Message from @Alibaba

Discord ID: 336178318967570433


2017-07-06 14:06:59 UTC  

Andorra is not part from the EU

2017-07-06 14:07:09 UTC  

but they're using the euro as their currency

2017-07-06 17:25:34 UTC  

@Capuno#9390 man you are funny. Your last link give example of "countries", islands ect that aren't in the Europe Zone but are clearly part of EU, like Frances territories (French Guyana, RĂ©union island, St. Pierre & Miquelon, etc.). Those territories are literally a part of France and hence, a part of EU. For Andorra, you should read this : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andorra%E2%80%93European_Union_relations and you'll see that they signed an agreement and are considered a part of EU, much like Vatican City, etc. As for your argument, it clearly shows that you aren't the most informed on that situation either. Let me give you a small example: Switzerland isn't part of EU, they could clearly take advantage to use the euro currency because of their geographical position but they can't and use the Swiss Franc currency. That's how it works. If you are a country that want to use the Euro currency, you HAVE TO be part of EU or at least sign agreements with the European Union that makes you legible for that. If your region decide to be independent, it could definitely stay a part of EU, but in the case where it decide to leave the EU at the same time, no, you wouldn't keep the Euro currency unless you decide to sign agreements that contributes to the EU.

2017-07-06 17:31:27 UTC  

Again I said that I lack information on your region situation, so needs to be condescending either. And if you think that EU wouldn't put pressure on a newly made country (if you guys decided to stay) is funny and delusional. Spain pressure might look pale in comparison...

2017-07-06 17:42:45 UTC  

The guy in charge of government ethics is too fed up of Trump's ethics violations and resigned
https://twitter.com/waltshaub/status/883007616435269632

2017-07-07 13:46:36 UTC  

I don't think you want to come on Mike Pence

2017-07-07 13:46:41 UTC  

That's straight to the zapper

2017-07-14 16:46:30 UTC  

the kid that grabbed her charging cellphone in her bath... I call that the new millennial's natural selection.

2017-07-14 16:47:23 UTC  

parent warning other about it looks like natural selection didn't do it's job completly too...

2017-07-14 19:45:43 UTC  

where is my daughter I NEED TO FIND MY DAUGHTER

2017-07-16 16:12:37 UTC  

I'd blame the death on the lowering standard for parenting rather than "millenials being millenials" or whatever else

2017-07-16 16:13:11 UTC  

In a more strict enviroment she would have never considered taking the phone into the bathroom

2017-07-16 16:13:18 UTC  

but that's just how I see it

2017-07-16 16:16:29 UTC  

I have no doubt some kid from the 80's died with a walkman in a bathtub or in a similar scenario..

2017-07-16 16:17:35 UTC  

Though I suppose darwinism may come into play..

2017-07-16 16:18:20 UTC  

a parent who raises their children poorly may see their children die, and so he won't have any more descendants.

2017-07-16 19:55:32 UTC  

not possible, a walkman works with AA battery, that's not enough electricity to die or even received a shock from that. Some people died with hairdryer and things like that though

2017-07-16 19:57:43 UTC  

and I mostly agree with you that it has to do with parenting. When I called it "millenials' natural selection", I meant that it's the new way to eliminate stupids from the society, not that it has to do with the girl who died being a millenial.

2017-07-16 20:00:32 UTC  

I never heard my parents telling me to not do that because it was dangerous but I knew it was. If your parent needs to tell you as a teenager that you should not put your hand in boiling water, it's not necessarily good parenting but more like you're stupid to begin with.

2017-07-16 20:02:40 UTC  

She would have been 6 or something I'd totally agree with you, but she was a teenager already... it's not so much a case of a bad parenting...

2017-07-16 21:06:56 UTC  

I didn't mean that the parents should've told her that something so obvious could have killed her

2017-07-16 21:07:33 UTC  

I was thinking that she shouldn't have been so attached to her phone to do something whilst being aware of the danger

2017-07-16 21:39:07 UTC  

well her parents are warning others that it's dangerous... just like something so obvious needs awareness...

2017-07-16 21:40:15 UTC  

but yeah, that's the part where I agree with you on the parenting.

2017-07-16 21:42:12 UTC  

but I don't know, I can't imagine myself being a teenager's parent that needs to tell something that obvious

2017-07-16 21:43:04 UTC  

"don't play with plugged electrical device when you're ass deep in the water"

2017-07-16 21:44:42 UTC  

I mean, being too attached to your phone is a thing, using it plugged in the bath is another level

2017-07-16 21:46:56 UTC  

she would have ended up tweeting behind a steering wheel...

2017-07-16 21:50:19 UTC  

you can't fix someone that stupid, even with good parenting... they can't serve as a guardrail all their children's life

2017-07-16 21:51:21 UTC  

funny stuff, "guardrail" is "garde-fou" in french, it means "guard for fools"

2017-07-17 10:34:59 UTC  

What I mean more precisely is, children need to be taught restraint. You say attachment to phones is a thing, but is it a good thing? Would it be a thing that should be prevented or restricted? I think maybe so.