I've seen some line cooks quit spectacularly before, and if that's what this was, then it's both not surprising and the most spectacular adios bitches I've seen.
My dad was in the air force for years, was incredibly sympathetic to immigrants and openly called for more immigration. But was hesitant to say service should guarantee citizenship.
Notably he was also very critical of Heinlein. Though he did like the bits that weren't heavy handed political philosophy.
He thought that a direct route from service to citizenship would create a militia class of immigrants. It would be very attractive to a certain group of people who's interests may not align with those of the US.
It was a security threat, he thought. And it seems like this attitude is shared by the DoD.
Except, as they've learned, they didn't actually have a theft problem. That was a lie to disguise low sales numbers. It's no better or worse than it's always been.
The real issue is and remains, the relentless pursuit of number must always go up.
Extrusion is a little different but similar. It would be easy to confuse the two.
Extrusion is forcing material through a die to get a shape. There's a play dough toy that is effectively a play dough extruder. You put the dough in the hopper, press a lever, and you get a star or whatever.
The surface finish you get kinda depends on the material, it will feel very smooth but won't be nearly as smooth under a microscope as this. If you're in to 3D printers, the aluminum arms are generally made of 80/20 T slot, which is an extruded material. Also like, all dry pasta is made this way.
Drawing is stretching the material. You're pulling it through the die rather than pushing it, and getting a shape, and the act of stretching it out makes it incredibly smooth and can yield a stronger product.
This is also how record stylus needles are made. And frequently brass tubes. It's not done through dies, but Chinese noodles are made in a similar process, constantly stretching until they're the desired size.
In that last one, you'd probably be able to see the bent over tip with the naked eye. You'd certainly be able to feel it if you ran your finger over it. It would take some force and would be pretty painful to use.
These are manufactured differently from most of the stuff you'd be looking at.
Rather than milling and grinding, the needles are made from a sheet of stainless that's rolled and welded, then drawn down to whatever size it needs to be, basically stretching the material out. Kinda like when you make a snake with silly puddy and pull it apart.
Then the points are ground in. Gives you a ridiculously smooth finish.
You're not going to sit and eat a spoonful of jelly like a fucking goblin, but you might eat a piece of plain bread and be happy about it. Especially if it's a perfectly cooked dinner roll.
You know if I lived in California right now I'd be wondering real hard why even be a part of the union? California contributes more than it receives, has vastly different politics than the rest of the country, has a powerhouse economy.
I only stopped with carbs because my doctor recommended I do so because I was likely to become diabetic if I didn't. The weight loss was a result of that.
Steinbeck man.... REALLY LOVED THOSE BEANS