Probably less to do with illegal voting, more to do with polling places being understaffed and city/county/state shenanigans requiring 2 forms of photo ID, your birth certificate, and a letter from your Second Grade teacher saying you're a special kid.
Things like this are the origin stories for heros in films who bring down corrupt bureaucracies through unspeakable violence
Reads like a Mossad hit piece
Do your thing Texas, put that woman in the chair for trying to drown children.
Israeli has been a belligerent country who has not stopped terrorizing their neighbors since their formation. Zionists created Israel through a campaign of terror against British mandate Palestine and continue it to this day against Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, and Iran.
Why are we supporting a country who does not want peace with their neighbors? They claim to be defending themselves by preemptively attacking any country that so much sneezes on them. Israel has even attacked the United States on many occasions.
If they want to be belligerent bullies in the region, they should have to do it on their own without dragging the US and it's allies into yet another middle eastern conflict.
They even assassinated the leader Hamas while they were negotiating a ceasefire. Does that sound like a peaceful country?
It's doable: https://vijayprema.com/using-lemmy-from-my-existing-mastodon/
The Tusky android app let's me browse lemmy.world communities.
My almost 4 year old can write her name and a few other letters
I don't even know A gun, let alone many guns to necessitate a entire rack.
Bruh, there's a ghost in that journal and she fucks him.
If the cops won't stop him, I'm sure an annoyed parent with a sleepless child will happily take care of it.
Furthermore, what's to stop the two new workers from democratically voting me out of the operation, keeping the store, name, brand, and equipment for themselves?
Depends on the bylaws you set up.
In most Co-operatives, there's a time period where a new employee is not given an ownership stake. Then there are specific procedures that layout that a member can only be removed if they have been found guilty of X number of misconducts over time. And even then, the bylaws usually try to remedy the situation before requiring a unanimous (minus 1) vote in order to remove the person.
And their families.
He also wrote the best book for JavaScript, JavaScript: The Good Parts.
JS is pretty bad, but it's so ubiquitous now that I don't know if anyone can create a replacement with enough traction for one of the big browsers to start supporting it.
It's real, buts it's written by the judge. They can file for a writ of coram nobis but it still has to be granted by the judge.
This guy gets it