I can buy a high-powered rifle in America with no ID, background check, or waiting, but the government won't trust me to fill a bathtub to the top. Is this justice? Is this freedom?pic.twitter.com/33AlN9WRMz
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I can buy a high-powered rifle in America with no ID, background check, or waiting, but the government won't trust me to fill a bathtub to the top. Is this justice? Is this freedom?pic.twitter.com/33AlN9WRMz
There's even an entire marketplace for making it possible to fill your stupid tub to the top because some jerk at the bathtub factory put a hole in it. Did we lose a war? Because I'm pretty sure Japan did, and yet they're laughing at us from their deep, smooth-walled tubs.pic.twitter.com/bdGHKT8Fu8
An infuriating aspect of visiting Japan as an American is seeing a world where many everyday things are slightly nicer—a doorbell on your hotel room door! A little paper shredder for your ATM receipt! Clean, free public toilets!—and then wondering forever why we can't have them
This is even more mind-blowing than bath sheets
I don't know and I can't stand it :|
American bathrooms (at least any of the ones I've lived in in the past 35 years) don't have floor drains. Also it was The Done Thing for awhile to put carpet next to tubs so there's probably some code thing re: mold.
Good sir, you have not LIVED until you’ve used a shower room. Very popular in the UK. It’s so ingenius when you look at water damage possibilities and such in North American bathrooms.
I'm calling it the killjoy drain for the rest of my life.
I feel the accuracy of this terminology in the soul under my cold wet bosoms!
Because american bathrooms don't have floorr drains duh.
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