geraltcloud9
geraltcloud9
geraltcloud9

Caught a Lyft with a buddy, in their Sedan. We get in the back, and my legs were stretched out in luxury. This is a Hyundai? Chevy and Ford are getting lapped.

When the bank realized the error and asked for their money back and she said NO, that is where the criminality began.

It’s kind of the absolutely most clearcut example you could think up. There can be loopholes when the amount of money is small enough that you can reasonably not recognise that it was given to you in error, and there can be loopholes when the bank fails to inform you of the error in a timely fashion. But when someone

Well, she moved the money, which she knew wasn’t hers (or: a reasonable person would have known it wasn’t theirs). Them making a mistake doesn’t give her a reason to think it’s hers, because it’s such a large amount that she would have recognised that it wasn’t what she was expected.

Not only that, Hyundais are very nice cars, and Genesis are EXTREMELY nice. When it comes to interior quality, they smoke the Germans. They just can’t match the performance.

Most people would understand that spending the money is not worth the time or hassle it would bring.

That’s not how deterrents work

I once had a mentally unwell, likely homeless person present one of these to one of my tellers.

Money being in your account doesn’t mean it’s yours. Mistakes happen. Even if the money got there on purpose, it doesn’t mean it’s yours. I’ve seen international college kids unwittingly become the middle man in wire fraud because they received a wire that was flagged, can’t give us a good or consistent story as to

One summer in college I worked for a very large corporation. You’ve heard of them. My boss took a week off, so his boss filled out my time card that week. Little did either of us know that my boss had already filled out a card for me since he was going to be off. I got paid double that week. I kept that extra $400

Uh.... No, they were supposed to deposit SOME money, but accidentally fat fingered a bunch of numbers.  So it’s like I went to pay you $20 for lunch, but accidentally gave you 20 Bens instead of 20 $1s, because I’m blind and put them in the wrong part of my wallet.

Imagine if you came to my house, accidentally left your phone here, and then when you came back to pick it up I was like “I already sold it. You left it here so it’s mine.”

Sure, you have a pretty much all the banking agreements, laws, and legal precedents in favor of your point, but how could they prevail over this?

Naw she knows what she did and damn you for making me side with the police! I may never forgive you.

This article makes zero sense. Of course its not her money and she knows that. Just because its transferred to your account doesnt make it yours if it was done in mistake, especially when they found it right away, followed the correct procedures to get the funds back, but had already been taken out of account and

I find this a difficult hill to order somebody to die upon. The statement at the end rings true. If I gave a cashier (or vending machine) more than exact change for a purchase, I would want change back, whether it’s one cent or $400. It doesn’t go to the entity that received the overage amount.

Black people doing weird, awesome, heroic, and magical shit, without needing to deal with the baggage of racism.

I watched it and I do not agree. I thought it was completely awful. Boring and joyless and I could not wait for it to end.

Frankly I have never really understood the resurgance of vinyl, I’m not really into music and I know that people say that it sounds more “true” because it’s not digital, but I still think a lot of it is either nostalgia or people being trendy.

Can’t think of a worse way to spend 4 hours than watching the Snyder cut in B&W. I guess a close 2nd would be watching the Snyder cut in color.