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I feel as if I'm slowly starting to go insane

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Edited by Wavy

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Just now, Mr. Freeze said:

 

id should DMCA that shit 

They really should given on how blatant it is.

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8 hours ago, Wavy said:

I feel as if I'm slowly starting to go insane

This is the first (and probably only) time a good ol' cease and desist would come in handy. Why are so many NFT "artists" obsessed with drawing apes, anyway?

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1 minute ago, Silent Wolf said:

This is the first (and probably only) time a good ol' cease and desist would come in handy. Why are so many NFT "artists" obsessed with drawing apes, anyway?

Honestly I might DM or contact id Software about this. It's completely unacceptable.

 

Though about the monkey thing: There's plenty of alterations and derivatives of Bored Apes. No idea why as they're completely lifeless and expressionless.

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22 hours ago, Biodegradable said:

 

Z9nJ5rl.png

i watched the matrix for the first time like 2 days ago and now i see references to it everywhere.

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4 minutes ago, Jello said:

 

c1c2170f-f039-4c84-adb8-d031c6a58acb.jpe

I’ve argued for years that the overabundance of abandoned shopping carts in parking lots is proof that humanity is intrinsically evil.

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17 minutes ago, Faceman2000 said:

I’ve argued for years that the overabundance of abandoned shopping carts in parking lots is proof that humanity is intrinsically evil.

I believe you are correct. As someone who has had to gather up carts, people who don't return them to the corral are intrinsically lazy, unempathetic, self-centered beings. There's no damn reason you should have to deposit a quarter for a cart, and then return it to get your quarter back. It's just the right damn thing to do. 

 

Every time you see someone out getting carts, they have other things that they need to be doing; make it easier by not letting your cart glide to the far end of the parking lot. It's called being a human. The minute it takes you to return it to the cart corral means two minutes someone else isn't wasting their damn time. Well, and the people who threaten lawsuits because a cart hit their vehicle in the parking lot, because it was supposed to be in a corral. 

 

I really think that 'meme' is extremely accurate.

 

Edit: Well, and when I was a wee lad and I went shopping with my Mom or my Grandmother, they would always ask me "Could you take the cart back for me?". And I loved it, because I was in control of the cart, and I could push it, put my feet up on it, and coast back to the cart corral. It was fun. Plus, I was being responsible.

Edited by Jello

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45 minutes ago, Shin Godzilla said:

A bunny looks at a PC monitor in Frame 1, then looks away unimpressed in Frame 2

That's a d'awww. Rabbits have no right being as cute as they are. It's no wonder they reproduce like... well, rabbits.

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16 hours ago, Jello said:

 

c1c2170f-f039-4c84-adb8-d031c6a58acb.jpe

 

Actually it's that the whole shopping cart flow is poorly designed. Just like doing the dishes is the final and most boring part of the meal flow. So it's the easiest for nobody to want (or need) to do the dishes.

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21 hours ago, Jello said:

Every time you see someone out getting carts, they have other things that they need to be doing;


Not always. My brother worked at a grocery store and collecting carts, to him, was essentially free break time.

...except on days like today when it's -0 degrees out...

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21 minutes ago, magicsofa said:


Not always. My brother worked at a grocery store and collecting carts, to him, was essentially free break time.

...except on days like today when it's -0 degrees out...

Well yeah, when I was essentially managing back of house and inventory at Toys R Us I would jump at the chance to get carts when I heard it over the radio. Especially when all the front of house staff was busy. Because I could have a smoke while I was doing it, and get out of the store for a few minutes.

 

That doesn't mean I didn't have better things to do.

Edited by Jello

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@Jello when we went shopping on this one mall nearby, we would never return the shopping carts because there were employees designated to fetch them back.

Edited by Gustavo6046

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2 hours ago, Gustavo6046 said:

@Jello when we went shopping on this one mall nearby, we would never return the shopping carts because there were employees designated to fetch them back.

Well I'm not saying take the cart back into the store, but at least return it to a cart corral. So you know, they aren't rolling all over the parking lot and hitting vehicles whenever a strong breeze comes up. If the store doesn't have cart corrals, well then just leave it wherever, I don't think the onus of actually taking them back into the building should be on paying customers either. It's up to the business to ensure they have employees available to gather them up.

 

But if there are cart corrals, it's simple common courtesy to at least put them there. I've seen plenty of people that would just leave the cart right next to the cart corral. Plenty of space to put it within the rails so there was less of a risk of it rolling away, but nope. Right next to it.

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I’m assuming, @Jello, that you are an American. Our friend @Gustavo6046 however, is not: he’s Brazilian, if I’m not mistaken. Having lived in Brazil for a time, I can assure you the way their grocery stores and shopping centers are set up is completely different from what you are used to. Supermarkets here are way bigger than anything in most parts of Brazil - even in Campinas, where I lived (a city of over a million people) there wasn’t a single supermarket that rivaled a typical American Walmart in size (there are some Walmarts there, but they are much smaller). It’s a totally different system and what Gustavo did was correct there as I recall. Gustavo’s confusion arises from his unfamiliarity with how shopping carts and supermarkets function in the US.

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