HelixDab2

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

The whole case is just a nightmare.

When you start looking back at Satanic Panic legal cases, it all seem so crazy. It's hard to believe that this was in my lifetime, and it's even harder to believe that people still think that was now. For a really good deep dive into some of the child sexual abuse cases that were going on at the time, check out, "Satan's Silence: Ritual Abuse and the Making of a Modern American Witch Hunt" by Debbie Nathan and Michael Snedeker. I remember some of this. And there are people that still defend the witch hunts.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Couple big problems -

To start, this is a morning routine, not a mourning routine. While it is true that I often mourn the morn, dude needs to learn how to spell.

Second, if you're up at 5:30, and not drinking coffee until 7am, and then have 3 hours of focused work, that right there is 10am. Your morning is supposed to be 'won' by this point, and you still haven't gotten to the weight training part of your morning.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 1 month ago

...Where you are currently stationed? What, military?

Regardless, if I were you, in Chicago, I'd take the reckless driving charge over being a CI.

[–] [email protected] 43 points 1 month ago (2 children)

IIRC one of them got out on an Alford plea, and is still trying to fight it.

People forget what this was like. Just being a weird kid and playing Dungeons & Dragons was enough to get you condemned as a devil-worshiper.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

Yeah, I've looked at those, briefly. I'm not sure if they would fit my wok, which is very thin cast iron (yes, actually cast iron, not a spun carbon steel wok). Hence the reason I want to get a wok burner that I'd end up needing to use outdoors.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

There's literally nothing else connected to it though; no USB drives, no other hard drives, etc. When I tried to plug in my old 2tb 7200rpm drives from my last computer, it wouldn't even power on to boot up.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

high-capacity magazine

Notice how they never tell you what high capacity is.

A normal handgun--as in, a regular Glock 17--will have magazines that hold anywhere from 13-21 rounds in a bone-stock configuration, depending on caliber. The only firearms that don't have this kind of capacity are micro-compacts, and guns that were originally designed by John Moses Browning before WWII.

This is sleight of hand to make it seem like the perpetrator was doing something deeply nefarious, when damn near any defensive handgun is going to have a "high capacity" magazine straight from the factory.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago (8 children)

I'm... Skeptical. Mostly because I have a lot of cast iron and love it, and I'm not sure how well they'd work with induction burners. And also because I want to get a wok burner (yeah, the 100k+ BTU monstrosities) for doing stir-fry, and I'm not sure that the realistically affordable induction wok burners are going to manage that.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I find that my M.2 SSD (with Win 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC) is weirdly slower at booting up than my SATA SSD (Win 10 Pro) was. I'm not sure why, since the hard drive itself should be faster. BIOS itself seems to be slower.

I also can't currently get it to even start if I have a hard drive plugged into the power supply and any of the SATA slots on the motherboard. IDK why. It reads the hard drives when I have them plugged in to an external bay and connected with a USB cable. It's super-frustrating. I'll try a SATA SSD and see if I have the same problem. If so, then I guess I'm stuck using M.2 drives. :(

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

I think this is compounded by the fact that many of the social institutions that used to exist are also greatly reduced, and children are expected to be much more structured now than they were. Used to be that kids could reasonably be expected to walk to a library or playground on their own, or play with neighborhood children, without being constantly supervised. (And yes, bullying happened, and yes, so did the Atlanta Child Murders. But the former was a much more realistic problem than the latter.) Kids were also going with parents to church, parents probably had some kind of social outlet, etc. There was, in general, more community. (I'm not bemoaning the loss of religion, since I think religion is trash, but I do miss the community that religion helped build.)

And yeah, most people I know now that home school kids are doing it to ensure that their kids aren't exposed to 'dangerous' ideas.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Progressive metal.

One of my favorite bands has a song where it sounds like everyone is playing a different time signature simultaneously, and it feels out of time and chaotic... And then snaps into focus perfectly, before breaking up again. (I can't identify the time signatures, no. I can hear at least two, and I'm pretty sure three. I think the drummer is doing polyrhythms?) You can listen to the same song five times in a row, focusing on a difference part each time, and hear something new each time. Or take Opeth's "River"; the same same song seems to effortless combine elements of country, blues, 70s rock, NWBHM into something that feels both classic and new. ("New" despite being originally released in 2014.) Or, shit, An Abstract Illusion's "Woe"; it's nominally split into 7 tracks, but the lack of breaks between songs means that the whole thing flows into a single piece. Or, or or!, "Castaway Angels" by Leprous; Leprous stretches and strains the definitions of what metal is, and is not. While some of what they do is clearly metal, are they still a metal band?

The only thing that's a real constant in progressive metal is that the bands all have impeccable musicianship.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

If the customer base skews wealthier, you're going to have more people shopping there that are pulling in $500k+ annually, and probably a handful that are pulling in over $1M. If you only have one bottle in that price range, but you have 100 members at a given location that have enough income where that seems like a reasonable purchase, then you're probably going to be able to sell it.

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