@Humane The pin just seems inefficient and derivative. I can do everything on cell phone just fine. And I believe the vast majority of people would even prefer to use their cell. Who wants to be riding on public transport and tell their pin “Hey. Text my mom back and tell her ___”
Lord whenever I get this random fired up feeling… im texting everyone in my phone and hoping to get a band of pirates together to have a jolly good time.
If you drive to work in the snow, get hurt on your commute, should your company pay for your medical bills since e they were the reason you had to come in?
I love that I have such a long record of saying some ridiculous thing to the point that if I say something outlandish, everyone just realizes it’s just me being me. I CALL IT LIVING AUTHENTICALLY.
In 1990, the windshield of British Airways Flight 5390 came off at an altitude of 17,000 feet. This triggered a sudden decompression in the cockpit, resulting in the captain being partially ejected out of the aircraft.
As luck would have it, Nigel Ogden, a flight attendant, was on his way into the cockpit at that moment. He managed to grab hold of the captain and maintain his grip for over 20 minutes while the copilot attempted an urgent landing.
Although the majority of the crew presumed that the pilot had already lost his life, Ogden did not let go.
There was a prevailing fear that if Ogden did release his hold, the pilot's body might strike the plane's engine, wing, or stabilizer, causing even more chaos.
All Ogden knew was that the pilot was gradually slipping more and more out of the window and his head was continuously being battered against the airplane's body.
Finally, after a distressing 20-minute flight with a gaping window, the aircraft was safely brought down at Southampton Airport. In the course of events, Ogden suffered from frostbite on his face, damage to one of his eyes, and a dislocated shoulder. In a miraculous turn of events, the pilot survived the ordeal, although he had frostbite and multiple fractures on his arms and hands.
The image is a recreation from the television series "Mayday!"
A 66 million year old Triceratops skull can now be found right here in Middle Tennessee.
I'll share more on how a Murfreesboro museum discovered the skull in Montana and brought it back to the area tonight at 6. @WKRN