

No moist wipes are ever flushable.


No moist wipes are ever flushable.


I agree with everything you said
I’m not going to argue with you.


I consider it failed, as a 31 year old US citizen. I have friends moving to other countries, I wish I could afford to do the same.


Agree with CPTSD comment
In response to the reply from OP:
Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) is controversial due to its complex nature, including debates over its validity, its relationship with trauma, and its diagnostic difficulties. Critics question if DID is a genuine disorder or a result of iatrogenesis (therapist-induced symptoms), while others argue it is a product of social contagion and media influence, rather than a direct trauma response. Its controversial status is further fueled by inaccurate media portrayals that sensationalize the condition and the difficulty in distinguishing it from other mental health issues.
Core controversies
Iatrogenesis and suggestion: Some experts argue that symptoms of DID are created or worsened through suggestive questioning or other therapeutic techniques, especially in highly hypnotizable or suggestible patients. They claim that the prevalence of the disorder can be a result of social influence and therapist suggestion, a concept known as the sociogenic model.
Trauma model vs. sociogenic model: The debate also centers on the underlying cause. The trauma model views DID as a psychological response to severe childhood trauma, where dissociation is a coping mechanism. The sociogenic model, however, sees it as a form of learned behavior influenced by cultural beliefs and media, rather than a direct response to trauma.
Diagnostic challenges: DID shares overlapping symptoms with other disorders, such as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), and Somatic Symptom Disorder (SSD), making accurate diagnosis difficult and sometimes leading to misdiagnosis.
Media influence: Dramatic and often inaccurate media portrayals have sensationalized DID, depicting individuals with the disorder as violent or monstrous. This can lead to increased stigmatization, fear, and underdiagnosis, as well as make people with DID hesitant to seek help for fear of judgment.


Yeah, but this is a strange situation. You’ll understand better if you read the article.
Special interest groups with lots of money fucked us, unfortunately.


It certainly sounds that way


You think those chains can stop her?


Yeah, being held for 12 hours sounds horrible. But their laws (and almost every country’s laws) didn’t allow entry without, you know, passports and all that. They broke the law to allow them in, that’s huge.


They did help. Read the article
I notice people’s gait, stability, and their DME
I fucking promise you we don’t prefer to drive, it’s the only option we have. Our government fucked us


You’re doing far, far more than the average person. This is way more than enough unless you’re harboring government secrets


I made the mistake of researching an AIDS patient on my personal phone (I wasn’t familiar with IRIS syndrome and some of the meds, I wanted to make sure I knew what meds I was giving and why). Advertisers are CERTAIN that I have AIDS now and that follows me EVERYWHERE months after the fact. Super annoying to have AIDS ads everywhere, I can’t imagine how triggering it must be for someone who is actually dealing with the diagnosis.
Mainstream historians generally hold that Lincoln was heterosexual,[2][3] noting that the historical context explains any of the supposed evidence.[4] Lincoln had romantic ties with women, and he had four children in an enduring marriage to Mary Todd Lincoln.[5] However, his intense bonds with men may or may not have had more meaning to them, with one notable case being his close friend Joshua Speed, with whom Lincoln lived together – and slept in the same bed as – for four years.