

What you are mentioning is something that happened before there was a Ghana. It was, however, done by countries that existed back then and still exist, and benefited from the system.


What you are mentioning is something that happened before there was a Ghana. It was, however, done by countries that existed back then and still exist, and benefited from the system.


got it. a little bit of a thing happened to a whole variety of people so we can safely ignore the huge injustice that was forced upon an entire continent because these things are somehow equal.
Although the clientele can sometimes be questionable, Waffle House has really good food for the price.
I know that people do that but I’ve never had the courage.


I’ve literally had this happen. Doing a doctorate in engineering rn and this is real.


wow, I never knew about that. Terrible


It could only be negligence to cover the ceiling with flammable materials then allow open flames. What’s shocking is how common it is for this exact scenario to play out–acoustic foam that is not fire resistant and pyrotechnics.
There is a bar/restaurant nearby me where they had to shut down their restaurant due to repeated health violations. They converted into only a bar but were eventually forced to stop serving alcohol because they kept overserving people and serving minors–this caused them to close down entirely. Weirder: it’s a historical building. A company who specializes in restoring neon signs offered to do it for free and the owner apparently screamed at them until they left.
The moral? These are probably terrible people.


You expect this from Texas but are shocked and disappointed when it’s the EU.
That’s not putting words in people’s mouths. It’s a rhetorical technique called “reductio ad absurdio” which means to takes an argument to its extreme until it become ridiculous, thereby exposing its flaws.