Gotta love it when natural selection takes over.
Gotta love it when natural selection takes over.
Yah...grew up there. Lived in Jackson, Mississippi for a while. Some real sweet spots all up and down the southern states.LA has always been a pit.
Have you ever been to the South? Maybe Florida? Yeah the gentrified spots can ok, but don’t take a wrong turn. This isn’t a partisan problem it’s a multi-dimensional problem. I realize simplicity is easier, but doesn’t tell the real story.
Wait, what! Jackson? Mississippi?Yah...grew up there. Lived in Jackson, Mississippi for a while. Some real sweet spots all up and down the southern states.
Still nothing like what I see downtown everyday.
Some under reported news is the skyrocketing violent crime rate.
Saw BB King jam with the house band at an underground spot in the shotgun district. One of the more memorable accidental encounters in my life.Wait, what! Jackson? Mississippi?
Who knew. Okay......Saw BB King jam with the house band at an underground spot in the shotgun district. One of the more memorable accidental encounters in my life.
FactRead on the Twitter that 1/3 of the military and 40% of California health care workers have refused the vaccine. Anyone have verification? If true that just goes to the boneheadedness of the cdc policy: get your vaccine and continue to lockdown (I think Biden said for a year in the cnn townhall). Given the experimental nature of the vaccine (and inability therefore to mandate), the unpleasant side effects in younger people, and the relative lack of risk in young people, the best way to sell this would be the quickest return to normal possible. Instead we get the new cdc tiers that say no return to normal in schools even after teachers vaccinated.
Fact
you are right, and it's curious that this is being allowed. Certain vaccines are considered a requirement in order to be deployable. Not being deployable eventually leads down the chapter road. Wonder if this vaccine is not being considered a deployment requirement. I will ask some people.When I was in the military, we didn't have an option, although some people were excused for certain allergies. The worst day in boot camp was one in each cheek and one in each arm.
On second thought, that wasn't the worst day. The next day was.
you are right, and it's curious that this is being allowed. Certain vaccines are considered a requirement in order to be deployable. Not being deployable eventually leads down the chapter road. Wonder if this vaccine is not being considered a deployment requirement. I will ask some people.
It maybe because it's only Emergency Use authorized. It's the reason hospitals haven't been able to mandate their workers to get it. It's still considered "experimental" so the employer is liable if they force it on someone and they have a side effect.
Oh how times have changed."Listen up, grunts. We are all going to get in this helicopter headed for a landing zone within range of an enemy position. If any of you don't want to go, just step off to the side there."
Oh how times have changed.
IV practice dummy was always fun.Another boot camp memory -- we were asked to "volunteer" blood donations. Every man went. When we got to the hospital, they let the one guy in the company who wanted to be a corpsman help out - getting him used to the sight of blood, I guess. We had to march over there, but they gave us a bus ride back to the barracks.
One of my foster care brothers was station in Frankfurt Germany. He dealt with Ammo. Well, one night he and his pals were out drinking and well, things got out of hand. MP showed up and my bro punched one of them. Not good to pull that stunt in 88' He got the boot and slept in his car for year and then got his shit together and has found a nice life in Kauai for over 30 years. He was dealt no cards at the poker table when he came to the planet. I would love to share his adoption story and his near death experience he endured before he was born. Espola, this is real life & death and this planet loves lifeAnother boot camp memory -- we were asked to "volunteer" blood donations. Every man went. When we got to the hospital, they let the one guy in the company who wanted to be a corpsman help out - getting him used to the sight of blood, I guess. We had to march over there, but they gave us a bus ride back to the barracks.
Darwin Award Candidate for the category. "Who Says You Go Out of this World Alone?"Gotta love it when natural selection takes over.