I should probably see about getting a real card and do small things with it.
I put everything on my credit card but I enter the transactions into my check register as if they were cash/debit, so I know I have the money to cover it.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I should probably see about getting a real card and do small things with it.
I put everything on my credit card but I enter the transactions into my check register as if they were cash/debit, so I know I have the money to cover it.
I put everything on my credit card but I enter the transactions into my check register as if they were cash/debit, so I know I have the money to cover it.
That's my approximate modus operandi. I still use my debit card from time to time so I don't have some sort of attack when the credit card bill comes, but I get reward points, so I figure I might as well generate them.
I have a question spurred by a story I just read--how old is old enough to leave sitting in a bath by themselves while you answer the door, presumably out of really easy earshot?
ita, young children can drown in 2 inches of water.
I would probably say 5?
I would probably say 5?
From five years old is what I've seen too.
My friend leaves her 2 and 4 year-olds alone together in the bath, but acknowledges it's not recommended.
I look sideways at your friend. Maybe a 4-year-old is OK to leave alone, but leaving a 2-year-old under the supervision of a prekindergardener? Oh HELL no!
She's not out of earshot or anything -- the house is small.
Okay, that jibes with my reflexive reaction. The author was portraying somewhat irresponsible behaviour without criticism.
I would freak out outright at the idea of leaving a two year old unsupervised in the bath long enough to be answering a door or doing anything else which took that level of my attention. But I don't have any experience to back that up with. The idea makes me nervous, is all.
Man, there's nothing like going back over a rebuttal you've typed up and replacing long paragraphs with single sentences. My previous boss used to urge me to be *more* communicative, but seriously, he had no idea what urges I was fighting. The amount of verbiage I can dredge up to discuss five minutes of TV from 15 years ago is pretty damned sad.
Work just never inspires that in me.
I wonder how prevalent this practice really is. I always start from the position of assuming hype, but then there is this:
Questions have been raised about the legality of the practice, which is also the focus of proposed legislation in Illinois and Maryland that would forbid public agencies from asking for access to social networks.
Seriously? I mean, the ACLU has already gotten involved on someone's benefit, and they're actually naming organisations that have done it. It's creepy.
I wouldn't want to work any place that asked for my FB password. If that's their presumption for an interview then it would be infinitely worse to work for them.
I wouldn't have a problem directing them to my FB profile, but otherwise, fuck them.
Dag, I wish I had some money to give to the ACLU because it's seriously getting to be a creepy culture here in the U.S. of A.