I was born in South America, moved to the US when I was a child. I'm an adult now, my main language is English, I think in English, I grew up here, I have a life here.
If someone asked "what" I am, I say "I'm american, but I was born in South America." It can be either a fun conversation, or a filter for judgy people I don't want around me.
If I moved to Germany, I would still say I'm an American, because it's the culture I know, the place I grew up, the identity I choose.
I don't deny my heritage, I still enjoy Salteñas once a month with my family, I speak Spanish to my son to make sure he doesn't forget it, I look Hispanic, I still have fond memories of being a child in another country, but I never say I'm "Bolivian-American," because by circumstances of life I just have more identity of my life, here.
Vaccines are such a charged subject for political reasons (that felt so frustrating to type).
I try to find something analogous. If I had the option to remove a poisonous plant from my home, I didn't because of personal choice, and my child ate the plant and died, I would consider it neglect.
Legally however, not even judges will agree with each other on this.
This is why we need government that isn't in the pocket of corporations.
We need something like lawmakers having to disclose their tax information annually. If you want to be in office and make millions you should be willing to put your morals on the review table.
I had to look it up because I used to play Warcraft 2 before I learned English so to me the codes were nonsensical lol
It's "it is a good day to die" for god mode
I had a bunch of sheets of paper with codes for StarCraft, Warcraft, GTA, and even game genie codes for every Pokemon game.
A lot of crime happened on this day across the US, why the New Orleans specifically?
Fire can lead to explosions, especially in giant batteries. Also, fireworks.
You saw, and understood the smoke. Many people don't notice, or don't question. Some people drive for weeks on low oil and when questioned about why they just say "there was a weird smell, but I didn't know what it was."
The explosion was an explosion? Ummm, yeah?
I don't understand what you're trying to say, you wouldn't be surprised of what?
TL;DW it's entitled rich a-hole who is used to money getting him what he wants, doesn't understand money cannot buy intelligence, reason, and/or empathy. A critical lack of all 3 causes a severe case of "Human Paste-itis" on the ocean floor
Putting aside everything past your first sentence, a "low amount of school shootings" is an absolutely crazy way to accept innocent children dying.
I mean, it's bad enough when innocent people get shot, but these are kids.
Maybe you'd have to explain further, but as it stands your statement comes off as "It's only some kids getting their brain lead-blasted."
That being said, addressing him directly and with power, but calmly could be an option.
Don't do it alone, but approaching a little and saying "I've noticed you at least 5 separate times and it's creeping me out, please stay away from me."
He'll most likely deny it or try to play it off, maybe even insult her, but standing her ground and saying "I don't believe you, I'm only asking nicely this time, there's no next time without the cops" and then walking away.
No insulting, no debating. It's a notice.
And of course, actually follow through, you see him again then call the non-emergency line and make a report. He can lie all he wants, once somebody has 2 or 3 police reports to prove he keeps showing up where they are then they can get a TRO within days.
It's not fair that she has to essentially make this her part time job, but it can be an effective option that doesn't have the side effects of making her look or feel at fault.
It's incredibly frustrating that the one being wronged has to keep their composure
Honestly, in legal paperwork, consult the laws.
In everyday conversation, it's what you feel.
I was born in South America, moved to the US when I was a child. I'm an adult now, my main language is English, I think in English, I grew up here, I have a life here.
If someone asked "what" I am, I say "I'm american, but I was born in South America." It can be either a fun conversation, or a filter for judgy people I don't want around me.
If I moved to Germany, I would still say I'm an American, because it's the culture I know, the place I grew up, the identity I choose.
I don't deny my heritage, I still enjoy Salteñas once a month with my family, I speak Spanish to my son to make sure he doesn't forget it, I look Hispanic, I still have fond memories of being a child in another country, but I never say I'm "Bolivian-American," because by circumstances of life I just have more identity of my life, here.