dawnell
dawnell
dawnell

Didn’t think anyone would take that so literal. I’ve been out about once a week, I’ve spoken to family and neighbors. I can’t imagine anyone thinking this is mostly as usual, though things should be taken more seriously. Just to start, it isn’t business as usual for anyone with children or people who take care at

Glad the murder mosquito isn't going to get us and that you had a good reason for driving around.  The death toll is only 132 today and was just over 100 on the day you wrote 121. And I live about 16 miles away, so I know the rest of what I said mostly from looking out the window. You just made it up about things

The pool industry does not sound like an essential job, unless you are building fences around them or some other safety thing. You shouldn’t have been driving all over any area. So you or your employer are part of the problem.

You end it by not being a customer of those places, not by cheating people out of their tips.

Blah, blah, same old argument.

I don't drink this, but $18 plus $5 shipping would a lot of tapioca pearls and regular tea at the Asian market. 

I don't drink this, but $18 plus $5 shipping would a lot of tapioca pearls and regular tea at the Asian market. 

That is how it is supposed to work, and as an all grown up person with internet access you should know that. 

I would have put Rise second, as I made more sense to me than either the original film or the novel. I thought it was fun to watch with the little nods to the original film.

I hope they just forgot that part of the story. I did UberEats and I tried Doordash, and most people didn't tip. But I did notice more often getting tips when delivering pizza, because people who had pizza delivered before the apps were already used to tipping. So no way that the pizza restaurant owner who looked into

I suppose it was so we didn’t go out and buy all of the masks, that it was easier to say you didn’t need them or that they didn’t work. Maybe that was easier to remember, or maybe people didn’t care if people who needed them more didn’t have enough, people would still go out and buy them.

They don't know until the driver shows up asking for the Doordash order. It's under the customer's name. 

Sometimes the company card doesn't work. Then it is up to the driver to decide to pay with his own money and hope that he will get his money back or cancel the order and not get paid after doing half of the work. I would choose the not getting paid rather than acting loose money I might not get back. 

I have been told some places they don’t want to deliver to at all.

The pretend customer still should tip the driver,  hopefully in cash. 

The pretend customer should be tipping the driver, hopefully with cash. 

Not really. There was a pretend customer waiting for the pizzas at a different location. And as you and others pointed out, Doordash steals tips made on the app, so I hope the pretend customer tipped with cash.

What essential job do you have that required you to drive all over the state during shelter in place/stay at home orders?

Sure, all of that was a bit confusing, but it isn’t confusing after being told that your county now requires you to wear a mask in public and you walk past a sign on the door plus a couple more reminding you that masks are required now because of local requirements and/or store policies. If someone really is still

I am old enough that I stopped doing about when people started calling it cosplay instead of wearing a costume. 

For myself l mostly agree with you, though it is a rare day that we spend $20 on takeout while we are at home. And we have no dry cleaning bill. We are trying not save for the time between the end of unemployment checks and it really being safe to go out and go back for work and all of that. So it is sometimes