macgynver
macgynver
macgynver

Yeah, I’d be very concerned about this. I know with car related documents, there is a big book of examples employees consult to determine if what you have is legitimate. When we moved, the DMV employee wouldn’t accept one of my husband’s things because it listed the last name first. She was wrong, but had to be

Ms Davis probably altered the forms in crayon... fairly easy to remove.

If you are good at it, you can ONLY do it once.

This one is pretty clever, too.

One of my favorite Kim Davis tweets:

Rosa Parks was specifically chosen by the NAACP as the face of their cause because of her intelligence and unimpeachable character. It seems like Kim Davis was chosen by the far right because of the opposite qualities. So, good call.

Yup, just another sad, lonely bigot.

I thought the forms DID have her name on them and that is why she took them off which is resulting in their being called into question.

No matter how many times I put fucked in my dictionary, it always thinks somehow, maybe this time, ducked makes more sense. Sigh.

Further proving this was never about her religious beliefs if she is altering forms that other people have signed. She hates gay people, period.

I’m really ready for her sanctimony pony to throw a shoe.

My dad reached for the slotted metal spoon, because, and I quote “Metal vibrates, and the holes allow for less wind resistance as you swing” He thought this was HYSTERICAL as he did it. Even 30 year old me is cringing at the thought. The only thing he taught me to do was to distrust authority figures. Every kid is

THANK YOU for posting this.

Some kids want to please adults, some don’t give a shit (or at least don’t do so outwardly). There’s no need (or use) to explore that tendency when they’re 4-10 years old; the concept is lost on them. Once they hit 10-12, you can teach them what it means to independently analyze the cost (and rewards) of pleasing

And then bring it up a year or so later so they know you knew.

I don’t see how that one could possibly backfire.

My mother used to be like that. Unfortunately I had a younger brother who was really good at framing me for his misdeeds and my mom was always on too much of a hair trigger to actually check her evidence before reacting. All she ever did was teach me I should do as I please, because a beating was coming anyway and I

Our take: If you did something wrong, you’re going to get punished for it (sort of the speeding ticket approach). However - if you come clean right up front, the punishment is going to be much less than if you lie about what happened. It may be as minor a punishment as discussing why it was wrong and how to fix what