Scott Conley 🇺🇸
19.9K posts

Scott Conley 🇺🇸
@Jackhammerscott
Wireless engineer, Tanker Driver married to Julie Conley, Son is Justin Conley DOL Christy Conley

So this man records himself at a “all-you-can-eat sushi bar” and proceeds to wolfs down four plates/100 pieces of sushi and is concerned he can’t eat more because he cleared the entire sushi bar out and he doesn’t know if they’re going to make more. Is he entitled to this or is he just a big fat glutton?






💊 This woman just canceled both her and her son’s health insurance — and she’s standing firm even though everyone around her thinks she’s crazy. The new plan would’ve cost her almost $1,000 a month with a huge deductible, so she dropped it completely. Now she’s using GoodRx for her prescriptions (dropped from $50 a month to just $8 for three meds) and asking her doctors for the straight cash/self-pay price — which turned out to be way lower than she expected. It’s such a wild eye-opener about how broken the insurance system has gotten for a lot of families. Would you ever consider dropping your health insurance and going the self-pay/GoodRx route, or does that feel too risky to you? I think it could be a real money saver.


Mailbox Vandalism: Poor Choices, Poor Outcomes! LIVE RIGHT NOW! youtube.com/live/tRGWNxKYf… Across the country, homeowners have quietly found a simple answer to the increasingly common crime of mailbox bashing: fill the box with concrete. When a vandal swings a bat and connects with sixty pounds of hardened cement, physics does the rest. A viral X thread ignited a national argument about property rights, criminal responsibility, and how far an owner can go to protect what is theirs. The moral case for the concrete mailbox is not complicated. The property owner is doing nothing more than reinforcing something he owns. The vandal, by contrast, is committing criminal mischief against that property -- a crime in every state. Any injury that follows flows directly from the criminal's own deliberate act. We do not ordinarily hold property owners responsible for the foreseeable consequences of other people's crimes. If someone breaks their arms swinging a bat at your mailbox from a moving vehicle, that’s on them. Join me for a leisurely and gun walk through the X thread that sparked this debate, and various points and counterpoints, examines the legal landscape around property protection and so-called booby trap statutes, and makes the case that hardening your own property is categorically different from laying a trap designed to injure. That line matters, and understanding where it falls is something every property owner should know. Join me LIVE right after the open-access show as I break it all down. Episode #M1304 youtube.com/live/tRGWNxKYf…






















