she's a supervisor which I don't think they do just to be nice. showing up every day is the only prerequisite to advancing at walmart. and btw you are telling me horrible walmart, which exploits the worker and all, is helping out people with disabilities?
So IP. Are you really telling me there is ZERO connection between salary and hard work and intelligence? You think the average checkout guy at walmart really has the iq to do the jobs of many here?
I don't think I argued that there was zero connection. Is this one of those "you didn't build that" or "climate change gave her asthma" miscommunication moments for you again?
and I quote: From what I've seen, people that go on to work in offices and in sales are not any smarter or harder of workers than people who end up working in stock rooms and in walmarts. and you are right. It is shockingly similar to those arguments.
How do you propose that we provide easier access to birth control? If they are to lazy to walk down to the gas station or liquor store and put 50 cents into a machine I doubt they will put much effort into it despite how easy you make it.
it makes me laugh when people act like the majority of teenage pregnancies are due to lack of knowledge of birth control. kind of ignore the fact that teenage pregnancies are dramatically down over the past 20 years.
There's a new one right adjacent to campus at UT. All the benefits of walmart, a lot less of the People of Wal Mart
I'm suggesting that lack of knowledge and access isn't why people CURRENTLY are getting pregnant. I posted a study here once that showed the knowledge of contraception was universal by teens.
I have always said that they should show those films they show in child birth classes in high school. Those screams and watching a baby's birth stuck with me. I think many girls after seeing the films would insist on using some form of birth control.