poptixzz
Matt Hallacy
poptixzz

It’s funny the obsession with high speeds people some people still have, 140 mph is a completely safe speed to travel at in a modern car. Obviously you have to take into account your vehicle and road/traffic conditions. But if you’ve got space there is nothing wrong with opening it up. I remember making a road trip

And they start getting tickets for the tags in the mirror by non local LEOs.

Hope this Picture comes thru. I would say back in the day NIMBY ruled

Jeez, just do what every other normal town does. Put up a sign and a circus clown.

Good! We need to think of the children!

When his left elbow hit the ground, he lost grip on the ball with his left hand (one might say DROPPED it) and the ball hit the ground. That’s a pretty clear non-catch according to the rules.

Bearback Mountain. The tender story of two grizzlies finding each other, and leaving the condoms at home.

Amazon Logistics is very unreliable. My last fake delivery was with ONTRAC. I wasted about 45 minutes trying to track that down. Amazon said to wait a day. It magically showed up on my door, even though they don’t have approved access into our apt buildings.

Welcome to the 2000's, the era of totally unrealistic fabricated metrics.

I had the same trouble (rural route) USPS leaving a note in the mailbox at the end of the road “Sorry we missed you” and wanting me to come pick up the package in town the next day when I was working in the front yard last Sept. from 11-6 and no one came to deliver anything. Called the local Postmaster and got a

(Didn’t even mention the hyper Newfoundland who barks at passing oxygen atoms that cross the fenceline)

My USPS carrier is shady / lazy. Our USPS carrier must have just written out a bunch of we missed you notes and dropped them off instead of packages. We’re sitting down to dinner facing a window to the front of the house when USPS is delivering, so there’s no way “they missed us”.

Happened to me a few times.

Yeah, seems like the most likely scenario. But usually they pull the truck right up to the house, so they’d have to be scanning them and then driving door to door anyway. I guess that would save some time for the driver, but I’d think their bosses would get tired of the calls from people who don’t know their stuff is

This totally happens to me about 1 out every 5 times.

So, in order to avoid jeopardizing their contract, they knowingly falsify data in a way that Amazon, a technology company, can easily and obviously detect.

That explains how I was looking at the mailbox when my Amazon order was supposedly delivered and saw no one come to the house. It was in the mailbox the next day.

If somebody left behind a bag on an airplane? Yes, that actually does seem like exactly the scenario that you would call police for first to make sure there wasn’t a bomb or other threat. It could be just a left bag, but it could be something much worse. I’m pretty sure the airlines don’t play around with things like

I really can’t tell if you’re being disingenuous or not.