Resigning before you can be kicked out will smooth over a bunch of transgressions. But not that one.
A Pennsylvania man accused of beheading his father and displaying the severed head in a video posted to YouTube has been found competent to stand trial.
He sounds like the average Trump supporter.
“Sounds like he lost his head!”
“No he didn’t, he set it over there on the table.”
Hell, he sounds like Trump.
Morons of a feather …
I know people are “presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law”, but there should be an addendum, “unless, of course, the person is charged with beheading their father and displaying the severed head in a video posted to YouTube”.
Hold on, you don’t know that he beheaded his father… maybe the head fell off all on its own, and he realized it would make for fresh content on his channel?
If he is released on bail, Thanksgiving Dinner will be awkward.
Nah, that just means that the court case is going to be really, really easy.
What kind of jive is this; you’re a “stuff the constitution” type of person now?
Nah. You know he’s not going to have any issues carving the turkey.
Is there some sort of “head of household” joke in there?
Not anymore.
You guys kill me!
ETA: figuratively
Well, maybe after decapitating his dad and putting all that stuff on YouTube, he was thoughtful enough to save the wishbone.
A Denver PD recruit with sickle cell was hazed so severely that both of his legs had to be amputated.
This is nothing short of evil. (The link goes to Yahoo.)
The scammers are now lurking on social media, looking for posts from upset travelers dealing with flight cancellations and delays, and posing as airline customer service agents, the Federal Trade Commission warned in an alert.
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"Opportunistic scammers know this, and they’re re lurking behind fake accounts trying to steal travelers’ information. The scammers ask passengers for a slew of information, like their booking confirmation number, phone number, or bank account,‘’ the FTC said. “Or they send passengers to a spoofed site that harvests their personal information and use it to steal the passenger’s identity or rack up charges on their accounts.”
That’s especially annoying, because these days social media can be a legit way of getting customer service. I recently needed to make some changes to my cable plan. No matter what time of day I called Comcast, the automated system said all their reps were busy and to make the change online, but when I tried to do it on their website it forced me into a live chat then told me there were no operators available and to call them instead. I had to go to Reddit to get the attention of a human employee who could put through the change for me, and someone less tech-savvy than myself could have easily fallen for an impersonator.
There’s risk even outside of “barbaric” training.
TIL the term “exertional sickling”. I had no idea that was a thing.