I got catfished on tinder once and the girl ended up having a body like this and when I saw that I pretended to get an important phone call and made her walk home at 3am
@TakebaSweep Thinking about what those bare feet would sound like slapping against the kitchen tiles while she makes me a drink.. oh uhh I mean happy Friday!
Seeing people say "oh now we're gona pretend GTA hasnt always been good and entertaining" like no man all that criticism of being boring and mid as fuck is directed entirely at gta5
Let's continue with the AC madness :-)
The main source of confusion in this debate is that when Americans talk about AC, they mean a distributed cooling system (HVAC), which is generally less aggressive.
AC installed in Europe is often based on a single unit that blows in a single direction, and often rather aggressively.
And this is the essence of the problem.
If you sleep under such an AC, it's almost certain that you will pick up a runny nose, a sore throat, a headache, or stiff muscles.
Two nights ago, I slept on the sofa under the AC while waiting for the Croatian WC game, and after a few hours, I developed a sore throat and a runny nose. The negative effect was immediate.
I jumped into the sea and spent some time under the sun, and it was gone.
Older people sleeping directly under an AC are actually risking their lives, and I'm not even joking.
So, regulatory pushback in Europe has some logic; these things, if used improperly, are dangerous. You can't have cold air blowing directly into your body, which is fighting the heat; in Europe, pretty much everybody knows this.
Cold drafts on a warm body that cause health issues are not superstitions; they're basic physics and biology, and if you deny this, it's hard to take your points seriously.
HVAC systems work differently; they distribute cold air throughout the house, so there is little risk of directional cold drafts.
But who has time for such nuances? Let's just label everybody as poor :-)