@Mephistopheles That guy who shot up some politicians at a baseball game a few years back was an avid Bernie Sanders supporter. That doesn't make Bernie responsible, or a bad person, or even mean that what he says is wrong (it is, but not because a lunatic thought it was a rationale for shooting people). You'll find loonies on every side of every argument. The fact that they exist isn't any kind of proof against that side.
@Mephistopheles Ben isn't a nihilist, (and I daresay the vast majority of his listeners aren't either), so there's no cognitive dissonance here. Ben's not Islamaphobic, he just dislikes people who think blowing random stuff up is OK. Unfortunately, many of those people are Muslims, but he's never, to my knowledge, supported anything generically anti-Muslim.
Finally, there is most certainly a set of beliefs (human beings have intrinsic value, human beings should be free to make their own choices, etc.) that became prevalent in "the west" (North America and Europe), and which make up what Ben and many other conservatives term "Western Civilization."
Ah, in regards to your nihilism/pessimism correction, I don't think that Ben's pessimistic about the general trend of history. He's frequently pessimistic about general events, but he's generally optimistic over the long term.
The problem in most of the middle east is a cultural one, not a regime one. You can take out an evil regime, but if the problems are in the culture, they'll just have a new evil regime by this time next week.
I've heard Iran isn't so much as the other countries. They were more/less a flourishing democracy until the cold war screwed them with both countries manipulating them.
If they could go back to that, it would be great.
TBF, I don't know how much of my information is accurate.
That's one of my biggest issues with our occupation. Even when people over there talk about how we're keeping them free and safe (other than the "front line" villages, more/less), they've shown no collective willingness to take responsibility and keep themselves that way.
There are many cases of individuals doing so, but not enough for it to be a community effort, like it needs to be for them to be able to do it on their own.
I think the real trick is if they can avoid shooting their citizens this time. Maybe with Soleimani out of the picture someone less blood thirsty will be able to hold their fire.
But totalitarian dictators don't usually care about that kind of things, because their citizens aren't people they are resources. If the resources are acting up, shoot them and get the rest of the resources back in line.
> The commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami, said that if he hadn’t suggested the cause of the crash was a missile strike, nobody would have found out.
I wonder if he was the "source" that leaked information to the US, Canada, UK, and Australia...
If he is, we have a pretty powerful ally in a high position.
I thought it was interesting that there was a report that the Iranian government put USA and Israel flags on the ground in front of the university, and the students all walked around them, instead of over them like the government intended. It's nice that there are people who respect other people, even if they are supposed to be enemies.
The Great Stork Derby was a contest held from 1926 to 1936, in which women residing in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, competed to produce the most babies in order to qualify for an unusual bequest in a will. The race was the product of a scheme by Charles Vance Millar (1853–1926), a Toronto lawyer, financier, and practical joker, who bequeathed the residue of his significant estate to the woman in Toronto who could produce the most children in the decade following his death.It is one of many unusual bequests listed in the will, along with giving a vacation home in Jamaica to a group of three men who...
The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 (Hungarian: 1956-os forradalom), or the Hungarian Uprising, was a nationwide revolution against the Hungarian People's Republic and its Soviet-imposed policies, lasting from 23 October until 10 November 1956. Leaderless at the beginning, it was the first major threat to Soviet control since the Red Army drove Nazi Germany from its territory at the End of World War II in Europe.
The revolt began as a student protest, which attracted thousands as they marched through central Budapest to the Hungarian Parliament building, calling out on the streets using a van with...
@Mephistopheles I mean, they're the ones who did eventually beat the USSR. So they kinda just played the long game. Which is a fair bit better than nuclear war, IMHO.
@Mephistopheles This is kinda my first time more than vaguely hearing about the whole thing, but if they didn't do that, then they probably should have. Still doesn't outweigh being the largest protector of freedom in the world over the past century.
@Gryphon They can't even get gun-crime under control because everyone forgot the REGULATED MILITIA in the Second Amendment (which was written pre-mg-42 and pre-Lolumbine).
@Mephistopheles OK, this one I can't past up. Firstly, the "well-regulated militia" bit is in what's known as the prefatory clause, which means it's the stuff that tells you what the reasoning is, not the actual "this is the law" bit.
Secondly, here is a lovely video of a fully automatic machine gun that was purchased for the war of 1812 (when many of the founders were still alive, the original design was test-fired on the estate of Hamilton). So yeah, gun control laws now would restrict weapons that were unrestricted back in the late 1700s.
Thirdly, if you need more evidence the founders were OK with pretty much anything, here is a letter from Madison to the owner of a ship, basically saying "yeah, you can have a bunch of cannons."
Finally, in Canada, we've had very few problems with mass shootings (one in a Mosque quite a while back, and that's about it I can think of). And semi-automatic guns are perfectly legal here. We've got more limits on magazine capacity, but you can get around that by, get this, sticking a screw in any size of magazine so you can't fit more bullets in. Which would take all of 10 seconds in your car to remove before you go shoot up a place.
@Mephistopheles In terms of CMPM, you've gotta have a pretty fast trigger finger to get 100 rpm out of an AR-15, and accuracy doesn't matter as much if you're 10 feet away from the kids you're murdering. In terms of CMASD (Children murdered after shooter died), it beats the AR quite nicely. Cause the thing just sorta keeps firing. And if you drop it, it'll scoot around on the floor, shooting bullets all over the place.
The Boston Massacre, known to the British as the Incident on King Street, was a confrontation on March 5, 1770 in which British soldiers shot and killed several people while being harassed by a mob in Boston. The event was heavily publicized by leading Patriots such as Paul Revere and Samuel Adams. British troops had been stationed in the Province of Massachusetts Bay since 1768 in order to support crown-appointed officials and to enforce unpopular Parliamentary legislation.
Amid tense relations between the civilians and the soldiers, a mob formed around a British sentry and verbally abused him...
Six dead, five wounded. Admittedly multiple shooters.
@Gryphon Listen, just use AP rounds, aim for the chest and make sure they can't escape, you should be able to get a score of at least 50 before the cops arrive. Brenton managed it on normal difficulty.
Also, if you want to stop shooting deaths, you'll start by banning handguns. They're far more lethal (both in absolute numbers and even more in terms of percentages of handguns that kill people).
@Hosch250 I mean, molotovs are a really crappy homemade subtype of incendiary grenades. So, all molotovs are grenades, but not all grenades are molotovs (obviously).
I do have a pretty good idea as to how I'd cobble together a full-on incendiary grenade though. It'd take a bit more time and care than a basic molotov, but I'm reasonably certain I'd retain all fingers and limbs.
I'm less certain as to whether I'd retain my status of not being in jail though.
@Hosch250 I'm pretty sure just having the thing would break a cornucopia of laws. Of course, they can't arrest you if they don't know you did it, so there is that.
The other problem with the whole idea is, I'm fairly certain I couldn't get some of the raw materials up here. I definitely could down in the states, but you might have to actually disassemble cartridges or something up here. Which would probably require a license to get, because Canada.
I know a guy from my high school built a shotgun in his garage, but it wasn't any kind of a standard bore, so he had to disassemble normal shells and repack them to use the thing.
I'm also not clear as to the legality of that particular project, but I don't think he got in trouble.
I personally think there should be a lot more guns... Take that guy that was going to shoot up a church in Texas a couple weeks ago. Guy pulls out a shotgun, gets two shots off, and then receives a bullet between the eyes from the armed guy 20 yards away. If everyone there had been unarmed, then who knows how many would have died.
@AndyD273 Yeah, apparently there were about half a dozen people pulling out guns when he went down, so even if that one guy who shot him hadn't been there, the guy would still have been stopped quickly.
@Hosch250 at least in the States, the ATF doesn't care if you own all the makings of explosives, bombs or whatever. It's when you assemble them that they care. I bet Canada is similar.
Ingredients for explosives can be had for cheap on the internet. Owning them isn't illegal. Combining without a license is very illegal.
They were going around confiscating butter knives. * * slightly hyperbolic. They were confiscating knives. A butter knife just got caught up in the sweep.
I mean, the knife sharpener is slightly pointy... But you gotta be pretty hard pressed to decide to use that. If your opponent has a knife, you're only going to make them more deadly
@RoryAlsop I'll grant that point, since my wording was a bit vague. But considering that the guy was a felon, and a mental health case, him having any kind of weapon was double illegal, so adding another gun law would have only made it triple illegal, and I'm not sure even that would have stopped him.
I think I might've invented a new card-based game.
It'll take a certain number of players (I'm thinking about 5 would be good).
Each player draws a card that gives them a skill set.
Each player represents a "nation".
So, one player might pull an "industrialized" nation. Something like Japan, where their specialty is industry. They don't really have a military, but they have the skill to build one if necessary. They don't have a super high population, though, so any losses are hard to recover from.
Another might pull the military/industrial card. Something like USA. This nation is very powerful early in the game, but can be taken down by alliances. To reduce the heavy-hitting threat until alliances can be formed, skills (for all cards, probably) would have to be scaled, so they have the ICBM skill, but can't use it for N terms.
Another might pull the raw-materials and population card. Think China after WWII. Their military and industry were mostly destroyed, but they had the raw population to present a serious fight in Korea.
Each player hides their original skillset, but can develop new skills over periods of turns.
For example, they could build a factory (I guess N factories would make a nation "industrialized", so they could eventually unlock that full skillset) if they skipped N turns.
Or they could build an ICBM system if they passed X turns.
Forming an alliance with another nation allows them to pool their resources and unlock capabilities faster.
Any skills built would be public.
So you could deduce who had what by alliances changing the speed new skills are developed at. And when an alliance is formed, each player can choose what capabilities their ally learns they have.
Like, the "USA" card could pretend to be the "Japan" card by only releasing the industry skillset.
The goal of the game is to conquer the other nations.
So there would be an attack mechanism somehow too, that costs resources.
I imagine most games would end up with 2-3 nations fighting it out after mutually knocking the weakest ones out and gaining their skills. Knocking a nation out would result in the same capabilities as an alliance, except across the whole range of the victim's skills (i.e. no hiding).
So they could use those skills to develop them for their own country, but it takes time to rebuild.
In other news, don't get in a car accident at high speed.
I was reading Reddit yesterday.
One person told a story about how one person got blasted into the glovebox. They couldn't find them at first, and thought they'd been thrown out of the car.
Another person felt fine except for a bellyache, opened their jacket, their guts dropped out, and they ended up dead.
Some people got caught on their seatbelt and got torn in two.
Way to re-make me scared of driving. I like it, but knowledge, in this case, is fear.
And don't drive a motorcycle. Great way to become pavement hamburger.
@Hosch250 Another way to do it would be to have the "who you are" cards open (it's fairly simple for a nation to tell if another one's developed, has a large population, etc.), but secretly draw the skill cards so they don't know whether you got nukes or not, whether you have airbases or tank factories, etc.
@Hosch250 We could probably find some way to play it online if you can't find any/enough live playtesters. I'd help you out if we found a time that works.
How about Industrial (your Japan example), Resourced (Russia/China), Military (Murica), Insurgent (or possibly Fanatical?) (Iran, Veitcong during 'Nam), Wealthy (Switzerland), and Technological (maybe German or something? More advanced techwise in general). That's 6 to start with.
Maybe one country that controls trade and is weak in its own right, but any enemies fall hard if they don't cooperate. Kind of like how overland trade between Europe/Asia routed through the Turkey/Syria region.
@Gryphon Yeah, something like that.
I could build it so "insurgent" was more "developing" and they could either develop militarily or industrially.
Where they'd have an advantage if they focused on one before entering the other.
I could also have a pure-military type, like Germany leading up to WWI. I mean, yeah, they had industry, but almost everything was being poured into the military.
So that gives me balanced military/industry, full-industry that could easily build a military, and full-military that could easily build an industry.
@Hosch250 Kinda like China pretending to be developing for the purposes of the world bank, while also having a huge developed economy, and world colonization goals?
Another possible way to do something similar to skill-locking is to have some kind of "high-tech" deck that nobody gets to draw from at the beginning. Which would have nukes and stuff in it, and you could research stuff from it once you've built up a bit. Not too late, to keep some of the military-industrial guy's advantage.
@AndyD273 I was thinking this would be more like Cuba or NK. Rejecting most aid and pretending to be stronger than they are early in the game while building strength as they can.
@Hosch250 I've been that little guy in Risk before. The Americas vs the Asians, with poor little me stuck in Europe. But if either attacks me, they'll weaken their armies enough that the other can wipe them out.
Speaking of the "things I won't work with", one of the comments on this page about peroxide peroxides had a joke that I'm not getting... I'm hoping someone with chemistry knowledge will help me out:
Two chemists walk into a bar. The first says, “Can I have a glass of H2O.” The second chemist says “Can I have a glass of water too.” The first chemist broke down in tears – his assassination attempt had failed.
Two chemists walk into a bar. The first says, “Can I have a glass of H2O.” The second chemist says “Can I have a glass of H2O too.” The second chemist then dies when he's given a glass of H2O2.
The line (from the peroxide peroxides article): "the authors report no safety problems at all" cracked me up. If there had been safety problems, it's rather unlikely that there'd be any authors left to report them.
I've been thinking--if I'd specialized in chemistry, I'd try to build an automated lab somewhat like the botox lab to create this stuff in very small quantities.
"The current thinking is that one of the intermediates is the HOOOOO- anion." Not within a kilometre of me it's not. Two kilometres if I'm downwind. I'm no chem major, but even I know that that's not a thing that will be around for any longer than it absolutely must. And will announce very loudly when it stops being around.
I enjoy reading about these chemicals as much as the next person, but I'm with the 'Stuff I will not work with' mentality of 'You can go throw rocks at the hornet's nest, and I will be over here in my bunker and cheer you on.'
In his book, he told about the gov trying to get companies to create this highly explosive substance.
It was so touchy even the craziest of techs wouldn't do it.
They built their own lab to do it.
It promptly blew the lab and most of the guys working on it to hell.
(Or heaven...)
My organic chem prof in high school told us about her graduate work on an ozonide (if I’m remembering right—anyway it was something exuberantly reactive). She cooked up a nice sample and brought down the window on the hood to go do something else. That was enough. Fortunately the hood was explosion proof, but whoever put it in didn’t think to make the wall explosion proof too. It’s not every day you see people in the hallway looking out of your hood. The glassware was left in very small pieces.
This is why chemists are insane. Not all of them, granted, but you will never catch me trying to whip up chemicals that I know will explode if they get looked at funny.
I'll spend my time trying to distill my coffee to be stronger, thank you. Seems a bit less risky to me to try and cram a few quarts of coffee into a single 8-oz cup than work with that stuff.
> Here’s a tip for ozonizer users, learned from a graduate school labmate: When the oxygen tank runs out, make sure that the tank you replace it with is not a hydrogen tank.
Apparently back when computers were worth their weight in gold (and they weighed a lot), the Air Force took some computer time and decided to use it to figure out what the best rocket fuels would be. Apparently they came up with some stuff that was a) impossible to synthesize, b) would explode if you so much as looked in its general direction, c) was probably going to be acutely toxic, chronically toxic, and carcinogenic, and d) ate anything you put it into in approximately ten seconds.
Needless to say, they never managed to get anybody to so much as try to synthesize the stuff.
@Gryphon Apparently they didn't do it right. If you add more zeros eventually they'll cure someones sanity. Worked for the UCLA.
Dangit, ACLU, not UCLA
@Halfthawed Hmm, my parents have a freeze dryer... I wonder if you could freeze dry a pot of coffee, rehydrate it just slightly, and make a super strong coffee concentrate.
It looks like that might be how instant coffee is made
@AndyD273 More or less, yeah. But I wouldn't recommend eating pure instant coffee. It kind of forms a dense syrup in your mouth upon reacting with your saliva and then just stays there for a while unless you wash it down with water, and once you're doing that anyway, you might as well just add the water beforehand.
Less than a month ago, there was some settling of the incident with firing Monica. It's obvious that there was not a lot of approval from the community on the chosen by SE course of action, and on the settlement as well.
Today, we are seeing a new wave of SE actions targeted on work with the com...
I'd already stopped flagging and doing review queues, but now I'm done contributing. I'll still hang around in chat, but no more questions, no more answers, no more votes from me. I wasn't a massive user, I probably only earned SE Inc. a few bucks. But that's more than they deserve, so I'm done.
@Gryphon Yeah. The thing is, I don't know where else to find a good conversation with people that I may not agree with that won't immediately turn into a giant insane brawl, but that isn't also an echo chamber of people that believe exactly what I do. Being able to have civil disagreements is pretty nice.
There are a number of people here I'd buy a coffee and have a long conversation with, if distance weren't a thing.
@AndyD273 That's why I'm going to hang around in chat. But SE doesn't deserve my work (meager though it may have been) anymore. So they're not going to get it.
Also, just in case anyone hasn't seen it, ya'll should probably go upvote this.
@AndyD273 Yeah, I just hope he finds a new job he loves where he can help people. He deserves it. Maybe one that's kinda like what this one was before the company turned into a dumpster fire.
In other examples of insanity, apparently a pedophile who's just been convicted in Michigan decided that he self-identified as an 8-year-old girl. Fortunately, the judge was not completely insane and convicted the dude anyway. Someone is actually taking gender theory to at least one of its logical conclusions.
@Gryphon I did read a comment or something somewhere that had the idea that perhaps it's time to start treating paedophilia as exactly that - a mental illness, in the same way that psychopathy is
@Hosch250 I feel a need to say something here. I'm so lost for words, I don't know what to say. Robert was amazing. Shog though... Shog... Without Shog9, SE just isn't the same any more
@Mithrandir24601 I get the feeling that SE hasn't been the same for a while now. We're just getting increasingly visible manifestations of it as we move along.
Shog, I first heard of you many years ago when I started being active on SE. Anyone who came anywhere near meta would inevitably stumble upon one of your many thoughtful, insightful and just damned fun posts. You were instrumental in setting the tone of SE and defining the way we, the community, ...