Open-Industry-8396

Open-Industry-8396 t1_jdx9nzh wrote

I like how wmur tries to sugar coat things. "The officer shot at the car" he'll no!, that knucklehead pulled a gun on the cop, the cop was shooting at the perp, not the car. He was protecting his life.

This is a clean shooting. That guy was recklessly endangering many people. It will probably turn out the guy is mentally ill, but how is the cop to know this.

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Open-Industry-8396 t1_jdx75rm wrote

Reply to Compost Needed by Smkncgar

Same, check with your town. Our dump offersv3 yards per month for free. They just compost all the yard clean up debris, so it's not the greatest but it worked fine for me.

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Open-Industry-8396 OP t1_jckoq9q wrote

Yeah, plus I had split a few cords myself In addition to the purchases. I've an inefficient stove , old windows and furnace. Plus it's a log cabin, inefficient. As the fuel prices rise and I get older, I'm gonna have to make a move. Hate to do it, love living in the woods in a cabin but that's life and the "fun" of aging..🙂

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Open-Industry-8396 t1_jbi2lbx wrote

I never understand how people can vote or make judgements on shit they don't know about. No one in this forum has any idea what the hell our troops are doing in Syria. Someone with a lot more info than us made this decision. I think I'll defer to their judgement instead of thinking myself a military strategist.

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Open-Industry-8396 t1_jahjapm wrote

I understand that this issue is brought up by the hospitals themselves. They do not want to care for or pay for psychiatric care in their er. I understand that. Its a ridiculous place to leave someone in a crisis. Maybe mandate each hospital to have a psychiatric unit that can expand and contract as needed. No easy solutions. The core of the problem is the mental health of our people and the thought that psychiatric care can "cure" the mentally ill. Most psych meds are not very helpful, and often times cause more problems them they solve. the real solution lies in getting individuals to properly care for themselves, this will cut out about 80 percent of the patients. A book called "50 things to do before seeing a Psychiatrist " is a solution. The problem is getting folks to actually do these things, it requires effort, often a lot of effort. current society prefers a quick easy fix, unfortunately good mental health requires a life long commitment and mentally healthy parenting. Sadly I do not see this situation improving at all. It will get worse. Hang on!

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Open-Industry-8396 t1_ja3hmc0 wrote

No offense but....... if you take a good look at the majority of new hampshire folks, this proposition seems pretty freaking disgusting to me. Potato faced new england girls and overweight dumpy husband's. Yuck.

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Open-Industry-8396 t1_j94qrdu wrote

People like your neighbors are disgusting humans. Very self centered bullies. If it's any consolation they usually have very miserable lives and zero peace of mind. I would Do everything I could to get them to move or I would move. (Like tell management, call police repeatedly, enlist all other neighbors in the battle and finally pay a very large Italian gentleman to pay them a visit.)

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Open-Industry-8396 t1_j6ey35d wrote

You should pay your rent or workout something with the owner or just leave. It is not right to make others suffer because you are having difficulties. The owner has bills related to that property. I find squatting is just a mean and disgusting thing to do. I am not a landlord.

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Open-Industry-8396 t1_j5oqgoi wrote

This will be unpopular. I too appreciate them. However they do get paid extremely well. It is their choosen job. An important one but I doubt many of them are altruistic, they're making bank, at least the linemen I knew. I think we just tend to feel extremely grateful when the power(that we pay through the nose for) is turned back on (so the energy industry can bank record profits) and we translate the joy of heat and electric to the "saintly" guys on the pole. Might as well revere the dps plow guy or the kid who goes to work in the grocery store in a snow storm. It's not about service or kindness, it's about the money.

Now, a decent soldier, they have more of a possibility of being altruistic and don't get paid great. I tend to be more grateful for occupations like teachers, nurses, good public servants, etc. I would like to live in a world where these type occupations are highly rewarded as opposed to Hollywood types and pro athletes.

Sources: retired US Army Senior NCO : grumpy old NH guy.

Have a nice day.

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Open-Industry-8396 t1_j3od8xa wrote

ER is great experience, you'll learn a lot. As far as where to work, ask your local paramedics where they bring g the most trauma. Preferably a big city with lots of violence🤣(nurse joke) manchvegas or trashua? City hospital in Boston would be great. Work 3, 12 hour shifts, then 4 days off. It's called the Baylor plan of scheduling, paid at 40 hours full time.

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