Farmington Maine Walmart pole is also a menace!
Farmington Maine Walmart pole is also a menace!
Same but I don’t use a knife, you can just snap bananas in half with your bare hands!
Same for me my first playthrough. I was very confused and overwhelmed and missed tons of shit. But my second playthrough is much more a love love thing.
I’m late to the party but thought I’d share anyway…
Five Captains Logs!
So maybe start with three dozen tribbles, but as the 12 days progress, the tribbles increase, 4 hundred tribbles, 5 thousand tribbles, 6 million tribbles, and something else has to replace the prior tribble day? I don’t know but it’s cracking me up!
How’s about three trombone solos?
I know, me too!
I have standards! (Also limited font choices).
Thank you, that’s high praise!
Just trying to blend in with you internet youths! Is it working?
You are a treasure!
When you’re looking at your picture there’s a little “i” you can click on and it’ll list related web searches.
I tried my hand on one of those AI image makers… Almost got kicked off twice because apparently “like-a-virgin-era Madonna but a sturgeon” is considered inappropriate somehow.
I too join in the under-the-bed club. So hard to clean, why not any of the many hard floors?!
Riker’s face is giving me life right now, thank you for this!
Here’s the article:
Don’t blame domestic violence victims in child welfare cases
DCF should be guided by best practices.
By The Editorial BoardUpdated September 20, 2023, 4:00 a.m. In cases involving domestic violence, DCF’s first obligation is to protect the child. But there are options that do not punish the parent who survived domestic violence. In cases involving domestic violence, DCF’s first obligation is to protect the child. But there are options that do not punish the parent who survived domestic violence.Wilfredo Lee/Associated Press It is one of the toughest challenges in the difficult field of child welfare — protecting children in homes where there is domestic violence while not punishing a non-abusive parent for being a victim.
A recent Globe story reported that in Massachusetts, advocates say the Department of Children and Families too often blames victims. The story profiled a mother, Lisa, who DCF said neglected her child — a finding that hurt her ability to get a job — because she fled to a next-door apartment when her partner tried to attack her, briefly leaving her sleeping baby alone.
While DCF’s first obligation is to protect the child, there are options that do not punish a parent who survived domestic violence. Studies show one of the best ways to ensure a child’s resilience in a home with domestic violence is to ensure they have a strong positive bond with the non-offending parent. DCF’s policies should reflect that goal, and the agency should work to strengthen, not sever, the bond between a child and a non-abusive parent.
Specify if comic sans! You got me!