Addicting Games is a game website where many free games (and a la carte extras for those games) are released. A successful release on AG (as it's abbreviated) could launch a game into eternal fame but a bug in the game could doom the game and its creator forever.
Addicting Games ia frequented mainly by kids under 13 years of age and if there's a chain comment thing going you'll know there's one (games can be commented on but sadly they're used more for chain comments and giving out way to much personal information like ASL).
-10 year old kid: Let's see what new games are on Addicting Games today!
-50 year old perv: Let's see what new clueless kids are on Addicting Games today!
Auditing is a form of public scrutiny where individuals openly film locations, typically places of work, using their legal right to film in public spaces. Auditors aim to test the adherence of security personnel, law enforcement officers, and company employees to the law and regulations governing the right to film in public. By documenting and sharing their experiences, auditors can draw attention to potential abuses of power, promote transparency, and hold authoritiesaccountable for their actions.
"Yo, what's up guys, it's AB (Auditing Britain). We are outsideLewisham Police Station and going to audit them."
No the fuck it isn't. Weed is nowhere near as addictive as alcohol or cocaine. Alcohol isn't even as addictive as cocaine.
Hym "And weed doesn't have a withdrawal effect after you stop using it. I guarantee- Wait... I'll bet you 1 million dollars that the study your citing involves quite a few 'self-reported' instances of people 'feeling as though they need it' and not ACTUAL addiction symptoms. I've known people who 'feel as though they need it' and those people are all idiots. That isn't a thing. Weed isn't anywhere near as addicting as cocaine. Cocaine is wildly addicting. That's actually the one thing Adderall has over cocaine (aside from duration). The sensation if basically the same but the cocaine is so much more addicting that I felt compelled to use more of it for about a year and a half after I ran out. So, yeah, not a real thing. Weed addiction isn't real."