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Posts
14
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914
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • About ten years ago, I worked for a small firm where most of the partners attended this very church.

    One of the reasons I left was that I felt completely out of place as they integrated their religion into the office culture.

    When I left, the managing partner would send me handwritten letters for YEARS effectively telling me that while I had chosen damnation for myself, I owed it to my daughter to have the opportunity for salvation by attending this specific gateway Church in Southlake.

    If I didn't have so much disdain and bitterness, I'd be tempted to send him this article.

  • That's always been my response when manager and owner use that whole "nobody wants to work anymore," thing because they can't get people to take offers for six bucks a year.

    Every single time I hear that, I say out loud, "Well I certainly don't want to work. Who in their right mind does? That's why we get paid to do it."

  • Who pays to watch these things? Like Fast and Furious part 47 is clearly making money as is Comic book hero vs other comic book anti-hero part 32.

    I know I'm old, but I can't even name the year when I last paid to go see a movie.

  • Math

    Jump
  • Most of the math I do at work is related to compound interest. Of all the math I believe the general public should understand, the concept of how paying interest to others is a total screw would get my top vote.

    I have a co-worker who took out a car loan last week at, wait for it, FIFTY THREE PERCENT INTEREST! No concept of what that was costing her. She could only see, "I can afford the monthly payment."

    (1 + r)n and its friend 1/(1 + r)n have been the two most important concepts in work and personal life that I've ever learned and applied.

  • I know several of those. One I don't see listed is stuff made here. If you're a fan of backyard scientist, you're gonna love stuff made here.

    Smarter everyday is really a special one. The way that guy involves his kids and his own boyish excitement when he finally gets an experiment right is downright heartwarming. Then there was the whole episode checking in on physics girl. He had no particular incentive to do that. He just really seems to care.

  • Assuming most Americans couldn't pass it, that explains a ton of politician rhetoric. They say things that are functionally impossible, but if the voter Is entirely unaware of how the government is structured and functions, then they'll eat it up and cast their vote, frequently against their own well being.

  • When I was still watching that show, I was perplexed that Democrats would say that's the world Republicans want and Republicans would say that's the world Democrats want.

    I'm firmly in the former camp and cannot for the life of me figure out how a conservative could agree with the latter.

  • Rule

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  • I saw him live about ten years ago.

    As per usual, he was about two hours late getting started. Once things got going I counted no fewer than sixty people traipsing about the stage in various stages of undress and demonstrating innumerable methods of erotic dance, including but not limited to a contortionist pimp with a dildo for a nose, all while George sat motionless on a stool in the center.

    This went on for at least four hours at which point, we decided to take our leave.

    As far as I know, that show is still going, never to conclude.

    That shit was weird. Really weird.

  • I found a sample test with 133 questions. I got 126 of them for 94.74%.

    There were a few history questions that threw me, specifically related to the federalist papers of which I've got scant little memory.

    I felt like the rest of it was pretty straightforward. I also think recent divisiveness has made a lot of the questions related to how the federal government is structured a lot easier.

    As to your assertion that most natural Americans would fail, I'd flip a coin on that. Maybe? Probably?

  • I found a channel recently, I think within the Roku channel, that plays nothing but old MTV videos.

    It was no more than a couple weeks ago that I found it, but I'm not sure if I can find it again.

    Nonetheless, it's out there somewhere.

    Edit: It's in the Roku channel. Go to the music category and it'll take you to music videos galore. Some are playlists of thirty hours or so, some are live. I see seventies, eighties, nineties, and 2000s along with different genres.