gfitzpatrick47
Giovanni_Fitzpatrick
gfitzpatrick47

While it hasn’t been as common in the last two expansions, many final raid bosses, particularly on Mythic difficulty (or in earlier expansions on Heroic, or doing specific things prior to the boss), the encounter would change drastically, and none of this was revealed by either Blizzard or derring-dos on the PTR.

This

So no drivers have ever stolen food? So no Uber drivers have ever refused to return goods left in their vehicle? So no UPS drivers have ever stolen packages?

Sure, while it’s not their job to make sure the order is prepared correctly, it IS their job to make sure the ENTIRE order is delivered to the address specified,

Perhaps I was unclear by what I meant by “missing” food.

In any case where food is missing, either a portion or the entire order, there’s only two possibilities: the restaurant fucked up, or the driver fucked up. “Fucked up” includes stealing some or all of the order. Regardless, it’s still a fuck up, and because the

If you’re out here trying to argue that some delivery drivers won’t take portions of an order, however small the percentage of orders it might be, you’re a damned naive fool.

If we have video evidence of delivery drivers for other industries misappropriating deliveries (such as Fedex, UPS, and the like), the same shit

That’s fine. Still doesn’t escape the fact that delivery drivers, rightly or wrongly, will be presumed the responsible party if part of the order is outright missing (regardless of whether the third-party service processes a quick refund; orderers want their food, not a refund), and that people are always gonna be

Irrelevant consideration. I’m not at the restaurant to check, nor am I going to go to the restaurant to make sure all the food is there, as that defeats the entire purpose of ordering delivery.

Sure it sucks for the driver if the restaurant fucked up, but it would be silly to guarantee a good tip prior to delivery when

I’m for that, but then you have the question of: Who is gonna foot the bill?

Assume the drivers get paid an hourly wage, is it gonna be 50/50 between the third-party delivery service and the restaurant? Is the delivery service gonna foot the entire bill seeing as how the drivers only have a business relationship with

I’m with you.

I’m firmly in the “No tip until delivery” bandwagon. Too often have I had my outright delivered to the wrong apartment because drivers seem to have some difficulty reading building+unit numbers, food being missing, and deliveries not arriving. Sure, I can go through the process of getting a refund, but

50% of men (and around 25%) the world over deal with some form of alopecia by the time they’re 50, usually androgenic alopecia (also known as male-pattern baldness, even though it also effects women).

It’s a bit silly to get bent out of shape about something as common and non-medically significant as alopecia,

It’s a bit silly to assume that everyone is constantly tuned in to Hollywood news, especially for something as trivial as Jada having alopecia.

Having been around celebrities and other well-to-do people, they spend significantly less time worrying about the minutiae of one anothers’ lives than fans do, which is why

That’s a thing called traction alopecia that’s caused by repeated damage to hair follicles due to certain hair styles and wig usage.

It’s commonly caused by pulling the hair too tight, which over time damages and ends up killing the hair follicles, usually the ones near the front of the head. Probably the most famous

Of course, and it hearkens back to the famous quote from Otto Von Bismarck, who predicted that a great European war would come out from “some damned foolish thing in the Balkans”.

Mind you, this was in 1888, 26 years before WWI, so even if he acknowledged that the Balkans were part of Europe (and not say the Caucasus,

All of that might be true, but it still ignores the implication made by William that outright wars in the former Yugoslavia somehow were neither “wars” nor took place in “Europe”.

Also, it’s rather common for civil wars to spill over into other territories, or precipitate larger conflicts. Further, a common way for

Tampa native here, and you’re a bit off.

While Tampa hasn’t had a direct hit by a major hurricane in a very long time, plenty of hurricanes have come through (and did significant damage) Tampa within my lifetime (31 years). Hell, between 2004-2006, there were no less than 3 named hurricanes (including Katrina) that

Again, we don’t know the exact timeline of when Schiller went to Wells Fargo. Wendy says it was after she was fired, Lori and Wells Fargo haven’t said anything to that effect. Regardless, merely being related to someone doesn’t give you legal authority over their finances (and since Wendy is divorced, she doesn’t have

Exactly.

People think that POAs grant unlimited freedom and authority to do anything on behalf of the grantor. Not only do they have limits legally, but depending on the company and the industry, there are limits to that as well (such as in financial affairs like you mentioned).

As far as Schiller being fired, that

You’ve put a lot of words into describing the double standard I’m talking about. Anyone can make any allegation against Williams for any reason and it’s instantly acted on because “crazy lady.” Nobody would think of stifling the great Kanye for his behavior because “quirky genius.”

Not to defend Kanye, but until someone in his orbit makes a legal request, or he does something that is outright illegal, the courts (or banks) can’t unilaterally decide to freeze his assets, or get him into a guardianship.

This article shows that someone in Wendy’s orbit has made a legal move against her. Because of

Thank you for chiming in.

I’m only familiar with how it works down in here in Tampa (I’ve got friends who work for the THA), and I know that we’re going through both a strong wave of gentrification, as well as strong attempts to get reasonably affordable housing in the city/county, especially since so many long-term

Oh, you’re absolutely right.

It’s very easy to look up situations, especially in large, dense metropolitan cities, where developers dangle affordable housing in order to get tax breaks and property easements, and once granted, actually provide little-to-no affordable housing. In fact, in the latest episode of