Whether they itemize it on the bill or not, it's going to be paid be the customers, won't it? I guess the issue is over the sneakiness of the matter. I guess if it's on the menu, like 1.5% Health fee added to all orders it shouldn't be an issue. The problem with the Airline and Hotel examples is that they never let you know about those fees until you're stuck without any other options.
In sleep paralysis studies, individuals often report a feeling of another presence. I don't know what causes it but it's not uncommon, which may or not be comforting. :) I get that too, like when I think there's people outside my front door, trying to get in.
I see he has carnival accidents up there but I don't see clowns. I hate clowns and actually, I'd be delighted to see a carnival accident if it involved a clown.
My car has had 6 recalls, only two of which applied to my particular model, one applying to manifold design and one to ignition switch design, both caused trapping of debris which may cause a fire. I elected not ot get it fixed. Why? Well, I have a sneaky suspicion that dealers (or maybe just the mechanics there) do things which cause further repairs to be necessary.
anyway, my solution is to just keep an eye on those things to make sure dirt and junk aren't trapped. I would say the best thing you can do is learn regular maintenance that you can do yourself. It'll add years to the life of your car.
For me I always think I may be hearing someone trying to break down the front door or jiggling the doorknob. Like I said, I'm more or less awake in my mind but I can't move and I have trouble focusing my listening to determine whether I'm really hearing it or it's just a hallucination aspect. For me trying to wake up never works and trying to focus my listening never works, I'm completely paralyzed. the only thing that works is to completely relax and try to go back to sleep, it'll often go away not too long after that. I think the act of "trying" to do anything actually prolongs the paralysis because that's what the paralysis is there to do in the first place, keep you from acting out your dreams.
Seems to me there must be more to the story. Like the ATF had a tip that these were real guns (otherwise why wasn't this jsut a customs issue??). Instead, ATF turns up, makes a big to-do about it and feels the need to asser dominance by destroying everything, making it seem worthwhile.
Before I got to the "orange tips" part, I was wondering about what law they would cite for confiscation. But apparently, the missing orange tips is grounds for confiscation. Just like driving 105 on the highway when the limit is 65, the cop can give you a warning, a small ticket (traveling too fast for conditions), an actual speeding ticket, or they can book you on reckless endagerment. All depends.
I get sleep paralysis. I hate it. Sometimes I'll get hallucinations, but I actually don't mind those, it's just a really vivid dream. The paralysis I hate is when I'm more or less fully awake in my mind but my body is sleeping and I can't make myself "wake up". It's just nothing works and the only thing I can do is go back to sleep. Sometimes it's difficult not to panic when this happens.
OK, so is it illegal to purchase weapons that can be easily retro-fitted into dangerous weapons? I know you can buy a Saigai-12 and remove all the safety crap to turn it back to it's original functionality and that's not illegal. I can't imagine the barrels or inner workings of these airsoft guns would function under live ammo conditions. So you'd basically have to build a rifle out of parts and maybe you could use the grips from the airsoft gun.
I do think that it is illegal for airsoft guns not to have the orange tip though.
Manycam can provide hours of fun when coupled with chat roulette. One tip is to tell your daughters that the Jonas Brothers are not on chat roulette, no matter what it looks like, and they do not want to see your boobs.
when I was 11-12 years old, my dad brought home 3 or 4 old chemistry sets that were barely touched. He renovated houses and the owner had these in the basement and said my dad could have them. They had all the good stuff in them. One of them even had an experiment for making gunpowder! I was constatly wrapping thing in magnesium and making the house stink like rotten eggs by making stinkbombs with sulfur.
Come to think of it, it's entirely possible that I could bowl against the best bowler in the world and be at least tied with him for 3 frames (I've gotten a couple turkeys before). That would never happen against the best golfer and I play golf a lot more than I bowl. I only bowl when there's no where else to drink.
Yes but the best desired outcome is far easier in bowling. I can't count the number of strikes I've gotten in bowling, but I can count the number of hole-in-ones I've gotten, zero. The only fair analogy would be if golf was designed around the hole-in-one, which it isn't. Plus you have to include weather. Golf strategy is uncountably more complicated than bowling strategy.
Any goof can roll a ball and get a "perfect" bowling outcome, it takes something more to get a hole-in-one or even under par.
I wouldn't call you insane for arguind that golf wasn't a sport. However, in golf there are countless ways to approach a hole, based on your abilities with different sets of clubs. You may try to for the green, or lay up. Do you try to carry the bunker or play it safe? How fast are the greens today? Where's the hole placement? There's a lot more strategy that you need to employ for every hole, every course, and depending on the abilities of the individual playing.
In bowling you're trying to do the exact thing everytime, right? Sure, lane conditions are different but ultimately, you want a strike everytime. IS there any other strategy to it?
Bowling is not a sport. Just because it takes an effort to throw 90 games in a week doesn't make it a sport. It's just a game because it has a fixed limit. No matter how good you are, you can't do better than a 900 series.
In sleep paralysis studies, individuals often report a feeling of another presence. I don't know what causes it but it's not uncommon, which may or not be comforting. :) I get that too, like when I think there's people outside my front door, trying to get in.
anyway, my solution is to just keep an eye on those things to make sure dirt and junk aren't trapped. I would say the best thing you can do is learn regular maintenance that you can do yourself. It'll add years to the life of your car.
erm, i don't think you've thought this all the way through. my advice is to not try this.
For me I always think I may be hearing someone trying to break down the front door or jiggling the doorknob. Like I said, I'm more or less awake in my mind but I can't move and I have trouble focusing my listening to determine whether I'm really hearing it or it's just a hallucination aspect. For me trying to wake up never works and trying to focus my listening never works, I'm completely paralyzed. the only thing that works is to completely relax and try to go back to sleep, it'll often go away not too long after that. I think the act of "trying" to do anything actually prolongs the paralysis because that's what the paralysis is there to do in the first place, keep you from acting out your dreams.
Seems to me there must be more to the story. Like the ATF had a tip that these were real guns (otherwise why wasn't this jsut a customs issue??). Instead, ATF turns up, makes a big to-do about it and feels the need to asser dominance by destroying everything, making it seem worthwhile.
Before I got to the "orange tips" part, I was wondering about what law they would cite for confiscation. But apparently, the missing orange tips is grounds for confiscation. Just like driving 105 on the highway when the limit is 65, the cop can give you a warning, a small ticket (traveling too fast for conditions), an actual speeding ticket, or they can book you on reckless endagerment. All depends.
I do think that it is illegal for airsoft guns not to have the orange tip though.
Yes but the best desired outcome is far easier in bowling. I can't count the number of strikes I've gotten in bowling, but I can count the number of hole-in-ones I've gotten, zero. The only fair analogy would be if golf was designed around the hole-in-one, which it isn't. Plus you have to include weather. Golf strategy is uncountably more complicated than bowling strategy.
Any goof can roll a ball and get a "perfect" bowling outcome, it takes something more to get a hole-in-one or even under par.
I wouldn't call you insane for arguind that golf wasn't a sport. However, in golf there are countless ways to approach a hole, based on your abilities with different sets of clubs. You may try to for the green, or lay up. Do you try to carry the bunker or play it safe? How fast are the greens today? Where's the hole placement? There's a lot more strategy that you need to employ for every hole, every course, and depending on the abilities of the individual playing.
In bowling you're trying to do the exact thing everytime, right? Sure, lane conditions are different but ultimately, you want a strike everytime. IS there any other strategy to it?