discreet-chaos
Magister
discreet-chaos

Possibly because this post existed before the return of the greys, all of the comments are showing as pending. It also looks like they haven't fixed the bug that is keeping us from recommending a comment out of pending, so I'm trying a reply to see if that works.

I'm sure there are other reasons, not the cost of living, which factor into why the majority of Ferguson PD live in other communities, I was just pointing out that not having to live in the community is a fairly normal thing. Maybe because it's affordable, Ferguson might want to require it, but first they're going to

Well, yeah. There are a lot of racist cops. I was just pointing out that police not living in the community they serve is a fairly normal thing, except where it's required for the job.

A lot of police officers in other communities around the country don't live in the cities they serve because they can't afford it. That may not be the case for Ferguson, but cops, teachers, firefighters, sanitation workers, it's often the case that they don't live where they work.

You or anyone is free to stand in the middle of a field in a lightning storm, if they wish.

You or anyone is free to stand in the middle of a field in a lightning storm, if they wish.

While I don't have a problem with the pending system, I hope you'll consider incentivizing or certainly encouraging the bloggers in your employ to follow people on behalf of the blog. What was frustrating about it before and I assume one of the reasons it was ended was that some blogs weren't following new people, so

I linked to all three of the local newscast's late reports from the night of the shooting, all of which contain witness statements and not one of them mention a "scuffle".

I will try that. Thanks.

Among other uses, we put garbanzos in salad. Because you can't really use a whole can in four side salads, we put the rest in the fridge and my youngest eats them as a TV-watching snack.

Something odd about the Two and Half Men storyline is that last season they were offered a wedding and if it had been real life and if they had rejected it, the situation would have created turmoil, but instead the show just went to credit and it was never mentioned again.

While sad, another part of this story is that the dogs were left with a U.S. Senator's son.

ABC15 was reporting last night that it was Flake's son and Fox affiliate is saying he was there when some people dropped off their dogs and when some came to claim their bodies.

I hadn't thought of that right off, instead my question was whether the app developers thought female customers are going to invite men out of the blue, or if the idea is that a guy will hear their female friend say something about the app and ask for an invite? What if she's a co-worker, an employee or a neighbor and

He is from Charleston, so he knows about hurricanes.

Maybe it's like the '96 Dole/Kemp campaign site and is being maintained out of love.

It's been a while since I've watched it, but if you're in the US, I recall that the Honest Company and its founding was a big focus of her Larry King interview on Hulu.

Maybe. Though I think that if there were a girl dim-witted enough not to spot the clues, who wasn't good enough friends with anyone else to communicate with them on social media or in the cafeteria, who wouldn't ask anyone else about it during the week between receiving the note and the "inspections", I don't think

It starts in their homes, where children learn some sense of kindness and empathy for other people.

I'm sure no one believed the letter. Not only were there enough telltale signs that it was intended as a joke, but the students were discussing it on social media according to the link.