The guy ate the onion..
BenjiRenji
Switzerland - 20 days is the legal limit, but we get 30 with one week around Christmas + New Year's Eve being mandatory.
I also got a special perk where I work 90% but due to a limitation of our system where we enter PTO, every Friday I take off doesn't count against my PTO budget (rather than only every second Friday). I have not told anyone.
Classic Japanese. No dancing around or confusion about anti-semitism, just straight out asking the Israeli about recent war crimes.
Had the same as a Swiss guy living there: sure, everybody loves Roger Federer, but they also know about Nazi gold and the banking secret protecting dictatorships. And they just ask about it directly. Would never happen on Japanese topics though.
Will he be "working" again in there or what?
Too bad I'm a boobs guy and thus can wait for the PC port.
Bigly depression
Isn't this just India posturing because of the Kashmir attack? The first threat about cutting off water was an empty one so now they are floating some military strike just to appear thst they care? I may eat my words here, but neither party is going to risk a full on war with an enemy with nukes over a place like Kashmir.
There should be a rule that you can't deport the legal guardian of a US citizen for that matter. All I'm saying is that they have an excuse for deporting them, even if it's a bad one. I don't understand the excuse for this case. Is there any?
Really? I've only seen this practice on the American continent and I've always wondered.
These days I get my produce directly to my front door from a farmer. This stuff lasts for at least a week, often much longer. Compared to the produce from supermarkets that seem to rot on the way home already.
These were all minors of deported parents no? At least there's a bad reason for it.
This makes residency permits completely worthless. Greencard holders other visa holders can all just be randomly detained when traveling.
True, it's a bit Swiss-focused where they have a lot of money for infrastructure, but where cities have mostly invested in cars and pedestrians, but not cycling.
Nevertheless I believe there are lessons in there that can be useful. Maybe not in Amsterdam or Copenhagen, but less bike-friendly places that want to change that.