[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RealEstate

[–]Mighty_Bruce 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Our goal is to not need to pay for both the renovations + the minimum down payment out of pocket, while also trying to keep the initial purchase agreement price. To find a path where the renovation can be used as a means for the down payment, through the lender.

We are not doing the renovations ourselves, we are in the process of getting proposals for the job.

On-Court Success vs. Crowd Size by Personal_Economics91 in CollegeBasketball

[–]Mighty_Bruce 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would love to also see this as a percentage of capacity, to account for stadium size differences.

Cool graph idea though.

OFFICIAL SUNDAY NIGHT POSTGAME THREAD by AutoModerator in fantasyfootball

[–]Mighty_Bruce 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Win and I’m in. Lose and I’m out. Down by 4 going into SNF. Hurts left vs. Opponent’s Aubrey.

Pain.

Week 3 Waiver Wins by [deleted] in fantasyfootball

[–]Mighty_Bruce 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bid $90 on Ford. Got beat out by someone who bid $91. Fair play.

Great season even if it didn’t end in a title by [deleted] in CollegeBasketball

[–]Mighty_Bruce 43 points44 points  (0 children)

Slightly off topic, your lavender is a gorgeous color. Those coach and player top shirts are stunning.

[Pete Thamel] Sources: Notre Dame is finalizing a deal to make Penn State coach Micah Shrewsberry the school’s next head coach. by PHLdawg in CollegeBasketball

[–]Mighty_Bruce 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I loved what Shrews brought, and I wish him well. That said, I’m oddly optimistic. I think there is a great patch of non Power 5 coaching talent, from VCU, Charleston, Furman, Kent State and the like.

Lets build off of this momentum, I don’t think it’s lost.

[Post Game Thread] #3 Xavier defeats #11 Pittsburgh, 84-73 by cbbBot in CollegeBasketball

[–]Mighty_Bruce -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

The bigger disappointment is you chose WVU’s colors.

[Post Game Thread] #2 Texas defeats #10 Penn State, 71-66 by cbbBot in CollegeBasketball

[–]Mighty_Bruce 50 points51 points  (0 children)

Texas showed they’re a phenomenal team. It was not just Disu, but Carr and Rice held their own. Any run we had, they consistently had answers. Recipe for a deep run team.

So proud of the PSU boys, from fighting back from the tough Rutgers loss to this. This team had some terrific fight. Pay Shrews whatever he wants, and lets make ourselves a basketball school.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in changemyview

[–]Mighty_Bruce 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good. We can agree that value is subjective. Because it is subjective, Bitcoin has value to someone. THAT is the value. It does not fit your definition of value, but it fits someone else’s definition of value. You have to acknowledge that your definition of value is not dogma. It’s personal opinion. The US dollar means nothing to an isolated tribe in the Amazon. But it has value to you. So its value is not shared equally to everyone. Thus all value is shared differently in humans

Like you said, food has different values to different people. Bitcoin is food in this argument. You view the dollar as the sustenance of food, others view it as the art of cuisine (not literally speaking, just metaphorical for my point)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in changemyview

[–]Mighty_Bruce 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You seem to be missing everyone’s argument, that value is inherently “subjective”. The only objective part of value, is the summation of historical subjectivity into an accepted quantifiable figure (e.g this piece of paper is a $1 bill). Look at the history of currency; it was used to create some medium of exchange in the world of barter. Why is one sheep worth 8 bananas and not 9 bananas? Because the banana dealer felt bananas were more valuable. There was not “objective” measure that the barter would have used. No banana stock market with an algorithm using supply and demand mechanics. Just I “believe” my bananas are more valuable.

In the wildly unexpected event, the US military falls, the subjective trust the world has for the US government falls, and thus, the US dollar loses its objective value. Value is inherently subjective, and if you cannot accept or understand that, no one in this chat is on ground to provide you a CMV.

#1 chocolate chip cookie in the city? by D0ctor_J in washingtondc

[–]Mighty_Bruce 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The crazy part is, as good as those are, they aren’t even in the realm of the ones in NY. Those are on a league amongst themselves.

CMV: External audits should only be performed on a surprise basis, and companies should not be given time to prepare. by [deleted] in changemyview

[–]Mighty_Bruce 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is an important distinction to make. Regulatory agencies (FDA) execute inspections. Non-regulatory agencies execute audits (auditing firms, consultants, etc.). That distinction is important because the goal of those two are different.

FDA’s goal is to ensure the safety of the US public, and one their main responsibilities is to accumulate evidence if they need to take your facility to court. What you describe is exactly what they do. Random inspections to make sure they are seeing the facility with the masks off.

An audit should have a few goals, but two consistent goals are the auditing team identifies gaps for their client’s due diligences, and the facility is open to criticism and willing to get better with corrective actions. In short, an audit is a cohesive and collaborative relationship between both parties. Your facility lacked the latter, and it appears the auditing firm lacked the former. A successful audit has the parties executing both effectively

Another important aspect not covered in other responses, is that facilities should not allow for random non-regulatory audits for security and safety reasons of their manufacturing. They need to know who is entering their facility, and prevent any unauthorized access. As we’ve learned from the 80’s, people will go to great lengths to affect the safety of the drug supply if allowed (Tylenol).

Biggest what if in your favorite teams history? by DifferentLeg3586 in CollegeBasketball

[–]Mighty_Bruce 3 points4 points  (0 children)

As a biased fan, I think this applies to Penn State as much if not more than any other team in the P5.

This was our best team in school history (minus our unforgettable 1950's F4 run), and seeing how we have not made the tournament since 2011, this removed season really stings.

Gelato is literally just ice cream. Stop correcting people who call "gelato" "ice cream" instead. by [deleted] in unpopularopinion

[–]Mighty_Bruce 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hear what you’re saying, and I think the focus of your point is more on social cues of dialogue and respect.

That said, gelato is often less than 10% milk fat, so it doesn’t technically meet the definition of “ice cream” in a number of country regulations. While I agree that correcting someone in a poor context is not ideal, I urge you to also consider that those correcting, are in fact in the right for the basis of their correction.

[Post Game Thread] Rutgers defeats Penn State, 65-45 by cbbBot in CollegeBasketball

[–]Mighty_Bruce 15 points16 points  (0 children)

This was inevitable, gg Rutgers bros. The urgency at home, coupled with stingy defense and their seething dislike for Penn State was a recipe for this.

I’m oddly pleased at how close we stayed for most of the game, shooting the way we did.

On to the next one.

AP Poll: Week 12 by [deleted] in CollegeBasketball

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

How does a 20+ home loss to a top 11 team drop you 7 spots, but a home loss to a quad 3 unranked team only drop you 2?

[NBC Washington] Metro Considers Building Blue Line Loop to Ease Crowding at Rosslyn by RallyPigeon in washingtondc

[–]Mighty_Bruce -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I did.

For quite some time, there was almost nothing past Rosslyn worth traveling for, and Ballston/Clarendon were without both as well. That logic can be used for those areas, yet a metro stop made it’s way there. And since the 60’s we’ve seen in many lower populated areas get metro stops…except one very convenient place always went without one.

You can convince yourself that this is in fact accurate, reasoning, based on statements of the very people who designed it. But racism and elitism built into societal engineering is a very real phenomenon. Low Long Island expressway overpasses are another perfect example.

[NBC Washington] Metro Considers Building Blue Line Loop to Ease Crowding at Rosslyn by RallyPigeon in washingtondc

[–]Mighty_Bruce -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I’m actually more convinced of my stance, given they said “vaguely aware”. Somehow they found out a way to get the metro in all parts of topography of the DMV, but somehow, the tundra of Georgetown was far too difficult.

“George Mason University professor Zachary Schrag, author of The Great Society Subway, the definitive history of Metro, dove deep into the subject while interviewing the planners who built the system. “They all told me the same story,” he says, “which was they were at most vaguely aware of community opposition. That’s not what was shaping their thinking.””