I love reading this response. It’s like you use it as a shield to protect yourself from a horribly thought out opinion based on movie stereotypes.

You sound completely misinformed, and you are stereotyping an entire group of people.

My wife had ADHD and she does not have any of your horrible examples. That’s not how it works, that’s not how they are.

Go back to your cave.

TheSciFiGuy80
1
Professor Emeritass [87]

I’m trying to figure out what your point is in response to my post.

I factored in work from home which is why I said there needs to be compromise. You aren’t working from your home in every room of your house. That’s why I said she needs to pick a room. And if you are working from home in the bedroom then you turn AWAY from the one wall with posters on it.

I’m talking about all the things listed above aside from the death of his wife and unborn son (which was brought up earlier and not the focus of that post).

But even then it just didn’t work for me. Red Son did the slippery slope trope so much better compromise after compromise until there was no going back (and funny enough still felt like Superman to an extent… albeit a Superman who lost his way).

all that other stuff (except lethal force) seems like small potatoes to make Superman a dictator and villain.

The thing I have a harder time wrapping my head around is a lot of the other heroes going along with it and for as long as they did (like The Flash).

Either way I really dislike Injustice (except for the PlasticMan annual).

That’s why Kingdom Come was the more believable take.

I did this with my dad and his baseball card collection (he’s got full sets of cards ranging from 1959 to 1968). I bought a couple of binders and a hell of a lot of vintage card sleeves.

So if you aren’t willing to hear anything, why post?

This is a forum for discussion and debate after all…

TheSciFiGuy80
454
Professor Emeritass [87]
16hLink

NTA

She has to grow up and learn to compromise. She can have one room to decorate with the posters and if she wants to decorate the bedroom, it’s one wall only.

That gives you free space so you don’t feel so suffocated.

TheSciFiGuy80
13Edited
Professor Emeritass [87]
16hLink

YTA

And what would you suggest they do with it? Be your maid and finish it for you? Hang it up?

You are sharing a common space, you need to realize “I’m tired, I’ll do it later” doesn’t cut it when other people are in line to get things done.

I don’t see what’s wrong with what he said.

He’s kind of correct. If we want a free to play game to succeed throwing a couple of bucks their way WHEN they offers something we want helps to make it a success.

Maybe a little too loyal to the game (to a fault) but he’s still not far off the mark.

Yeah, this is a game about a bunch of characters from different worlds (mostly comics and cartoons) fighting each other.

But some of these guys take this waaaaaaaay too damn seriously.

It’s sad.

I loved this cartoon.

Hanna Barbera had a great Sci Fi catalogue of characters thanks to Alex Toth.

TheSciFiGuy80
45
Professor Emeritass [87]

YTA

Passive aggressive without even having all the facts.

You did NOT politely ask.

You didn’t know if she saw you or noticed your mom.

She’s NOT obligated to give up her seat.

You don’t know if she has hidden disabilities of chronic pain she deals with herself.

You immediately went to insult mode and said it loudly enough that bystanders heard.

Bravo. Again, YTA.

I sided with the NCR one play through and Indy Vegas the other play through. Those were the two I thought worked best.

Neither one was 100% happy results afterwards which was pretty close to how things operate in reality.

A lot of them don’t make much.

Believe it or not many smaller Christian churches DISLIKE mega churches and their pastors.

The pastor at my church has a list of people (available in the foyer) who he does not believe are really Christians in terms of their behavior, their actions, and what they say… Joel Osteen is at the top of that list. That list is just there as a guide for Christians who may get tricked into what those people are trying to sell.

There was no grey area for me with the Legion. They owned slaves and mistreated them.

That’s all I needed to see.

Ummm if she’s getting $5000 a month she’s fine.

The will said it’s yours. DO NOT sign it away. This can be life changing for you. I’d talk to a financial advisor and put that money to work.

TheSciFiGuy80
13
Professor Emeritass [87]

I wouldn’t say you are an asshole because it WAS clean.

I’ve noticed a lot of people are hung up on this kind of thing. But they’ll buy used cutlery at an estate sale or at Goodwill not knowing what happened to it…

I think your husband overreacted.

TheSciFiGuy80
5Edited
Professor Emeritass [87]

lol I have four kids and I have never had to resort to what you feel you should have to do.

As they got older I started letting them make more and more choices on their own. The deal is that they have to start cleaning up their own messes and dealing with the consequences. I’d never completely abandon them if they needed real help, but that’s not what we are talking about here.

If one of my kids decided to get a tattoo, even if I wasn’t ok with it, it’s not my body or choice anymore as they are an ADULT. If they asked my opinion I’d give it, and I’m free not to fund it, but I can’t and won’t resort to basically blackmail and abuse because they’re doing something I don’t like.

This isn’t parenting 101 this is a grown man (you) acting like a baby because someone isn’t listening to him and he’s not getting his way.

At this point I’m going to assume you are a troll. Because the immature pushback and replies sound like someone who hasn’t grown past twenty. You are egging people on with your response and it doesn’t really seem like you are here for actual advice or judgement just riling people up.

TheSciFiGuy80
5
Professor Emeritass [87]

I have four kids. Parenting is something that recedes.

You can’t keep controlling your kid because YOU don’t like their choices.

That’s terrible parenting because you aren’t letting them experiences consequences on their own.