I know, it's sickening.They're pushing it. All you gotta do is see the late night hosts getting ready for their "One World: Together at Home" deal with Female Gaga...
I know, it's sickening.They're pushing it. All you gotta do is see the late night hosts getting ready for their "One World: Together at Home" deal with Female Gaga...
Could be, but not quite yet. Other stuff has to happen first.That's a direct result of the government funded insurance program that makes the cost of insurance so low that it almost, if not for certain, guarantees a payout. When you go to a class or seminar put on by the extension service, they will often lay out examples on the cost of insurance vs. crop yield and compare it to the last 2 or 3 years and show how much it paid in each year for a certain crop per acre in the relevant region. They even admit that the cost of the insurance is so low because it's government funded and no regular insurance company would ever do it for that, but as long as the government is handing out free money with this insurance program, they recommend everyone sign up for it. I think that's why big corporate farms get away with much of the monopoly they have. Because they threw this bone in for the little guy in their lobbying package. But that could all be a whole different thread.
Let me guess. The invisible mark that can only be read with special equipment or app will be "666".
Sounds like mark of the beast to me.
Soylent green
I know. But someone had to say itHeh.
That's what Bill's meme was inferring....
Its people!That movie scared the crap out of me.
Here's something interesting to think about.
Many people are now working from home, because of the pandemic.
I wonder if even after the crisis of the pandemic has passed, whether more people would opt to work from home if that was an option?
I'm pretty sure there are a great many jobs that could be done just as well at home, rather than going to an office or company everyday.
I'm curious if there might be an upswing in those working the same jobs as they are doing, but just instead from the comfort of their own home?
Too early to tell; I dont expect it’s whether to work can be done remotely that will drive a lot of those decisions, instead it may be driven by the costs and benefits associated with the pivot.Here's something interesting to think about....I'm curious if there might be an upswing in those working the same jobs as they are doing, but just instead from the comfort of their own home?
...so....you're saying we'll be deducting the costs of our coffee as a business expense...Some sectors, such as financial services, will be subject to additional regulatory costs now that each worker’s home is their place of business and routine in-office supervisory inspections have to occur. Those rules have to change or businesses have to change their operating models to comply and that’s neither cheap nor easy.
Related to this in particular, and the topic in general, there's public perception. Bleach smells strong and people think it makes things smell clean, and "everyone knows" that bleach kills everything immediately, so I'm sure it's often used just because people think it means they know what they're doing even if it means the opposite.An example if this is that, across the country, institutions have blood borne pathogen kits to clean up body fluids with a sodium hypochlorite (bleach) solution rather than a broad spectrum disinfectant-detergent which would be more effective and far less hazardous.
Why not?Don't go to spec's
Why not?
Based on some obscure social media posts, there may be a gathering of open carry folks in Coryell County in response to this article:
https://www.tdtnews.com/news/coronavirus/article_be1a146b-112c-5a4f-a4be-bb5196efd5d4.html
I already have to drive through there on the way to check on things at the ranch, so I'm seriously thinking about joining them. It would be interesting to hold a "social distancing" sunrise service (Oh, and Happy Good Friday to those who follow) and then a Bill of Rights exercise.