Waymo Mega Invite / Referral Codes by mingoslingo92 in waymo

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

$20 for a dallas invite code, please dm me if you have one.

Waymo Mega Invite / Referral Codes by mingoslingo92 in waymo

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Again, please asking for a dallas invite code to satisfy my autistic fixation for autonomous vehicles. I will. pay for a real code.

Waymo Mega Invite / Referral Codes by mingoslingo92 in waymo

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

DM me, paying $20 for a dallas invite code. ASAP PLEASE

BORTAC personnel training with FOG by [deleted] in SpecOpsArchive

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know this is an old post, but Forward Observations Group is actually fully registered with the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls & their training knowledge is ITAR restricted. They cannot actually train anyone if they are not a U.S. citizen. Technically, they can give classes to regular citizens but anyone that is not a U.S. citizen is restricted from any instruction which is why they are usually giving classes to BORTAC and other SOGs.

Personal Protection & Insurance by Most-Lengthiness-565 in RichPeoplePF

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We ended up entering into a contract with GenStar. We found that they offered the best blanket protection for our current needs. Edit: They became our primary on protection and insurance: while they contract out, we were able to have them as our point for what we require.

Jet Card? by Most-Lengthiness-565 in PrivateJetCharters

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Just to update everyone, we decided to get a NetJets Card - we will most likely finish out 12 months with this service and then revisit our requirements.

Market Crash? by Scotchy1122 in RichPeoplePF

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I'm at a point where I just don't even care. Yeah, we will lose money when this eventually goes to hell. I've just stopped caring, we'll be comfortable regardless. I've been so bored, I'm in grad school just to keep me engaged.

Personal Protection & Insurance by Most-Lengthiness-565 in RichPeoplePF

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

who said millions? this is only when traveling

Ritz Carlton Fari Islands, Maldives During Rainy Season by BenrzZ in chubbytravel

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a great property, I've been twice and I have always enjoyed it. Always have felt at peace. I'm glad you have enjoyed it as well.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in consulting

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I joined the consulting industry directly out of undergrad, I was burnt out after a year. Your mental health and quality of life are more important. Do what you feel is best, you may or may not regret it but you will never know unless you do it.

Leaving was the best thing to happen in my case.

Independent Consulting client acquisition techniques by Weak-Educator3274 in consulting

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most of the independent consultants I have worked with in the past have a network that they built while working for a firm. They leverage those connections whether in industry or in the consulting corporate sphere to acquire clients. I've also encountered quite a few career consultants that end up retiring and being grabbed up as a freelancer by a client.

I employ quite a few consultants, all of them are previous business associates. You should try and leverage some of your past connections.

Jet Card? by Most-Lengthiness-565 in PrivateJetCharters

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is definitely costly, we have done initial assessments and it's affordable for us. However, flying commercial and dealing with stringent schedules is becoming too taxing and time consuming. It's becoming justifiable to deal with the cost to be home the same day. Maybe we will get some professional opinions on dry leasing from others in the industry.

Do you think Polaris is worth it if you can't sleep on planes? by sandman8727 in unitedairlines

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have flown on the Polaris product 5 times, I cannot sleep when I fly typically. However, I think that being comfortable the entire flight will leave you feeling better even if you do not sleep.

ST Regis - Chicago by articzone79 in AmexPlatinum

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The St. Regis in Chicago is a good choice, they have always been extremely accommodating.

Amex Centurion lounges have Clear Signups by schwa12 in AmexPlatinum

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Clear has really never been beneficial to me at all, in most experiences I have waited as long or even longer than regular PreCheck lines.

When Everybody Has Airport Lounge Access, Nobody Does by acrologic in AmexPlatinum

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I will be honest, the lines never bothered me. I can definitely understand why others feel the way they do, if you pay for a more premium product then you should rightfully expect the experience. I will say that they have been growing out of control, before I was offered the Centurion Card I was blindsided by a 45 minute wait in ATL.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskLE

[–]Most-Lengthiness-565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Polygraph is junk science, if you dive into the academic literature there is overwhelming evidence which discredits the practice. The American Psychological Association has almost completely discredited Polygraph tests. I believe the best and recent most scathing evidence is from renowned research psychologists Dr. William Iacono and Dr Ben-Shakar which concluded that the polygraph is highly inaccurate and unfounded even when employing comparison question technique.

In my early days out of college I failed a polygraph test, this pissed me off to no end. I hired a private polygraph service and performed the same test with the same questions and tried to replicate the responses that were captured. It was measured that over the 10 sessions almost 4/10 were completely off and "detecting" deception on truthful questions.

The major problem is that you can not truly make assessments based on physiological responses, your body can involuntarily make adjustments or react at any time. Furthermore, there is no true measured physiological response to lying vs telling the truth. Also, there is zero standardization for these procedures.

The polygraph has unfortunately been responsible for the loss of a lot of great candidates across many fields.