just as people design certain video games to maximize recurring income, someone will design a sex bot.
(25 Likes) Which sex doll would you recommend I buy? Are there any technical aspects I should look into?
The type of sex doll will always depend on personal taste.precious moments jesus loves me baby
What you should always understand is that sex dolls are made specifically for your sexual pleasure and are not in any shape or form to replace a real person. That being said – yes sex dolls are still very popular and they sell very well
(82 Likes) Which colleges are famous for grade deflation? (To hold nothing against these schools – I just want to be aware of these academic settings).
These names came up most often to find a list of colleges/universities known for grade deflation on the Internet. *not listed in any particular order Wellesley College Love Doll of California Berkeley (Cal) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Reed College (Average GPA 2014: 3.15) Boston University Princeton University had an official grade deflation policy until 2014, but the policy has since been revoked was done. The takeaway: Grade inflation doesn’t seem to be associated with academic rigor, as many places deemed “academically strict”