You may have forgotten, in this party, winning is less important than pleasing the billionaires.
You may have forgotten, in this party, winning is less important than pleasing the billionaires.
The replies make sense, and I should have realized. I guess I was thinking any deposit large enough to cover all the possibilities would be more than anyone would agree to, but I can see how it’s to both owner and guest’s advantage to make it work.
There are hotels that allow dogs in the rooms? I don’t see how that could work in the long run without requiring deposits that most people wouldn’t want to pay.
you get half an updoot for the shittymorph reference
That information is very widely and readily available with a basic web search. His voice was fine until (I forget) years ago when a weird illness damaged his vocal cords.
I’m sorry I have to ask, but, serious or kidding?
I get for vacation areas this is less of an issue but for places like ny city, San Francisco, etc it’s taking homes out of use.
It’s every bit as big of an issue for vacation areas / areas where tourism is the primary driver of the economy.
Take Tahoe or Mammoth Lakes for example: until the early 2010s it was still possible to move there without knowing anyone or having any other inside track, get a job (not your favorite or first choice, usually, but something to work from while you get established) and find your crappy first apartment or half-a-cabin or rundown shack or basement or ADU to rent.
That scenario is almost completely gone now and has been for ten years, plus or minus – depending on where each person sees the line that divides difficult from impossible. People making far less than a living wage now commute to both of those areas from an hour or more away. The sense of how “connected” or privileged one has to be to make it or even just scrape by in areas such as these has relentlessly risen to a level that has had an enormous impact on mental and emotional health and life outcomes in these areas too.
All of these factors were already big in the negative column balancing the very real positives of living so close to nature and preferred sporting activities, before the rise of the short term rental blight. But nowadays those negatives are practically off the meter.
holy shit. everybody should read this.
Doesn’t even have to be right wing (a.k.a. the extreme right)… even moderate at this point equals business-as-usual equals right off the cliff as soon as possible.
Meanwhile, what they serve at Chipotle is not worth even half of what they charge for it.
I guess it’s another pipe dream
It’s a projection, naturally.
Or heat stroke
Also weird that just one of their archbishops can be described as an ally of sex abuse victims, instead of all of them.
That’s still basically a complaint about how he doesn’t get to.
I get a funny feeling that the decarbonization plans of the other 75%+ are worthless or nearly worthless in terms of actually helping humanity in any significant way with the polycrisis at hand. The very existence of a worldwide brand of anything is nowhere near sustainable.
Concrete production is one of the big culprits in climate change. But maybe this could be done with rammed earth, sustainably harvested timber, and dry-stone masonry.
I have my own photo of that same thing, took it in Chicago in 2013!
The rainforest is priceless. The fine should have been $infinity.
Watch this riveting documentary to become permanently disgusted with the US’s handling of Peltier’s case.
Incident at Oglala
“miscarriage of justice” is an understatement.