Transaction: bbb566b222fa785f1dacf196c8b78661b522df1b

Included in block 5,857,245 at 2016/10/15 15:38:33 (UTC).

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Transaction info
transaction_id bbb566b222fa785f1dacf196c8b78661b522df1b
ref_block_num 24,200
block_num5,857,245
ref_block_prefix 1,668,895,624
expiration2016/10/15T15:38:45
transaction_num 6
extensions[]
signatures 1f3ae3ddb73f0be1ebaef5fccc6d4ee94a71d5f727f26a78c6149828218cb8f69133526ea0681595e4c62ce35de4fd738e3641cc28653eeaebc7b402da1e3e64a2
operations
comment
"parent_author":"jbaker585",<br>"parent_permlink":"when-a-site-you-depend-on-goes-down",<br>"author":"builderofcastles",<br>"permlink":"re-jbaker585-when-a-site-you-depend-on-goes-down-20161015t153002693z",<br>"title":"",<br>"body":"Loyalty is a weird thing. It is a very admirable trait to have,<br> however,<br> when in a world that selling out is the norm,<br> it is very dangerous.\n\nWhen you are loyal to someone,<br> and they are loyal to you,<br> then it become a great synergistic bond,<br> where the two of you can do more than either alone.\nThis is great! This is the best!\n\nThe biggest problem with being a loyal type person is that you see everything through \"you\" colored glasses. You assume other people have some loyalty. You believe the scale goes from:\n. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No loyalty <---------|----------> High loyalty\n\nYou believe that a company you are working for,<br> or a company you are buying from actually cares (at least a little bit) for you.\n\nWhen in actuality the scale goes from:\nNeg loyalty <----------------No loyalty -----------------> High loyalty\n\nThere are people actually out to screw you over. And want nothing more then for you to put your trust and loyalty in you.\n\nIn most jobs,<br> you will find people that really want to use you. But,<br> for the most part,<br> you will find people that really do not care. They have no loyalty at all. The job is a job. You are a coworker in passing.\n\nSo,<br> be aware that you are seeing the world through tinted glasses and make adjustments. I strongly suggest learning how much you can give,<br> and never giving more than that. At this level,<br> you can sustain your giving,<br> and even if the other person turns out to be evil (or just untrustworthy) then you will not fall apart.",<br>"json_metadata":" \"tags\":[\"writing\" "
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