Another example of "safe" seniors only
[QUOTE=BuckeyeNation;2492704]Hey everyone,
Daisy asked for me to pass on a message to everyone on here. Not that I have had the privilege to ever meet her in person like some of you lucky dogs but she asked me to pass this on nonetheless. She is out of the business (some including me could argue she never really was in the business but let's don't go there), she has had a few scary situations and met up with a few jerks that have finally convinced her that she needed to find another line of work. So stop barking up that tree and move on to someone else that wants your company (as long as you have the cash).
The rest of you be safe and happy hunting.
BN.[/QUOTE]I have learned the hard way. Many guys on USASG are seniors. But only a couple guys in each town treat these gals like women. Too many seniors are rude, crude, and dangerous to the girls and us guys. Be safe and good hunting.
To our "out of bounds" friend.
[QUOTE=BuckeyeNation;2492704]Oh for the guy on here that lives in Monroe with your mommy / daddy and used your job at a call center to pull down all sort of personal details and then threaten it against her please get a life. Also know that using that data is just a creepy move that makes everyone else on here look like a tool.
The rest of you be safe and happy hunting.
BN.[/QUOTE]What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. In the private sector, it can mean a new, less-lucrative career for "Mr. Failure-to-launch". Mostly because the company itself could lose access to at least a couple of important databases that come to my mind.
Not to mention a visit from the Attorney General's office. They're already cracking down on abusive marketing practices. The kind of cyber activity you're talking about carries even bigger penalties.
In the public sector, it can mean much more, including civil suits and a record.
But I wouldn't say the guy's mom (mommy / daddy) is a trans man.
Unless you know something I don't "wink".