Devils Panties 12/18/2024
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You probably would roll on the shooter pretty quick, i'd think. but hey - depends on how competent and interested in hosing you the DA is. Maybe you planned to be tied up in the trunk to avoid being accused.
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I think he's referring to the getaway driver in a robbery where you get part of the stolen money.
The company is profiting from the poisonous cinnamon.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] on last edited by
and lead in specific is, for some reason, used in some older industrial spice grinders
Because lead is cheap and easy to cast, I bet.
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[email protected]replied to HubertManne on last edited by
What is that thing sitting to the right in the first panel? A young sibling covered in mashed potatoes?
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Like I said, there are lawsuits and there should be, because a business is ultimately responsible for what it sold and who it chose to do business with to a fundamentally higher standard than an individual is.
The consumer facing businesses can turn around a sue their suppliers to continue the chain.Finding they destroyed documentation that they knew something would indeed be a pretty big smoking gun. There's no real reason to think that they did though, since the businesses in question aren't actually making any money off of it or in a position to benefit. They actually loose money by having to pull stock and destroy it.
In at least one case, we know which company added the lead and which potentially knew about it, they're just in Ecuador.
Also, felony murder requires that you have intent to commit a criminal act. As written, not necessarily as applied, it would apply if you agreed to drive to a gas station robbery and your passenger killed someone. If you just agree to give someone a ride and then they kill someone you're not culpable, assuming you said "oh hell no" and then didn't continue to give them a ride post-murder.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] on last edited by
True, but in the modern era so is aluminum, and I would have expected essentially everywhere to have updated by now since we're more than a century into knowing lead and food don't mix.
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Buy it then do a lead test on it. Same for Turmeric, there's a lead based yellow pigment that is added to make it look MOAR YELLOW. Buy it, test it, make note of where you got it for next time.
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How do you test for lead though?
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Also the app us malware infested and even leaves malware and spyware on your phone after you delete the app!
"They" used to say McDonald's is not a restaurant company, it's a real estate company (they buy land and lease it to franchisees).
Temu is not a cheap crap company, they are a data company. Their business is to collect data and sell it to profit. The cheap crap you get doesn't need to make them money, because they are in they business of data harvesting and selling. The cheap crap is just how they get your data.
If anyone offers you even cheaper stuff if you buy it through the app, then that's a good sign they want to sell your data.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
To be fair, if the lead is added by a middle man selling to the company, then the company isn't making any more money.
I can definitely see a situation where that's the case. It would be comparable to buying something off someone, you look at it and it looks like everything is in order, after you sell it on it turns out the stuff was stolen.
I'm not 100% sure, but I don't think you can be held accountable in such a situation unless it's proven that you either knew or should have known that you were selling stolen goods.
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I mean that sounds like if I hire a contractor whose work is not up to code. In that scenario im still on the hook middleman or not.
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That depends on what level you're working at: If you hire a company to do electrical work as a part of your construction project, you'll typically rely on that company to provide paperwork confirming that everything is in order. As your company does not have the qualifications to do the certification (hence why you are hiring a subcontractor), you cannot be expected to cross-check the work.
If the building catches fire due to an electrical failure, it's the subcontractor that signed off on the paper whose held liable, not the company that delivered the end-product.
Similarly, if I buy a product and receive a certificate that it holds some standard, I'm permitted to assume the certificate is valid and re-sell the product, unless there's some express reason I should have understood that something is wrong.
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I ordered a TV mount (not from Temu). I had to install some app called Shop to get tracking information. The settings had a data and privacy section so I go in to turn off third party ad shit. They direct me to a form that accepts my email address and say it may take up to seven days?? Like, what? Just give me a check box.