
Day: July 15, 2018
Dixie and her babies.
Our human met a sloth bear named Hank while on a behind the scenes tour of the zoo today! Yay Hank!

#badsciencejokes — view on Instagram https://ift.tt/2uB6pap
the instagram fitness community loves sidewalk oats
The Instagram fitness community is actually composed of pigeons
Urgent National Frozen Veg Recall after nine dead — Police Hour
holy??? shit???
The recall is actually for Europe BTW
Also the nine dead is total from outbreaks that have happened since 2015 so this is a bit misleading this one wording it like nine people have just died related to this recall
https://www.snopes.com/news/2018/07/07/uk-supermarkets-recall-frozen-vegetables-listeria-concerns/
Urgent National Frozen Veg Recall after nine dead — Police Hour
Urgent National Frozen Veg Recall after nine dead — Police Hour
holy??? shit???
Signal boost! Alert: UK folk! 15 July, 2018
Especially UK based spoonies,* since frozen vegetables are easier to cook, and are therefore a staple of our diets.
*(disabled and/or people with chronic pain, fatigue – for those unfamiliar with the term)
Urgent National Frozen Veg Recall after nine dead — Police Hour
NPR reported ~45 min ago (its 10:50 pm CT 7/12/18) that a family of woodchucks ate Paul Ryan’s car rendering it useless. Muahahaha! Yea woodchucks!
There is no way this is tr…
DIRECT ACTION
GOODCHUCKS
How many cars would a woodchuck fuck up if a woodchuck could fuck it up?
Different Strokes?
I think I left the teller at the bank genuinely disturbed when I told him that “If I can’t afford it, I just don’t buy it.”
“What about a car? Do you drive a car?” he inquired, his voice toning on the edge of fear.
I told him, “Yeah, I have a vehicle. I bought it used for under $3,000.”
He looked physically pained. “What about if you want to buy some kind of new appliance? Or furniture?” he persisted.
I stared at him blankly. “My couch was $5.00 at Goodwill. Like…I just buy shit cheap or I don’t buy it at all. The only thing in my life that I make payments on is my house, my bills, and my insurance, and that’s split five ways because I have housemates.”
The young man looked horrified? Appalled? And somehow also awed?
This guy couldn’t have been much older than me. But it seemed that he’d never even considered the option before of saving up for something to purchase it outright instead of using a credit card.
Am I the only person in my general age group (just turned 26) who’s never owned a credit card, and who has forgone basic comforts in order to save up for items so you don’t owe money to anyone, like, ever?If you’re living in the US without a credit card at 26, you’re playing with danger.
No credit is viewed as the same as bad credit. Which means you could be denied if you ever do need to rent an apartment or a car. Hospitals and clinics are also less likely to allow payment plan programs for people without good credit.
The best thing you could do at this point is apply for a credit card you’re eligible for and pay a few things (I do gas and groceries myself) with it each month. As long as you keep it to zero balance each month there is no interest and there will be proof of you not having debt (instead of just the absence of debt).
what.
This is legit how it works. The system requires records on you, or else. So you need a credit card and worse, you need to have a record of using it, even if you pay it off every single month. Unfortunately, the formulas used to determine credit score are secret, so we also have people suggesting that your credit rating is helped if every so often you do pay a bit of interest. The whole thing is a complete mess. If you don’t have a credit rating/history, then any loans you manage to get will be at extremely high interest and will require much more effort than they really should.
what
yeaah let me just go get a card that i can’t pay off because capitalism is shit, even if i literally only buy a pack of gum
that’d go wellIf you pay it off in full every month there is no interest. Do what OP is doing but put some of that on your credit card and pay it off every month, and soon you will have a very good credit rating.
you skipped right the fuck over the “can’t pay it off” part huh
like credit cards are just not a viable thing if you’re poor and have shit income
And I’m saying to literally not put anything on it if you can’t buy it in cash. And I’m aware that they fuck over poor people, but yeah, that’s the system that’s in place. This is advice for navigating it, which is how to obtain good credit which helps a lot.
Right like don’t make minimum payments, put your gas on your credit card then that same day pay the credit card company online then don’t worry about it for another month. It’s an absolutely shit system, but in the event of an emergency it’s good to have.
I have had to explain this to a lot of people in my life, but it’s true- no credit is the same as bad credit. What having (and using) the card actually shows is that you are capable of (and actually follow through on) making regular payments: ie, it is proof of having a steady income (even if you do not actually have a steady income). It is showing you reliably can pay for things you purchase, which is what your credit score is all about.
Think of it this way. You have a credit card, which is your credit tracking device. You use the card to tell someone “I will pay for this thing with borrowed money.” They agree to allow you to pay with borrowed money. You then turn around to your credit card company and say “Thank you for allowing me to borrow your money, I will now pay you back with my own money.” (which, if you repay them promptly enough, you can repay them the exact same amount you borrowed, rather than paying them more than you borrowed [which is what interest is])
The credit card company then recognizes that you successfully borrowed their money AND returned it safely, and they pass that information along to credit tracking companies. Each time you do this, you gain credibility. If you do this enough times, you are considered a credible borrower of money, so that if you ever are in a situation where you need to borrow a large sum of money (for example, a mortgage or a car or a hospital bill or whatever), companies with money will look at how well you have returned money in the past, and say Ah yes, this person repays their debts well, so we can lend them our money this time.
So like, do what the above folks are recommending. Get a credit card and use to to reasonably purchase things you already have to buy- put a batch of groceries on the card. Go home (or wherever you can use the interne), pay it off as if you had paid cash in the store for it. There is no extra fee or interest for doing this, and you are leveling up your credibility in case of emergency later on in life.
Ok, here’s a guide for the easiest way to do this.
1. get your first baby credit card with the bank that you already bank with. If it has cashback rewards, even better (that’ll be free money later).
2. set that shit up so it pays the full amount, automatically, every month. you don’t have to remember to go home and pay it off, or worry about it at all. You won’t pay interest.
Your first card, especially if you have no credit, is going to have a small limit. Like $500. This is important: credit companies want you to use a certain percentage of the card every month. This is 1-9%. I usually just go straight 5%. If you use too much, you look like a wild card (even if you pay it off every month) and if you use nothing than you’re not proving to them you can be trusted.
So your first card has a $500 limit. 5% of 500 is $25.
Your goal is to use $25/month.
This is about a tank of gas for me. So once a month, I would fill up with this card, and then put it in the back of my wallet until next month. The payment was made automatically by my bank from one account (debit) to the other (credit). Rinse and repeat. I did this for a year.
Then after a year, my credit had skyrocketed (because I had nothing before, and added this good habit for a year). So I called up my bank and asked for them to increase my limit based on my new credit. I had shown them I was good at borrowing a good amount of money and paying it back on time every time.
The bank increased my limit to $5,500. Like holy shit, at the time I was definitely not expecting that.
So new math. 5% of 5500 is $225. So now instead of gas, I put my cell phone bill ($50), my car insurance ($130), and my dog food automatic order ($40) on it.
The best part is everything is automatic. I keep this card in the back of my wallet permanently; all these bills and the automatic payments are, well, automatic. My credit goes up, I rack up cash back rewards, there’s nothing to it.
And, if I ever get in an emergency, like a vet bill for one of my dogs, I can use that card to pay the $3,000 emergency bill without worrying about whether the place will take my dog if I have no money. I can then go home, change the settings from “pay in full every month” to “pay $X every month” (more than the minimum!) until it’s paid off, and then go back to just my bills. My credit might take a little dip during that time, but will bounce back pretty quickly.
There’s several other factors to credit (hit me up if you want more info) but this was literally the only measure I took for my first year, and my credit went from 525 to 700 in a year. Another year later, I’m now at 753, have a mortgage with a great rate, and can get a monster ass loan if I really need it in case an emergency or hard times fall.
It’s a shitty system of hoops to jump through, but knowing you can use these measures if it comes to it is a good feeling.
Okay but literally read this entire post please!
Take it from someone who was taught that credit cards are evil, you NEED to build up some credit.
I’m 32 and only JUST NOW able to get a card because my fiance helped me do so. I could not get approved before because I didn’t have any credit.
Do you ever see a discourse go over your dash that’s just so fucking wild it’s not even worth commenting on, it’s simply easier to block every single person in the thread and move on with your life.
Facts that adults don’t tell you about bullying
– Communication doesn’t work on bullies. Telling a bully they’re making you feel bad is the wrong way to go. They want to make you feel bad. That’s the point.
– being kind to a bully doesn’t always mean they’ll stop. Sometimes it means they’ll just use your kindness to manipulate you while still continuing to bully you.
– not every bully has a sympathetically tragic home life. Sometimes people are just mean. Sometimes people just get off on hurting others.
– on that note, a tough home life is a reason, not an excuse. You don’t have to put up with bullying because somebody’s life sucks, just like you don’t have to let someone mug you because they’re broke.
– in order to forgive someone, they have to apologize first. If your bully has not apologized to you, you do not owe them anything.
– getting bullied as a kid can still mess you up in adult life. Maybe kids grow out of being bullies, but the marks they left often don’t go away.
– there are ways to get people to stop bullying you, but they almost all involve being mean back.
– as long as parents keep raising shitty bullying kids, there will be bullies. No amount of assemblies and hand-drawn posters will fix the problem. It’s the parents’ fault.
the only time I got a real life bully to stop was when I punched him in the face.
Some from my own experience;
-Even if teachers and the kids’ parents do their darndest to end the bullying with detentions and such, it might not work.
-Changing schools might not work, either.
-Fighting back might not work, if the bullies are strong guys and like to beat you up. I fought back, but got punched and kicked a lot back.
-If nothing seems to work, try to find a way to take courses in adult education.
Every situation is different, and so is what’s more likely to help. Sometimes nothing really does, besides riding it out the best you can. (And I know how much easier said that can be.)
I got two main approaches, neither of them remotely helpful.
At school: “Maybe try not being so weird”/“Ignore it!”
At home: “You must not have beaten on them enough, or they wouldn’t still be bothering you!” (Or, you know, maybe that approach is not actually appropriate in all circumstances, and might make it easier to paint you as The Real Problem 😩)
I’ll add that even in cases where bullies do get physical, they don’t necessarily have to be good at fighting for giving it back to them not to work so well as a deterrent. Sometimes they’re just sneaky. Sometimes they’ll carefully keep out of lunging range and throw stuff, after they’ve learned that getting closer is bad for their health. Sometimes provoking you into flipping your shit is apparently worth the beatdown. (Especially with the right audience. See also: sneaky.) And so on.
Expecting bullies’ motives and actions to even make sense to anyone but other people with the same mindset can be a mistake.
There is no one-size solution. I really wish I could offer one, myself. But, too many adults do want to think they have one–and it’s somehow a child’s fault if that’s just not working.
All this. And also. There will be adult bullies when you are an adult. (Adults can also bully kids, of course.) And if you run into the worst, they will be sophisticated, dedicated beyond belief to hurting people, and adept at what they do beyond what you may be able to imagine or believe is possible.
Hitting back did help sometimes. A lot of my bullies were boys, and I think they were too embarrassed to be seen fighting a girl, so they’d run away. One of them hopped on a tricycle he found lying by the road and pedaled away down the road when I tried to catch him once we got off the bus. He never bothered me again after that.
I have also been thinking about how people think a bully and a stalker can’t be the same thing. Some bullies might just be opportunistic and pick on you when you’re in their line of sight. But some decide they like bullying you so much they’ll follow you to the ends of the earth to do it.


You must be logged in to post a comment.