Another asinine comment you have no clue about typical you looking to stir shit up150 degrees in the truck......sometimes.....why would you trash working people like that?
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Another asinine comment you have no clue about typical you looking to stir shit up150 degrees in the truck......sometimes.....why would you trash working people like that?
Not quite that high lol if it did I would have you come by and try to fry eggs on the SS top lolGeneral G., has a tool box that reaches 132*..
it was a question not a commentAnother asinine comment you have no clue about typical you looking to stir shit up
First part was a comment thats what I replied tooit was a question not a comment
First part was a comment thats what I replied too
Livia Albeck-RipkaFirst part was a comment thats what I replied too
WAA WAA poor baby has to do his job spend a minute in the hot truck lolLivia Albeck-Ripka
Sun, August 21, 2022 at 11:00 AM·8 min read
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Matt Leichenger, a driver with UPS, delivers packages along his route in the Brooklyn neighborhood of New York on Tuesday, Aug. 16, 2022. (Johnny Milano/The New York Times)
About 8 p.m. on a hot Thursday in July, Nicholas Gubell, a driver for UPS, was nearing the end of his route on Long Island, New York, when he started to feel woozy.
That day, Gubell, 26, had delivered about 200 packages. Temperatures had soared into the high 80s, and it was even hotter inside the metal shell of the back of the truck, where, with each stop, he would spend up to a minute or so to retrieve his cargo, sweat beading on his skin.
Now, pulled over on the side of the road, he was panting and barely able to speak, gripping his phone with his hand, which had cramped from dehydration.
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“My body was losing it,” Gubell said. Paramedics covered him in ice packs to bring down his body temperature and took him to a hospital. “I was just trying to hold on as best I could.”
As blistering heat waves swept across the United States this summer, breaking temperature records and placing millions under heat advisories and warnings, workers such as Gubell have continued to deliver America’s packages for a variety of carriers, often in trucks that have no cooling mechanisms for drivers. Some UPS workers have shared photographs that show thermometer readings of up to 150 degrees in the backs of their trucks.
i await your apology![]()
So-called fetal personhood laws would make abortion murder, ruling out all or most of the exceptions for abortion allowed in states that already ban it.
WTF??!?
Bet they were all jabed. ?WAA WAA poor baby has to do his job spend a minute in the hot truck lol