If only we could enact some sort of practice - a doctrine really - where those who choose to engage in the disseminating of information of any sort are duty bound to be impartial and allow for good faith counter arguments. Doesn't that sound fair?
There really is actual truth in the world, and opinions are fine too, so long as they're presented as such. "The ocean has had record high temperatures every day for the past year" is an objective fact. "The oil companies have intentionally hidden the extent of their impact on climate change" is (currently) an opinion that can be debated by people from both sides of the issue if they do so in good faith. As one example.
I use it in coffee specifically because I don't want the hyper sweetness that white sugar provides. I think that the molasses takes the edge out of the coffee which allows me to use less of it. It could also be a mental thing but I'm still using less sugar so..
Ok so here's the deal. You replied to a guy who said "I don't know how ot is in the US. but..." with a dumb comment about how this is clearly a US card so it's a US issue. Your response made no sense (to me) because the original comment wasn't claiming anything that required US insight. They were simply providing input from their neck of the world.
Thus my confused response as to what this being a US social security card has to do with anything. Nobody asked for clarification on that, just used it as a launch point for their comment.
Trump has never "been" anything. He appears as what he thinks benefits him the most. He wanted to rub elbows with the city's elite, and that meant pretending to be a Democrat.
ETA: I'm not saying that he's always been a Republican either. His entire existence is a self-serving sham. He is and always has been a Trumper.
Citation: His current hijacking of the RNC to pilfer their funds and line his own pockets.
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What possible reason could Glassdoor have invented to convince themselves this is a good idea?