I ended up using an old hotmail account I had laying around after protonmail and gmail failed me for SMTP access to notify myself of server issues.
DaGeek247
If i want quick and easy watertight i'll coat it in a paint sealer (or similiar) from the craft store. I have yet to manage printing a watertight print right on the bed.
Although Peckey did get a monthly disability check of around $1,500, he felt he was charged for information he could have found on the internet.
He was and it is. The va website itself is a wealth of information on what the process is and how to work through it. /r/veterans is still a great source of specific information despite the recent troubles.
Last October, the Federal Trade Commission reminded veterans that they don’t need to pay for help getting benefits. The alert also warned of scammers who emphasize their military service to “gain your trust so you won’t stop and ask questions about their pitches.”
And it turns out, if you dont want to learn about the va process, you can still get shit done by asking one of the organizations who have been helping vets for nearly a hundred years to walk you through the process.
I'm less than impressed that this is happening, but also not surprised. The company is another one preying on veterans inability to speak out for themselves and taking advantage of their willful and/or regular ignorance. The support for veterans is there, but a company that charges huge amounts of money to tell you how to lie to the va so you can 'get your percent raised' is exactly the sort of thing that a disgruntled veteran who tried nothing and is all out of ideas would pursue.
The va isnt there to keep you from your benefits. It's there because companies, and veterans like this keep trying to lie and game the system so they can get what the want rather than what they deserve. It's also got it's own problems, but lying to get what you want isnt the way this should be handled.
Not at all. It just that you're using a whitelist (subscribed communities only) while a lot of people like to browse by blacklist (allow everything new, but block specific communities).
You multi-posted. once you've sent off a comment, make sure to refresh the page (without resending the data) to see it show up. It can take a bit. Also, sometimes there's glitches. Not sure which it is in this case but it's worth mentioning.
All of the ones I have at least. It's not like DHT/PeX stopped working when rarbg did.
Have you considered keeping both plans? You said it was a different isp - dsl and fiber use different cables is it may be possible. Depending on what youre after, this may be a fun project for tying two lines together.
I'd just take the cash, honestly.
The graduated system of adulthood in this country is very odd in many ways. The age of consent, when you're old enough to start drawing a paycheck, when you're allowed to start driving, when you're allowed to start voting, and when you're allowed to buy marajuana or alcohol are all different ages. And through all of this you're expected to conduct yourself like an adult while your brain chemistry is going through radical changes.
I'm not so sure I completely agree. A better done graduated system could do a lot better than a single all or nothing system could. Specifically, drugs in general. It's not just that drugs are bad or whatever. it's that the ease with which a company can exploit a younger person, combined with the fact that under a general age the young adults are all having their brains still developed, that the cost to society for allowing drug use is a lot higher than the cost of allowing drug use for older folks.
Nope. Not if you have any heart at all at least. The us has good samaritan laws in all 50 states, with minor variation. Sure, it's technically possible you might be opening yourself to legal consequences if you help out, but the law as written protects you from being sued for it unless you do something incredibly fucking dumb. (moving a man with a broken spine out of a car is bad, unless the car is on fire).
In china, the opposite is true; everything you do other than inaction can very easily open you up to legal consequences. This is why you can see someone who drove an elderly couple to the er get sued by that couple, or a baby get run over by a truck with a good dozen people walking past without helping (same website).
There is the vague chance in the usa that helping might get you in trouble, but it is most certainly not the best choice to walk past them if something obviously bad that you can help with is going on.
From the git repo;
Q) How does this work?
A) This uses the Shamir Secret Sharing Scheme to break an encryption key into parts that can be recombined to create the original key, but only requiring a certain threshold to do so. I've adapted Hashicorp's implementation from their vault repo
Ftfy.