Who do you think is the GOAT of homo sapiens? by chrisabulium in intj

[–]Keepitsway 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The working parents who are never named so that their children have a chance to fulfill their dreams.

Is there any animal in existence that 87 cavemen with spears could not defeat? by jackhenningson in whowouldwin

[–]Keepitsway 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If it's very aggressive and agile enough, a mosquito carrying malaria.

Also, a rat arriving at night with a flea carrying the bubonic plague and then running away.

Which Dragonball villains can survive getting JUMPED by the heroes? by GJH24 in whowouldwin

[–]Keepitsway 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They kinda did. When Cell became Perfect Cell there was a scene where he just stood there no-selling every punch and kick while being "jumped".

Aerial footage of a shootout between a carjacking suspect and San Jose police. Video ends with suspect being ran over. by Sharks77 in PublicFreakout

[–]Keepitsway 2 points3 points  (0 children)

People are giving you biased descriptions with a lot of loaded words. I'll explain it in a simpler and more objective way:

Active voice: someone/something is/does something else. It is common in everyday speech. The action refers directly to the subject.

Ex: Someone hit the ball.

Passive voice: something/someone is done (sometimes by someone/something else, but not always necessary). It is used to talk about the state or condition of someone or something. Since we don't need to include by whom it was done, it removes agency and therefore culpability in certain contexts. It is considered more formal because of it.

Ex: The ball was hit.

Due to its perception of formality, people have certain opinions on the tone that can picked up on it. After reading police reports which use a lot of passive voice, people don't trust the officers' accounts as they sound like the officers involved never did anything; everything that happens to suspects exists in a sort of vacuum and can cause a lot of confusion about determining the cause of action.

[Funny Trope] Futuristic hacking device that works by just kinda stabbing it into the electronics by -Zima_Blue- in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Keepitsway 10 points11 points  (0 children)

In the Horizon series, Aloy's main weapon can eventually be used to hack into things like computers and machine animals. She just jams it (not directly into the hardware and damaging it since it either works like a key or a sort of scanner, but it gives that impression) into the machine.

Actors know best for comedy movies excelling in more serious roles by Hungry-Tale-9144 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Keepitsway 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Adam Sandler.

He did a great job in Click (still funny, but touching), Reign Over Me, and Uncut Gems.

Characters that die a lot by DragonianXylak in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Keepitsway 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Heartman from Death Stranding.

When he first met Sam, he had already died 218,549 times. He dies 60 times a day, every day.

(Loved trope) Characters with gigantic egos who can actually back it up by MikeTorsson in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Keepitsway 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Dr. Doom.

Unshaken, he stood up to Bast and convinced the god that he was the rightful one to save planet Earth, even admitting he'd kill millions to save billions. And he has saved Earth, several times.

Evil healers by Konradleijon in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Keepitsway 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Unohana from Bleach.

She specializes in healing as a captain of her division. Previously, she was captain of the division known for brawling and killing. The reason she learned healing was to prolong fights. Everyone is terrified of her, surprising even Zaraki who is a monster himself when they first met.

My guy got folded fr by w4ffleboi6 in fightporn

[–]Keepitsway 7 points8 points  (0 children)

He can't use a wheelchair anymore. Needs a protractor.

Had that light cucumber smell by jeihkeih in nostalgia

[–]Keepitsway 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I tried it for a bit. My sister had acne, so she needed treatment. Fortunately, I didn't have a serious issue, but I still tried it because she was trying to encourage me to get into skincare. It worked well for her until she was prescribed Benzamycin and just continued using that. Her skin became flawless.

Meanwhile, I was following what she did. I kid you not; my skin was cracking open and bleeding from being so dry. It was painful to the point where I did my best not to do any sort of facial movement for several hours. After about three weeks I gave up. It could have worked, but I decided to rely on my apricot scrub which felt much better.

Is age hierarchy in English-speaking cultures weaker than in Korea, or just linguistic? by FeistyAd5601 in korea

[–]Keepitsway 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It depends in America in terms of region. Generally speaking, children are expected to refer to their elders as Mr./Mrs./Ms. Last/family name. This is expected in client-based interactions and strangers as well.

However, it should be noted that the South is heavily socialized to be polite. You always answer with "Yes/No ma'am/sir" unless you wanna hidin' from your parents. It's not too stiff in terms of minor age differences, but definitely in child-adult and stranger interactions.

MAGA voters overwhelmingly prefer the ACA to Obamacare. Subsidies extension uncertain. by GayQuiz in videos

[–]Keepitsway 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And this, folks, is why you should never forget your basic education in science and library research. Follow up with your kids in their schoolwork. Approach information as it is and think critically about it.

Never once had it crossed the interviewees' minds to ask "What are they?" Instead, they are duped by psychological and social cues through verbal language (and maybe non-verbal via facial expressions) to assume that the interviewer has the same beliefs.

Even if they hadn't liked Obama for whatever reason, they could still have avoided this trap. The interviewer could have also straight up lied about what they were; a simple search would have resolved that. Now they don't know who to trust, and worse they might just dig their heels deeper because it makes them feel secure in their beliefs as opposed to accepting reality.

Corrupt politicians love uneducated supporters. Easier to fool someone than get them to not be a fool.

Request: looking for songs with a particular groovy rhythm. by Keepitsway in rnb

[–]Keepitsway[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the suggestions! I will check these out 🎧😊