What bias would that fall under? One could assume the variation has to do with the average American's trust of law enforcement vs their trust of a qualified person.
(Assuming the repeat experiments were done in the US that is)
Thank you for the description, that actually makes it a lot easier to understand.
So how do you go about combining the two?
For example, my great grandfather's sister's grandson was on the USS Thresher when it imploded. What would his relation be to me?
On that note, what do you call your grandparent's sibling, vs your great grandparent's sibling, and so on? Again, Google isn't being very helpful here.
To me the whole "I'm sorry" being a legal admission of guilt thing is bullshit. Like is there any situation where that has actually been beneficial to someone not trying to commit insurance fraud?
I mean that's fair, you're not really supposed to joke about killing former presidents, even if it's in reference to the biggest piece of shit of the 21st century
I used to volunteer with my local thrift store and anytime there was something donated they didn't think they could sell it would get sent to goodwill lol
I wanna say this has been going on for a while, but it really feels like they've cranked it up just recently. I was in a goodwill probably just a month or so ago and it felt like everything there was the same price you'd have gotten it new. It's insane.
Stick to your local thrifters, people, chances are they have better shit anyway.
What bias would that fall under? One could assume the variation has to do with the average American's trust of law enforcement vs their trust of a qualified person.
(Assuming the repeat experiments were done in the US that is)