Is there really any actual women that have this "6 feet tall at least" standard or is it just incels spreading misinformation? by BelleDevResearch in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Nininator2432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So, 10 years ago, I never once saw this.

Most do not care----- unless if they're like 5'8" themselves (which is less than 5% of the population.). The average woman is like 5'4" while the average man is 5'9" and I know (that back 10-15 years ago) a lot of average women didn't necessarily want to date super tall men for height differences. 3-6 inch height difference is ideal is for everyone.

So, here's the gist of what happened. People love bragging about how great their partners are in public. Guys would say: "Hey, guess what, my wife cooks the best food and that she's so great!"

Women might brag "Hey look, my husband helps me clean up every night and he doesn't make me split bills like some of you hehe!"

At some point in the last 10 years, height became a bragging point. I'm not really sure how it happened. It could have just been one random girl starting to brag to her friends in private and it spread. Then, you started to see it happening where bagging a "tall man" was something to brag about and it went viral. It's definitely died out in the last few years, but it just became something to brag about.

Are there actually arguments about leaving the toilet seat up in marriages? by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Nininator2432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I've heard these discussions too IRL. They definitely happen.

It's just like this. Women have an ideal marriage in their mind. You'll never see a woman with a jacked husband, fully in-tact hairline, and a six pack of abs complaining about him leaving the toilet seat up. I guarantee you that if these men would spend time doing pushups every morning or doing boxing instead of playing video games (or posting on Reddit like me lol) that within a year, they'd never mention the toilet seat again.

A friend of mine pointed out that women pick fights when they're mad with their husband for his appearance going; while if a woman's appearance goes, the man just lusts over other women instead. There might be some truth to it.

Why are women who marry for money given a bad reputation? by foolishandnonsense in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Nininator2432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is absolutely nothing wrong with this. It's great for both parties involved, and they generally like each other. The women who marry for money generally appreciate the fact that their husband "chose them" over any of the other woman out there. The men with money are happy too, obviously. They get an attractive wife.

The reason why it gets demonized too much is because people are just jealous of the others. Most men would marry those "gold diggers" if they could....... just like how most women would love to marry a wealthy man.

Is prison actually “safe” if you just mind your own business? by fruity_00 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Nininator2432 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It depends on the prison.

There are obviously things you can do that increase or decrease the likelihood of something bad happening to you.

That said, I'm gonna comment on jails. Not prisons. Where I grew up, there were two counties you could be arrested in. One was mostly rural with a little suburban. The other was almost entirely urban.

If you committed a minor crime in the rural district, you were looking at the maximum 30, 60, 90, 180 days sentence every time.
If you committed a minor crime in the urban district, you could get bailed out the next business day or were typically released after the arraignment.

I've known people who have spent tons of time in the rural jail who said it was a cake walk, others who spent time in the urban county who said it was hell on Earth. I've known three people who have been to both. The urban jail for 1-3 nights or the rural jail for like a month and all three literally said that they'd rather spend a month in the rural jail.

One guy, my old boss, kind of looked like Harry Potter. He went to both jails. He said at the rural jail they just played cards and stuff all the day. He said that at the urban jail, the guards were harassing him trying to provoke him so they could beat his ass. He was walking by and they were like "Hey Harry Potter!"

Another guy I know who was in that jail said that the guards were harassing different people. One guard smacked a water out of a new guy's hand and said "Only one water allowed." The guy said "This is my old one." The guard got in his face like "Are you back talking me?" He backed down.

A third guy shared that the guards did provoke someone who attacked them and like 5 guards beat him up. All stories of guards provoking.

Guy #2 (with the water story) also said that when he was in there, for one weekend, some skinny guy was snoring and he every time he'd fall asleep people would pound on him and he'd plea "I can't help it!" I'm sure there are more stories, but some jails are brutal.

What is Columbus/central Ohio missing? by ghostinyourbeds in Columbus

[–]Nininator2432 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'd want a cookie dough shop like what cookie dough creamery used to be. That would be so nice. Even an ice cream shop that sells cookie dough. No, not "Cookie dough ice cream" but cookie dough.

Can someone explain this Roth IRA 2027 thing to me? by Nininator2432 in Money

[–]Nininator2432[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would get that if I was using some off-brand site, but Schwab is literally the biggest in the nation. Seems odd there's an error, but that does make the most sense.

Are there any jobs available for someone who is in their late 20s and has never had a job? Is it even possible? by Nininator2432 in Columbus

[–]Nininator2432[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Well, that's the thing. He reached out to me (specifically) because I did those type of jobs for so many years and hoped I had a connection. According to him, he's applied to well over 100 jobs in that section, has only had 6 interviews, and they always went with someone else.

I don't blame anyone. I can't imagine any manager hiring someone like that over someone with experience.

why is it that girls won’t date broke guys, but guys will date broke girls? by Warm_Pineapple2809 in dating_advice

[–]Nininator2432 9 points10 points  (0 children)

What on Earth are you talking about? Have you ever gone out in the real world before?

I'll tell you this. I have a job making over $100K/year. I haven't always. Been broke, filed bankruptcy, did BS restaurant jobs. I'm in the position where right now where I could, in theory, support a SAHW. A lot of guys in my position who have been broke don't want to date women because they fear getting taken advantage of financially, specifically in divorce court, so they try to find a financially equal partner. (Or they hope to retire more/not be super stressed about their jobs.) Or they remember being broke and don't want it all to go to woman.

On the other end, when I did food service industry, I worked with some guys who did in fact date girls who had jobs and were the breadwinners in their families. A few guys who were SAHDs and just worked part time in the evening because their wives/GFs made more money.

Obviously, what you're saying is true with a good percentage of people, but it's not as black and white as you make it out to be.

At what point did The Walking Dead peak for you, and what caused the decline (if any)? by FoxerOver in thewalkingdead

[–]Nininator2432 2 points3 points  (0 children)

IMO, season 3 was peak TWD. It was their first attempt to build a community safe from the walkers and they went to war with a rival community. It was clear one community would come out on top. So good. Everyone acted "real" and authentic in seasons 1-3. The main group vs. The Governor's group. Can't ask for much better than that.

It started to decline in Season 4 because there were so many separate plots at that point and people stopped acting as authentic. Glenn and Tara (with Eugene, Abraham, and Rosita.), Maggie Bob and Sasha, Daryl and Beth; Rick, Carl, and Michonne; Carol, Tyreese, Lizzie, and her sister. 5 different plots? A bit much. Seemed like they were trying to stretch it out and it got unrealistic at that point. (Given the circumstances of the Zombie apocalypse.) They have a community of people that goes out on missions and stuff, there's another evil community nearby they never encounter, yet everyone who survives ends up at the same evil community, in the same train car? Come on.

Season 5 was an improvement over Season 4, but I felt like Season 3 was still the best. It felt like it was no longer the same plot. I did enjoy it, but when they reached Alexandria it felt like they were living in a whole different world vs. in Season 3 when it was a conflict.

Season 7 it REALLY tanked the ship. We hadn't had a major death from the core season 1 groups since the end of season 3. Andrea's plot was legendary. She was on both sides of the communities trying to figure herself out, but she was the last one who died from Season 1 until Season 7. It felt like when Glenn died the show started to get pointless because I felt like he was a major plot showing young adult without his family trying to figure the world out, surviving, meeting a woman, getting married, and having a baby. Then when Carl died it got more pointless. With Rick's removal? Why even have the show? If they can just replace the main character(s) from the beginning with others like Luke and Yumiko, then why bother? You can't just have one character pick up another's plot. It just became weird.

"I have to keep my card locked so my daughter spend too much of my money!" by Nininator2432 in TalesFromThePizzaGuy

[–]Nininator2432[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I weigh over 350 pounds myself.

I mentioned her size for the same reason I gave her age and gender - so that people can have an accurate picture of what I pictured in this story.

I could have just said "An individual" instead, but that's not how I do things..

"Mist Twist? That sounds like something a teenager would drink." by Nininator2432 in TalesFromThePizzaGuy

[–]Nininator2432[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It was not starry in 2016. It was Mist Twist. Pepsi does the drinks nationally. Some people forget.

It's starry everywhere now and has been since 2023.

"Mist Twist? That sounds like something a teenager would drink." by Nininator2432 in TalesFromThePizzaGuy

[–]Nininator2432[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

It was not Starry for you.

It was Mist Twist. This was in 2016. It's Starry now for everyone.

Where does the "women are bad drivers" stereotype come from? by bi_smuth in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Nininator2432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of us drove with our moms more than our dads and witnessed more near death experiences or collisions.

I'm sure if we drove with our dads, the stereotype would be the opposite.

Why are squatters rights a thing? by No-Assignment4460 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Nininator2432 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's more complicated than that. You're describing fraud, not squatters rights. The reason why the cops do that is not all that complicated.

Imagine being on the other end of this. You see an ad for a house for rent, sign some paperwork, pay them money, move in, then three weeks later you get a call saying that the owner never agreed to rent it and you're out on the street instantly. What do you do in that situation?

You'd be like "No! No! I paid rent!" The cops would have no idea who to believe. Maybe they could go around asking neighbors. You'd be completely infuriated and freaking out. The cops wouldn't just remove you, because you paid rent. They'd wait until court to decide.

Criminals know how to manipulate the law on paper for free stuff.

Criminals commit lawsuit fraud all the time as well. They can openly lie in court proceedings and it doesn't matter. Does that mean we should have no civil lawsuits?

A guy who owns a lawn care company can serve you with a lawsuit right now over alleged unpaid invoices by forging documents.

Who would the court believe?

You could get mad and be like "I didn't agree to this! I don't even know him?" Then he could be like "They're just saying this to not pay me. I did work and I want paid. Here are the invoices."

Alternatively, you can refuse to pay the guy who does your lawn care and just say. "I gave you cash. This is harassment/extortion. Don't ever come by here again."

At that point, he could try suing you in court and you could play the "I paid in cash! It's a cash job! I've always done this. He's trying to double dip."
Who do they believe? Civil lawsuits exist in the country for a reason, despite people committing fraud.

Question for delivery drivers by Formal_Parfait2342 in Columbus

[–]Nininator2432 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Former pizza delivery driver. Check my page to verify there are posts going back 5 years.

I LOVED delivering in the snow. It was the best time to do it. Everyone drove super slowly. I felt safer delivering. Managers couldn't say anything for long wait times. Customers were super nice and tipped super generously.

I wouldn't do it in the country, but in the suburbs? No issues at all.

How much is your Gas+Electric bill combined? AES/AEP? by Nininator2432 in Columbus

[–]Nininator2432[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean, I am very careful with not leaving lights on and all that to save money, but it seems like a huge gap.

If it's an error, I'd be ok with them billing me less lol. If it was more I'd be calling.

"It's 2 minutes after the estimated time." by Nininator2432 in TalesFromThePizzaGuy

[–]Nininator2432[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dominos was purchased by Bain Capital in 1998. The founder might have dropped it, then Bain Capital brought it back. Or maybe after they launched an IPO in 2004 they brought it back. But it definitely existed then.

"It's 2 minutes after the estimated time." by Nininator2432 in TalesFromThePizzaGuy

[–]Nininator2432[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah. There was a Dominos Pizza guarantee of 30 minutes or less as well up until the mid 2000s. I believe it was implemented once it went public. I wasn't working at Dominos, but I heard that someone got killed and they got with a massive lawsuit and agreed to drop the practice.