village604
I have it. I know when I make poor diet decisions it's on me, not anyone else.
No it doesn't. Your phone's battery isn't actually at 100% when it reads 100%.
That's why I said easily accessible.
Personal responsibility absolutely plays a role here.
If they have easily accessible healthier options, kinda.
More people living in a location means there is more work to be done and more people to do it.
If that were universally applicable the towns wouldn't be dying to begin with. The houses are empty because there's a lack of available work.
It also won't give you 3rd degree burns. I've intentionally lit my hand on fire with alcohol many times, and I've never had as much as a blister.
The fact that they were unjustly imprisoned isn't a good reason to waste taxpayer money throwing this guy in prison.
You do get positives from your house price going up since you can borrow against the equity.
But property taxes pay for a lot of things, like schools, so if we're getting rid of that tax revenue it has to be made up somewhere. I doubt there's enough investment properties and landlords to make up that difference, and if that ended up being the new source the cities would try to kill personal home ownership.
Our ball python loves it. We had to put multiple curtain rods at the top of their (we're assuming female but aren't sure) enclosure and they still manage to fall off it on a daily basis.
I always chuckle when I see someone say that ball pythons don't climb.
I'd eat healthier food because I'd have to.
That has absolutely nothing to do with people who have access to healthy foods choosing to eat unhealthy foods.
If I go out and buy a bottle of liquor, I can't blame liquor advertising for my choice to break my sobriety. That would be all on me.