Of course
leadore
Personally when my toner runs out I will buy Brother toner to reward them. Even if it costs more than off-brands, it lasts so long it's not like it would save me that much money per year anyway.
I love my Brother laser printer!
I think so, back in his first term. As I recall, a veteran offered his and he took it and kept it.
Chips A'Roy is crummy.
If you wear glasses or contacts that are for seeing at a distance, it's hard for your eyes to focus close-up for very long. Same for if you don't wear glasses at all, if you are reading a lot. So depending on your situation you may just need to take your glasses off while reading, or pick up some cheap reading glasses at the drugstore--making sure to get the right type for easily focusing on the page, or even get bifocals. Best bet is to get an eye exam and tell the optometrist what you've said here, so they can figure out what your best options are.
Or he could just call up people who have received it (or their heirs if deceased), and have one of them give him theirs, like he did with the Nobel Prize. Maybe even several of them, so he can brag that he was awarded more Medals of Honor than anyone in history.
Boomer here (cusp between boomer & gen x): Why not both put down the phone AND turn off the TV?
I have a TV but pretty much only turn it on for local news & weather. I absolutely can't tolerate the ads and there are no good shows anyway except a few on PBS. I use a flip phone. I won't call it a 'dumb' phone because it's still android underneath and has navigation. But no internet.
Of course that doesn't stop me from sitting on my ass in front of a computer on the internet, but at least I'm not doing that 24/7 and have other things for entertainment like books, games, hobbies.
edit: not to imply I speak for other boomers. Most of them are on their smartphones all the time, getting notifications every 5 seconds like everyone else.
Yeah, I was over-simplifying to make my statement more dramatic and semi-funny, because so many people hate the clock-switching.
It's complicated. DST is mostly observed in North America, Europe, and part of Australia, and mostly since pre- or during WWII, BUT yes there are a few countries that started later. There are also some original ones that stopped observing it and then started again later. Also, some of the people still alive from when it started would have been too young to be able to agree to it.
So I'll amend my statement to "The vast majority of people alive today didn't agree to DST". Doesn't have the same punch.
No one alive today agreed to Daylight Saving Time.
I read the note. It was accurate. It was comprehensive. It contained no factual errors that I could identify. And I did not recognise it. Now, six weeks later, I was reading someone else’s account of a consultation I had conducted — and I couldn’t recall the patient clearly enough to reconstruct what had been left out.
If you couldn't recall enough to reconstruct what had been left out, then how do you know it was accurate and comprehensive? hmm? HMMMM?
What a nightmare.
That's why I said he tried to get past security and into the dinner.