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Cake day: March 5th, 2024

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  • I’ll just leave this here.

    The four rules of firearm safety:

    1. Treat every firearm as if it were loaded. Even if you know it is empty, act as if it is loaded. When picking up a firearm, immediately check if it is loaded, and then treat it as loaded regardless of whether it is or isn’t.

    2. Always point the muzzle in a safe direction. Never allow the muzzle to point at something unless you are okay with seeing that thing with a bullet hole in it.

    3. Be sure of your target, what is before and beyond your target. Clearly identify what you are shooting at before you shoot. Recognize the bullet can also strike things in front of or behind the target. Practically speaking, when target shooting, ensure that something behind the target will absorb misses safely. Usually a hill is sufficient.

    4. Keep your finger outside the trigger guard until ready to shoot. Always leave your finger off the trigger until you are ready to discharge the weapon. A good place to rest it is usually just above the trigger, straight along the body of the gun. Moving it down to the trigger should be the very last thing you do immediately before firing the weapon.

    Rules 1 and 4 have no exceptions that I can think of.



  • Depends if I can get my phone unlocked and call an ambulance or not. Unassisted I’m probably bleeding out, but if I can get to a hospital then I can probably make it. I do wonder how much skin I’ll even have left at this point, considering the sheer number of cuts, scrapes and burns I’ve had, but blood loss should be the only potentially fatal problem needing to be dealt with immediately.

    Big if, though, my hands would be a busted up mess. Operating a touchscreen would be a pretty big ask, and I probably don’t have a lot of time fully conscious. I’d also have several broken bones preventing me from going anywhere to find help.



  • If you’re not used to winter driving conditions, keep your speed to about half of the posted speed limit, AND allow about double the normal distance for any braking you have to do. Give yourself a little over twice the normal amount of time it’d take you to drive somewhere.

    This is generous, and will generally keep you safe on the road even if you’re unaccustomed to the conditions. Ice can still cause (sometimes unavoidable) problems even with these extra allowances, but if you’re going slowly and giving the extra distance, any accidents will be at low speed and very minor.


  • Agreed.

    I would also be curious if she has any areas of interest where she is actually very quick and knowledgeable. If not, that might be cause for concern, but for all we know she just hates the humanities and is actually a wizard at higher mathematics. Especially since she’s young, there’s no real way to gauge whether it’s a lack of general intelligence or just a symptom of complete and total disinterest in a particular subject.

    Also let’s not forget that pretty people can often get away with more than average looking people can, so they don’t have quite the same degree of pressure to perform in areas where they’re uninterested. If a quick, dazzling smile can unlock the ability to copy someone else’s homework or get the teacher to grant extra time on an assignment, well, school might be a little easier.







  • Riding your bike is exercise, so I’ll give that one a pass as a healthier hobby. Reading just depends on what you’re reading I suppose. Going to restaurants is generally looked at as a bad habit in my experience. Waste of money basically.

    Regarding what makes video games special, I will say that they can develop bad personal habits a little easier than a lot of other hobbies. I think they have greater addiction potential than say, reading or bike riding. More on par with sex or gambling. They also create a temptation to oversimplify/misunderstand things about real life in the same way tv/movies do.

    But yeah, overall I don’t think its a particularly bad hobby if you don’t go overboard with them.




  • Only time I’ve ever encountered the idea done for ostensibly practical purposes is what I’ve seen described as a “stagecoach gun”, where it’s a double-barrel that’s been sawed off. Portability is probably part of it, but I do think the bigger spread is also a desired characteristic in that context. I can see a case where a stagecoach driver back in the day might want that intimidation factor of “this probably isn’t going to miss you if I discharge these two barrels in the general direction of your horse.” Ultimately I’m not sure though.


  • Just imagine if you ordered a jack and coke, and you had no way of knowing if they’re actually going to give you watered-down diet coke and the mildest single malt scotch they could find, or cherry coke and a really intense rye, or anything in between. And at every new place, it’s just a gamble what you’ll get.

    That’s kinda what its like.



  • The only significant difference flavor-wise I’m aware of from burr size is that a larger burr has more mass, and is more resistant to heating up from friction during use, with that accompanying expansion changing the grind characteristics. Tbh though, I think you need to be going either high volume at a commercial scale, or be trying to perfectly nail some ultra-precise extraction recipe for an award-winning cup of coffee for the thermal expansion to become relevant.


  • IPA wackos, I can’t stand this places IPAs because they don’t put a whole roasted chicken in the cup with the beer.

    … yea okay, that’s fair.

    Still though, IPAs run a huge gamut for some reason. I feel like the degree of variety you find in the IPA category is really strangely big. Like, if I order a stout or a porter I know about what I’m going to get, flavor-wise. But with an IPA it can run from fairly mild to way-past-grapefruit-juice.


  • Depends on what type of bullshit.

    On one end, if the bullshit is just “my partner wants me to give a fuck about them”, and you don’t want to have to do that, then decent sex might be enough to make you consider changing your mind, if you’re also compatible in other ways.

    On the other end, if the bullshit is “my partner has psychotic breaks and chases me around the house with a chainsaw”, I don’t think any quality of sex would really merit consideration in the bigger picture, given how short your lifespan might become.

    So, there’s something of a scale there, and it partly comes down to what you personally consider bullshit to be. People won’t agree on that, it’s a personal thing.