Skip Navigation

Posts
0
Comments
615
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Then add a layer of air a few feet wide between the armor and the crew compartment, duh.

  • They almost certainly have in house legal teams and those lawyers are salaried.

  • Not really, unless the house was built incredibly cheaply with thin studs and crappy drywall.

    Wood is pretty decent at blocking sound -- it the voids between the studs that's an issue. Filling them with sound deadening insulation solves that problem.

    It's not as good at blocking sound as a masonry wall obviously, but it's "good enough" at a fraction of the price.

  • My toolbag calipers are cheap hardware store ones. They're accurate enough and I'm not out much when they inevitably get damaged or lost.

  • That saying holds more truth if you're using the "non-political" definitions of conservative -- i.e. moderate, cautious, or resistant to change.

    Moreso "set in your ways" as the world changes around you.

  • The tired, old trope of "Every accusation is a confession" tends to be true with conservatives.

  • Oh, they're talking about bear bears -- the animal.

    ... I feel like the original scenario didn't make that clear.

  • I don't get it: a bear just makes more sense. Despite their intimidating appearance most are gentle creatures. Their fur and mass can provide warmth, and if you're injured they can easily carry you out of the woods.

    If you pick "random man" you might get a twink and I feel like they're more of a liability in a survival situation.

  • In a hypothetical civil war peoole wouldn't shoot the helicopters and jets. They'd blend with the regular population in to hide from them. They'd shoot the pilot when the pilot is out buying groceries or filling their car with gas ... or kidnap their loved ones.

    A civil war would be horrifying. There would be no uniforms, no front lines, and no rules of war. Both sides would go after the other's friends and family when they can't find or attack their enemy directly.

  • I'm with you on that. What makes the Steam Deck so appealing is it's a handheld PC.

  • As someone 10 minutes outside of a major city, my (slow, unreliable, expensive) options are:

    • Cellular
    • Satellite
    • Fixed wireless

    Americans are entirely at the whim of ISPs and what areas they determine are worth investing infrastructure in.

  • curved ... swords?

  • I'd suggest a cheap used or spare laptop/desktop with a beginner friendly distro like Linux Mint Cinnamon to learn on. Just use it for casual stuff -- you'll pick up what you need to learn as you go.

    That way if something breaks or you don't know how to do something while you're learning you're not "stuck".

  • I often go to nursing homes for medical calls, and asking for basic patient information is always a treat at the crappier ones.

    Pro-tip: when the medic asks you things like "What are we here for?", "How long have they been having this issue?", or "What's their medical history?" you don't actually have to answer. Just give a blank stare and say "I don't know, I just started my shift" or "They're not my patient". All you have to do is give the ambulance crew the patient's name and birthday, and even that's optional.

    Is the patient dead and you don't know when it happened? Say "I was talking to them a few minutes ago!" even if they're cold to the touch. Bonus points if the pt has a DNR and you don't give it to the medic.

    If all that is too much work, say "I'll go check" and find somewhere to hide until they leave with the patient -- this situation is their problem now.

  • I agree that there's a lot of direct trolling online, but I wouldn't discount the number of "useful idiots".

    Remember Q-anon? The core of that entire "movement" was a handful of people on an obscure website steering discourse and pumping out conspiracy theories to a few hundred dedicated direct followers. That audience served as both a testbed for ideas and a free "localization service" -- they'd take an unpolished core idea and through discourse transform it into something marketable for wider consumption. Said followers obscure the source of the messaging, amplify it, spread it to traditional social media / the real world, "fight" dissidents, etc.

    Those "useful idiots" are a fundamental part of an efficient, cost effective, and successful disinformation campaign.

  • Yeah, the majority of them aren't "bots". It's mostly people acting as useful idiots, parroting talking points put forth by Kremlin backed trolls. The shit reeks of 2018's totally organic "Walk Away" movement -- the arguments and slogans practically rhyme.

    I don't like the "bots" thing either since it's inaccurate to what's actually going on, but at the same time I don't know a concise way to call out pretty obvious Russian state backed AstroTurfing.

  • I know this Is an old post, but in the early 2000s 70's fashion came back in vogue -- a 30 years difference. And 30 years ago from today is the 90s, so it makes sense.

    I think it's a result of the 40 year old crowd. They're a marketable demographic with money and started to get nostalgic for their childhood, so creators cater to them. Kids get exposed to it, a few trend setters decide it's cool/vintage, and it takes off from there.

  • The problem is there are crazy "leftists" on lemmy. Your instance defederated from the instances home to the worst of them, so you probably didn't get to experience it.

    Imagine people the adhere to some of the worst parts of right-wing fascism, but with "leftist" branding.