SoItWasYouAllAlong
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j2uhepv wrote
Reply to comment by SignalLog7 in TIL water becomes a non-polar solvent when it reaches supercritical state. by catfishgod
One tiny comma makes the difference between "Science, bitch!" and "science bitch".
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j2aea7a wrote
Reply to comment by VoodooVedal in TIL that in the early 80s, Dr. Dre was a successful electro DJ with his group World Class Wreckin' Cru. Daft Punk mentions Dre in their song “Teachers,” about artists that influenced them by avec_serif
And where is the evidence to support your claim that /u/bentoboxing is interpreting the moral values of art differently, depending on the artist's race?
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j2a52m2 wrote
Reply to comment by VoodooVedal in TIL that in the early 80s, Dr. Dre was a successful electro DJ with his group World Class Wreckin' Cru. Daft Punk mentions Dre in their song “Teachers,” about artists that influenced them by avec_serif
If you'll push political agendas, you'll need to be better than that.
/u/bentoboxing's comment mentioned two things: drugs and violence. Your attempt to spin this into "sex, drugs, and debauchery" completely ignored the "violence" part, and invented a "sex" part, which was never in /u/bentoboxing's original claim.
If we are going to pull groundless arguments out if thin air, why not cabbage? Both gangsta rappers and rock'n'rollers eat cabbage. Clearly that makes them the same.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j1yuqyk wrote
Reply to comment by ExtremePrivilege in TIL that on average women live five years longer than men, and that by age 85 around 67% of the population is female in the US. by Successful-Depth-235
In a way, men carry the burden of supporting healthier lifestyle for women. And women carry the burden of living the hardest part of life without the support of a partner.
In the end it all pales before the injustice which is ageing...
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j11dakh wrote
Reply to comment by linotype in My mom’s 50 year old magnifier from the CCCP era. The star is a state quality mark of the USSR which works as a certification of quality. by daanikp
How did you manage to misread "claim to any good" as "manufacturing prowess"? The expression "manufacturing prowess" does not appear in the discussion before you mentioned it.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j10czbu wrote
Reply to comment by Generation-WinVista in My mom’s 50 year old magnifier from the CCCP era. The star is a state quality mark of the USSR which works as a certification of quality. by daanikp
You should ease off the propaganda, bud. The following is the list of USSR Nobel laureates in science. Of a total of 8, Lev Landau is the only one I can identify as non-Russian (I'm not sure about it - he was born in Baku, which was in the Russian Empire at the time, but today is in Azerbaijan so I thought I'd count him as non-Russian).
Physics:
- 1958 Pavel Cherenkov, Ilya Frank, Igor Tamm
- 1962 Lev Landau
- 1964 Nikolay Basov, Aleksandr Prokhorov
- 1978 Pyotr Kapitsa
Chemistry:
- 1956 Nikolai Semenov
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j0pj260 wrote
Reply to comment by WhiteWingedDove- in 15 Years of almost daily use and still going strong , I present to you the Toyota of Backpacks by TheRealHowardPotts
That would be an attempt of using the map to reason against the realities of the terrain.
I'm not an economist, but here's my attempt at describing it in my own words: Microeconomics has an extremely simplified model, which works reasonably well for the purposes it is designed for: Individuals' market behavior, parameterized by few key quantities of the market environment. The dynamics of the collective market environment (simplified to a few key quantities), as a result of individuals' market behavior. But that's all. It says nothing about e.g. whether, when times are good, the owner of a small private business will size bonuses based on the bare minimum which maximizes expected future return, or be generous for emotional reasons.
> In reality, every decision is a decision where the "bottom line is at stake."
That goes directly against my personal experience of businesses' (of various sizes) day-to-day operations. Also, microeconomics assumes "rational actors", not omniscient or internally efficient. It doesn't model the internal dynamics of a business, just its behavior on its external "market" interface, based on available information. E.g, in the same circumstances, on the inside some try to formalize a perfect methodology and avoid disruptions. Others try to build agility and foster disruptive patterns. That aspect of a business is outside the scope of microeconomics.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j0o2ph5 wrote
Reply to comment by WhiteWingedDove- in 15 Years of almost daily use and still going strong , I present to you the Toyota of Backpacks by TheRealHowardPotts
>I don't think a single moral business establishment has ever existed, and if it did, it was quickly run out of business by another that was willing to be more cut throat.
I believe that to be correct, but the conclusion you're drawing from it, to be incorrect. There's also a human factor on the corporate side. In many cases, someone says "Let's call those damn fools and explain to them that they can't just imitate registered trademarks and there are laws against that.' Even in a naturally inhumane corporation, there are still a lot of humane employees, simply because the corporation wants good team players.
The human factor would not be present in the big decisions where the bottom line is at stake. But small daily interactions are a different matter.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j0j6hpd wrote
Reply to comment by WhiteWingedDove- in 15 Years of almost daily use and still going strong , I present to you the Toyota of Backpacks by TheRealHowardPotts
I agree that it's not a major wrongdoing. But it demonstrates that they were and remain assholes.
Actually what they faced strongest public backlash for, was the fact that, IIUC, they outright went and filed suit against a bunch of mom-and-pop businesses. No cease and desist notices, directly sued individual craftsmen. "We're a megacorporation and have a large legal team on retainer, so it doesn't cost us anything to sue you" What kind of sociopath does that? I mean, it was a corporation's action, but an actual living person made those decisions...
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j0j4wr0 wrote
Reply to comment by newspeer in 15 Years of almost daily use and still going strong , I present to you the Toyota of Backpacks by TheRealHowardPotts
My point is, I'm disputing the "protect what (...) rightfully own" part in your previous statement. We don't know that their property extends as far as their claims did.
Those aren't empty words. Do look up my other comment here (with the two links), and compare their logo against Bearwear's logo. AFAICT, they're trying to prevent the use of stylized images of any mammalian footprint.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j0j05oa wrote
Reply to comment by newspeer in 15 Years of almost daily use and still going strong , I present to you the Toyota of Backpacks by TheRealHowardPotts
>this was over a decade ago
Apparently a decade was not enough time for them to admit they were at fault. They did however find the time to attack multiple parties. Never successfully sued anyone that I know of. Just used the advantage of their deeper pockets to threaten smaller businesses and hoped that it works.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j0icxok wrote
Reply to 15 Years of almost daily use and still going strong , I present to you the Toyota of Backpacks by TheRealHowardPotts
They don't sound like very nice people. Not even by the very low bar we've come to apply to big faceless corporations:
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_j096mc3 wrote
Reply to TIL That 1994 FIFA World Cup in USA still holds the record for the one with highest attendance by marecko
And yet, Americans continue to confuse "football" with "handmelon"...
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_iub4ne7 wrote
Reply to comment by onewobblywheel in TIL that antimatter is made with antiprotons, which are the opposite of protons, with a negative charge, antineutrons with a neutral charge and positrons, which are the opposite of electrons, with a positive charge. by Doomguy2021
>Mass relates to inertia, not necessarily gravity.
Where are you getting this? No experiment has ever unambiguously demonstrated any difference between inertial and gravitational mass. This of course doesn't say much about antimatter, which has not been experimentally covered wrt gravity.
But anyhow, on your main point - my understanding is the same. Until someone actually measures antimatter's reaction to gravity, it's anybody's guess. IIUC, we have a good model for the makeup of antimatter of quarks, but that doesn't suffice, since we don't have a quantum model of gravity.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_iua9lef wrote
Reply to comment by VeryJoyfulHeart59 in TIL that Richard Feynman, one of the greatest theoretical physicists ever, was rejected admission to Columbia University because of his Jewish ancestry and instead went to MIT. by icbm67
Ok, but was the existence of these sexual relations at all correlated to the women's career outcomes? "Frisky Feynman was a menace to women in science", without concrete specifics to support it, sounds to me like the one making the claim doesn't realize that women like sex too. As far as I can tell, Feynman was very handsome and witty.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_iua57gx wrote
Reply to comment by clegane in TIL bicycle brakes in the UK are reversed from the US and Europe by UlisKromwell
Yup. People who consider the rear brake to be the main one, obviously ride on roads only. And likely on dry, even roads.
Where bicycle braking becomes interesting, is steep downhill, on low-traction surface. 80%+ of the braking force comes from the front brake, and it's a balancing act better suited to one's dominant hand.
I live in the EU, and it always annoyed me that they default the front brake to the left handle. It's an accident waiting to happen, on a mountain bike with hydraulic brakes and soft front suspension.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_iu9znvn wrote
Reply to comment by onewobblywheel in TIL that antimatter is made with antiprotons, which are the opposite of protons, with a negative charge, antineutrons with a neutral charge and positrons, which are the opposite of electrons, with a positive charge. by Doomguy2021
For a source, you can try: Wikipedia -> positron -> mass.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_iu9yx8v wrote
Reply to comment by VeryJoyfulHeart59 in TIL that Richard Feynman, one of the greatest theoretical physicists ever, was rejected admission to Columbia University because of his Jewish ancestry and instead went to MIT. by icbm67
I can imagine that the practice of filing formal complaints didn't exist. But if Feynman was destroying people's careers, that should have been known to everyone the field. It would have been knowledge of vital importance to his colleagues, not just gossip interest.
Besides, "The man was a menace to women in science": now that is a claim that has not been substantiated in this thread.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_iu9v01y wrote
Reply to comment by VeryJoyfulHeart59 in TIL that Richard Feynman, one of the greatest theoretical physicists ever, was rejected admission to Columbia University because of his Jewish ancestry and instead went to MIT. by icbm67
It is weak evidence. However, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, weak evidence is still evidence.
SoItWasYouAllAlong t1_jb2z7xm wrote
Reply to comment by TheInsaneC in Dozens of Israeli reserve pilots ditch drill to protest judicial overhaul by Dirty_Quesadilla
>His power comes from poor uneducated peripherals
Uhm... Israel being a democratic country, his power comes from the popular majority, no?
I am unfamiliar with the specific situation. So your objections to the government may have solid grounds. However, "we are more educated" and "they don't know what's best for them" are the standard elitist cliches, regularly used in attempt to marginalize the popular majority.