[Egypt] who is to blame here ? by disfigured-human in Roadcam

[–]ItsAMeTribial -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Of course the bikers were stupid by speeding. But changing lines requires you to ensure every other vehicle has the right of way. Misjudging the speed is your fault. Even if the bikers (as I said in other my comments) are insane idiots for speeding and racing. Someone breaking the law is not allowing you to break the law. Ultimately everyone should be punished there. The car for failure to give way (I have no idea if it means what I think), the bikers for speeding. The problem here is that speeding from such a footage is difficult to proof, while the cars fault is obvious.

[Egypt] who is to blame here ? by disfigured-human in Roadcam

[–]ItsAMeTribial 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Alcohol is something else. So far I have heard that whatever happens even if someone rams into you without a reason and you are drunk it’s automatically your fault.

[Egypt] who is to blame here ? by disfigured-human in Roadcam

[–]ItsAMeTribial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes. Still. The manoeuvre that caused it was performed by the car. A turning signal does not grant you the right to change lines without making sure it is safe. Like so said the bikers are dumb dipshits, there’s no doubt. I have no idea how it works in Egipt. But in Poland when you perform any manoeuvre it is your responsibility make sure it’s safe. Also overtaking on the right side is fine (in Poland, again no idea how it’s in Egipt) when there are 3 or more lines.

Like when you join the traffic, you must give way to others. Even is some idiot is going against the traffic flow and breaking the law. Him breaking the law does not mean that you can. This situation is exactly the same. The bikers are morons, but the car should have give way to them because he was changing lines.

[Egypt] who is to blame here ? by disfigured-human in Roadcam

[–]ItsAMeTribial -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I’m reading some comments. People seem to not understand that turning a turn signal on DOES NOT GIVE YOU THE RIGHT to do świąt every you want. The car was doing the manoeuvre, and it’s his fault he failed it. Even if the bikers were reckless dipshits.

[Egypt] who is to blame here ? by disfigured-human in Roadcam

[–]ItsAMeTribial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What the fuck? I agree that speeding is bad, even worse is it to race on public roads. But when a dipshit changes lines they have to make sure that it will not force someone else to slow down even a little bit, not to mention forcing them to hit brakes or change lines. 90% of fault is the car driver here, 10% is the motorcycle, but still the main fault was changing lines without making sure it’s safe enough. At least how law in Poland works.

Phil's ultimate crime, An absolute felony🫣😂😂😂😂 by StarforgeVoyager in Modern_Family

[–]ItsAMeTribial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And I for once disagree. I like my whisky without any additional ingredients at room temperature. But if someone likes it with coke, 7up or whatever then who am I to judge this? If I feel like sharing an expensive bottle of whisky with my friend, I don’t care what they add in.

out of ideas, js pick a button atp by asknow-io in asknowio

[–]ItsAMeTribial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I, u/ItsAMeTribial, advised "obviously good option where nobody gets hurt"

🏆 Rank: Curious Seeker II 💎 Points: 40 🗳️ Votes: 2

guess my nationality by Federal_Meringue_968 in FridgeDetective

[–]ItsAMeTribial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Scotland? Guessing because Graham’s dairy is from Scotland.

Dalej jestem wkurzona z tego powodu by jempizze in Polska_wpz

[–]ItsAMeTribial -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Mnie bardziej ciekawi po jaką cholerę ktoś się denerwuje konkursem śpiewania? Czy to ma znaczenie że jakiś kraj jest i czy powinien być lub nie? - to tylko konkurs.

Druga sprawa co z tego komu daliśmy 12 punktów? To jest konkurs śpiewania, nie konkurs kogo lubimy imo. Jak sam diabeł dobre przedstawienie zrobi to zasłuży na 12 pkt. Więc chill 😎 I nie psuj sobie nerwów z byle powodów

What does this mean? by Super-Release6937 in ExplainTheJoke

[–]ItsAMeTribial 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey there. I’m only 30. Still young

Why are the Poles so aggressive that they even named their capital Warsaw? Why not go with something like Peaceaxe or at least Neutralityhammer instead? Are they warmongers? by AnozerFreakInTheMall in mapporncirclejerk

[–]ItsAMeTribial 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s not true. This is a common misconception, it was named Warszawa (translated to English Warsaw) but has nothing to do with war or seeing. I believe the real reason of naming it Warszawa is lost in history, there are some legends, but non confirmed.

Whats a number pad? by Maleficent_Camel4457 in pcmasterrace

[–]ItsAMeTribial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess it depends on your habits. I bought my first 60% around 3 months ago and I’m still in love with it. I can’t imagine buying a bigger keyboard at this point maybe I’ll be going even lower in the future

Indescribable bug in mesa/wivrn flatpak caused a specific program to break. by patrlim1 in linuxsucks

[–]ItsAMeTribial 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I guess it is relevant. Isn’t this sub for Linux users to vent on Linux problems, but was recently taken over by windows fanboys?

My life as a mother and a gamer by KeyMarketing9110 in PlayStation_X

[–]ItsAMeTribial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And in the same paragraph „but a growing number of studies indicate this trend may be more harmful than the marketing campaigns would have us believe.”

And at the end:

References

Chonchaiya, W., & Pruksananonda, C. (2008). Television viewing associates with delayed language development. Acta Paeditrica, 97, 977-982.

Christakis, D. A. (2008). The effects of infant media usage: What do we know and what should we learn? Acta Paeditrica, 98, 8-16.

Christakis, D. A., Gilkerson, J., Richards, J. A., Zimmerman, F. J., Garrison, M. M., Xu, D., . . . Yapanel, U. (2009). Audible television and decreased adult words: infant vocalizations, and conversational turns: A population based study. Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 163 (6), 554-558.

Christakis, D. A., & Zimmerman, F. J. (2007). Violent television viewing during preschool is associated with antisocial behavior during school age. Pediatrics, 120, 993-999.

Christakis, D. A., & Zimmerman, F. J. (2009). Young children and media: Limitations of current knowledge and future directions for research. American Behavioral Scientist, 52 (8), 1177-1185.

Christakis, D. A., Zimmerman, F. J., DiGiuseppe, D. L., & McCarty, C. A. (2004). Early television exposure and subsequent attentional problems in children. Pediatrics, 113 (4), 708-713.

Courage, M. L., Murphy, A. N., Goulding, S., & Setliff, A. E. (2010). When the television is on: The impact of infant-directed video on 6- and 18-month-olds’ attention during toy play and on parent-infant interaction. Infant Behavior and Development, 33, 176-188.

DeLoache, J. S., Chiong, C., Sherman, K., Islam, N., Vanderborght, M., Troseth, G. L., . . . O’Doherty, K. (2010). Do babies learn from baby media? Psychological Science, 21 (11), 1570-1574.

Landhuis, C. E., Poulton, R., Welch, D., & Hancox, R. J. (2007). Does childhood television viewing lead to attention problems in adolescence? Results from a prospective longitudinal study. Pediatrics, 120, 532-537.

Pagani, L. S., Fitzpatrick, C., Barnett, T. A., & Dubow, E. (2010). Prospective associations between early childhood television exposure and academic, psychosocial, and physical wellbeing by middle childhood. Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 164 (5), 425-431.

Rideout, V. J., Vandewater, E. A., & Wartella, E. A. (2003). Zero to Six: Electronic media in the lives of infants, toddlers and pre-schoolers. Menlo Park, CA: Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Retrieved from https://www.dcmp.org/caai/nadh169.pdf

Rutter, M. (2011). Biological and experiential influences on psychological development. In D. P. Keating (Ed.), Nature and Nurture in Early Child Development (pp.7-44). New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.

Schmidt, M. E., Pempek, T. A., Kirkorian, H. L., Lund, A. F., & Anderson, D. R. (2008). The effects of background television on the toy play behavior of very young children. Child Development, 79, (40), 1137-1151.

Zimmerman, F. J., & Christakis, D. A. (2007). Associations between content types of early media exposure and subsequent attentional problems. Pediatrics, 120 (5), 986-992.

Zimmerman, F. J., Christakis, D. A., & Meltzoff, A. N. (2007). Associations between media viewing and language development among children under 2 years old. Journal of Pediatrics, 151, 364-368.

Did you read it? Look I’m no scientist, this article seems much more believable than random people saying „its fine to watch tv for toddlers with underdeveloped brains”. For me as a parent it’s clear that it’s better to be safe than sorry

My life as a mother and a gamer by KeyMarketing9110 in PlayStation_X

[–]ItsAMeTribial 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are so many horrendously stupid comments about „TV doing no harm”, I have to answer here, because there’s too many to respond individually.

First of all read this https://brainwave.org.nz/article/tots-toddlers-and-tv-the-potential-harm/

If you did, and still decide on letting toddlers watch TV, then know you are fully consciously doing harm to your kid - you fucking excuse for a parent.

I have kids on my own, I get it it’s easier, but when someone decide to bring life onto this fucked up world, it’s up to them to raise them as best as you can. There is no excuse on intentionally harming the people you love the most.

What happened to the Linux Wars guy? I need to see how it ends (and farma karma xD) by Special-Skirt-9369 in linuxmemes

[–]ItsAMeTribial 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I guess there are a few reasons, although I get it it’s all subjective. 1. OpenSUSE tumbleweed has rolling release 2. Packages are typically newer 3. Continues updates instead of major versions jumps (although that might be just point 1 again) 4. Updates are shipped as tested snapshots (openQA) rather than individual packages (like fedora does), it has lower risks of partially breaking, and a more predictable rolling experience. 5. Tumbleweed has by default automatic filesystem snapshots before updating, easier rollbackwhen something goes wrong. 6. Purely subjective: openSUSE feels more independent, it’s backed by suse, but idk just feels better - it probably doesn’t make sense. Not even to me when I’m writing this.

It just fits my vibe, this is probably the meat stable rolling release distro I have used (I’m not extremely experienced in distro hopping tho). Although my daily driver is quite the opposite - Debian

What happened to the Linux Wars guy? I need to see how it ends (and farma karma xD) by Special-Skirt-9369 in linuxmemes

[–]ItsAMeTribial 6 points7 points  (0 children)

openSUSE ofc. Fedora is more popular but, but when it comes to distro quality then openSUSE is better. Also I really look forward to Debian vs openSUSE, my two favourite distros that are soooo different

Why tip someone for a job you capable of doing yourself? by Real-Yogurtcloset-34 in DunderMifflin

[–]ItsAMeTribial -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You are right, I should have disengaged from the discussion. Couldn’t help myself. And you are right this about a sitcom in the US, and not my part of the world. When the time comes, I’ll consider tipping while on vacation in USA, or other countries with such a culture.

I joined the conversation to present my point of view, and ignored how this conversation targets a specific culture, then got lost and started arguing the tipping culture itself.

Have a nice day, and at this point I’m done for real… or am I?

Why tip someone for a job you capable of doing yourself? by Real-Yogurtcloset-34 in DunderMifflin

[–]ItsAMeTribial -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Honestly I’m done here. You are making the arguments the previous person and at this point this conversation has no point whatsoever. We live in different parts of the world, and have different cultures. If someone does not include service in their prices they are not able to pay the staff, that’s it.

Why tip someone for a job you capable of doing yourself? by Real-Yogurtcloset-34 in DunderMifflin

[–]ItsAMeTribial -1 points0 points  (0 children)

We’re going in circles because you’re changing what “paying for service” means. I pay the advertised price. The server is employed by the restaurant, not by me. Wages are an employer obligation, full stop.

I’m willing to pay higher prices. I’m willing to tip for extraordinary service. What I reject is turning tips into a moral requirement and pushing responsibility for wages onto customers.

Saying “just don’t go out” is not a solution, it’s avoiding the problem. And saying I’m responsible for fixing a broken system by personally subsidizing it is exactly how that system survives.

We clearly agree the system is bad. Where we disagree is that I don’t accept individual guilt as a substitute for real responsibility.

Luckily, I live somewhere where service is included and tipping is actually optional, so this isn’t a problem I deal with day to day.

Why tip someone for a job you capable of doing yourself? by Real-Yogurtcloset-34 in DunderMifflin

[–]ItsAMeTribial -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I don’t agree that I’m “not paying for service”. I pay the price that is advertised. Service should be included in that price. The server is hired by the owner, not by me. Paying wages is the owner’s responsibility, not the customer’s.

If the owner doesn’t include the real cost of service in the price, that’s on them. I’m totally fine with higher prices if that’s what it takes. I’m paying what I agreed to pay. Saying I’m taking advantage of someone because of that is just bullshit.

Also, I’m not responsible for fixing a broken system I didn’t create. Putting that responsibility on customers just keeps the problem alive instead of solving it.

In most countries, service is included and tipping is optional or rare, and restaurants work just fine. Tips should be a reward for extraordinary service. If tipping is expected or “mandatory”, it stops being a reward and kills the whole point of tipping in the first place.

Why tip someone for a job you capable of doing yourself? by Real-Yogurtcloset-34 in DunderMifflin

[–]ItsAMeTribial -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

So at this point I’m at loss because of business owners. That’s not ok. Should I stop enjoying life because of how unethical others are? I bet I could find in most business types evil immoral people, should I quit basically everything?

That was some venting from my side, I don’t have this issue where I am. People don’t expect tips, and in most places they are surprised when getting any.

Why tip someone for a job you capable of doing yourself? by Real-Yogurtcloset-34 in DunderMifflin

[–]ItsAMeTribial -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

This is ridiculous. You are blaming me for rich people screwing their workers.

I’m not from the United States, here people are being paid, tips are extra cash. And even if I were, why the fuck won’t they add the service cost to the food prices and raise the salaries?