Can you call the cops for someone stealing your food?
Table of Contents
Can you call the cops for someone stealing your food?
Originally Answered: If someone steals your lunch from the company fridge, why can’t you file a police report? You can call the police to try to file a report. Don’t call 911 (or your country’s emergency dispatch equivelant) because (literally) losing your lunch is not an emergency.
Can I call the cops on my roommate?
In extreme situations that escalate to violence, you should not hesitate to call the police if your roommate is threatening your safety or otherwise breaking the law. The landlord likely will start eviction proceedings against the roommate, in part to avoid liability if the roommate does eventually harm you.
How to stop your roommate from eating your food?
You always do, and you have had enough. This morning was the last time your roommate will ever enjoy your Fruity Pebbles for breakfast because here are five ways to stop him/her from ever eating your food again. A right sign on a label sticker is the first step in deterring your roommate from taking your food.
How many words can describe how much you hate your roommate?
There are approximately 1,025,109 words in English language, but none of them can describe how much you despise your roommate when he/she takes your food without permission. Your roommate might think you won’t notice that one Oreo is missing from your cookie jar or that the milk you bought yesterday is already unsealed, but you do notice.
What should you never tolerate in a roommate situation?
In fact, there are some things you should never tolerate in a roommate situation. First of all, I’m certainly not preaching princess standards or expectations. If you’ve never had roommates other than your parents, listen up: Roommates are not around to take care of you. They will not put you first. They might not even put you second.
Should I text my Roommate a tip before a party?
It wouldn’t hurt your roommate to text a tip before you leave work so you can make plans to unwind elsewhere. That’s baseline respect, but any roommate worth the communal salt will start a legit conversation pre-party to get clearance from all housemates. Unless it’s clearly on fire, none shall pass.