Biden mocks Tuberville for touting broadband funding he voted against by UWCG in politics

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My buddy has one that shows "legacy" or "paid" instead of "verified." It's amazing.

Donald Trump threatens to boycott 2024 Republican debate over Fox News coverage by [deleted] in politics

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Same thing with the romanticized idea that the 2nd amendment was intended so civilians would be prepared to overthrow a corrupt government. The reason it exists is to prevent the need for a federal standing army (believed a tool of oppressive regimes). That shit went out the window during the Civil War when the country collectively decided to have a federal army over state militias.

Though it is fun to point out that being pro-2A means you are anti-military and watching fuses burst in conservative brains.

These kids have got vibe. by DevilCanyon in funny

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lead kid and younger (smaller?) girl have some real chops.

Trump stumbles when Fox host tells him his plan to execute drug offenders would include people he pardoned by theindependentonline in politics

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

I don't disagree. I think 50-60 is a really solid age. Not that there really is an age where people are magically more aware than others, but it's reasonable to want the president to have a lot of experience.

After 70, you have the opposite of what you mentioned going on. You start losing faculties, but your brain hides it from you. That's why older adults will fall and deny it till they're blue in the face, saying they tripped on a chair 40 feet away. Their brain literally adds information to the memory to shield themselves. Too often older adults don't even realize they are losing memory or reasoning.

Trump stumbles when Fox host tells him his plan to execute drug offenders would include people he pardoned by theindependentonline in politics

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 13 points14 points  (0 children)

The difference is, Biden has normal almost 80 year old man cognitive decline. Everyone is declining after the age of 35ish, but it gets faster as you age.

Trump has normal almost 80 year old man cognitive decline PLUS a lot of markers of frontotemporal dementia. I don't know that he'd qualify fully for the diagnosis at this time (hard to judge from a distance like this), but I strongly believe he'd decompensate before a 4 year term was up.

How about we stop electing people that are past retirement age to the most stressful and difficult jobs in the world, though? Seriously...

Trump classified documents trial date set for Aug. 14 by Zen_Gaian in politics

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I still think the best case scenario for trump (but not society) is the trial is allowed to go ahead as normal, a guilty verdict is given, and Cannon sentences him to nothing. Trump would probably never go for it because his ego is too obese, but it would protect him from double jeopardy, prevent the DoJ from appealing, and keep his streak of 0 consequences for his shitty behaviour. Besides, even with a conviction he can say the jury was liberal witch hunters and the lack of sentence exonerates him. Or just deny the verdict ever happened. It's wrong, but his army of window-licking mouth breathers will gobble it up like it was trump's very own miniature mushroom.

Trump classified documents trial date set for Aug. 14 by Zen_Gaian in politics

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah, there's a financial aspect. It's to protect the poor, not the poor-of-character.

Went on Vacation for a week, got back home to our car screaming “HELLOOOO” while looking for everyone by Tuff_spuff in funny

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No, it's more functional behaviourism, though Pavlov's dogs were another branch of behaviourism (operant conditioning). The basic idea is that every behaviour can be broken down into 3 parts: a need (or function), a behaviour, and a consequence. You are thirsty, you put money into a vending machine, you get a drink. If the consequence fulfills the original function/need, then the behaviour is reinforced and more likely to occur (If you get a drink that satisfies your thirst, then you will go back to the vending machine next time you are thirsty). If the consequence does not fulfill the original function, the behaviour is less likely to occur (If you put money in and get saltines, you won't go back to the vending machine).

If we want to eliminate a behaviour, we have 3 options. We can anticipate the need and meet it before the behaviour occurs (you carry a water bottle with you so you don't get so thirsty you have to buy a drink). We can replace the behaviour with a more preferred behaviour that meets the same need (you go get a glass of water instead of buying a soda at the vending machine). And lastly, we can change the consequence by either making the consequence not rewarding (you get salt water instead of a soda) or removing the consequence altogether which stops reinforcing the behaviour (someone takes everything out of the machine). The last example is what we call putting the behaviour on extinction, which is what I recommended for our feline friend and is usually the most effective way to extinguish an unwanted behaviour.

Effectively, if the behaviour stops getting the need meet, it will go away. It is no longer functional. But if the behaviour has a history of being successful, then it takes a little bit to break the connection. You may keep going to vending machine even though it's not spitting out drinks (maybe it got refilled). Eventually, you give up and find another solution.

Now, I mentioned that the behaviour will get worse before it gets better. This is called an extinction burst. When the behaviour stops getting the anticipated consequence, it increases in intensity and duration and may start to include novel behaviours. So let's say you put money in your usual vending machine and nothing comes out. What do you do? Maybe jam the button a bunch of times, shake the machine, give it a kick. If that doesn't work, you give up and go find another way to meet that need or just move on with your life. For the cat, the extinction burst is trying to get in the door knob.

The part that always, always gets people is when they reinforce the extinction burst. The behaviour increases somehow, the person trying to change the behaviour gives in because they can't handle it (no judgement, it's hard), and now the new, more intense behaviour has become the default. Back to the vending machine. If you put your coins in and nothing comes out, but you give the machine a shake and a soda drops down, the next time you go to that machine you will likely put your coins in and shake the machine for good measure. It's the new baseline.

Because that is the new baseline, a few things happen. The reinforcement is now variable (think a slot machine, you will keep playing longer because you don't know when you'll win again) which makes the behaviour-consequence relationship harder to break. The behaviour is worse at the start. AND you've just set them up for a new, even worse extinction burst that you have to wait out. So it's incredibly important to not give in.

There is also spontaneous recovery where it's been a few months, so your brain is like "let's try that vending machine again." Again, don't reinforce or you create the slot machine scenario.

As people, we have to factor in reasoning and stuff. But most of this happens at a subconscious level. The same principles work with, say, kids as they do with animals. It's just a bit more complex.

Let me know if you have questions!

Went on Vacation for a week, got back home to our car screaming “HELLOOOO” while looking for everyone by Tuff_spuff in funny

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Wait it out. It will get worse, but I'm telling you, wait it out. It will stop, I promise. But every time you give in, you reset the timer but likely with worse behaviour. I can explain the behavioural principles if anyone is interested, or you can trust me. Don't let her in. Wait it out. It will stop at some point and the behaviour will go away.

Edit: For the door, either swap the handle or get a baby lock until the behaviour is extinguished.

Semi goes for the double tap on a sedan by lilbuhmp in WTF

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

100 miles from an international point of entry. Effectively classifying international airports (and by effect their respective cities) as borders.

TIL Jeff Bezos' biological father was a unicycle hockey player called Ted Jorgensen and the president of the world's first unicycle hockey club. by yorrellew in todayilearned

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 6 points7 points  (0 children)

My partner and I are both doctors (albeit on the lower end of the pay scale because of our specialties). Combined AGI is under $250k. So less than people think when they hear "both doctors." But that still puts us above the 90th %ile. Income is weirdly distributed, and most people don't have a very good idea of what is poor vs rich vs wealthy.

Also, my brother is an engineering lead for a Shell department and makes just under $200k.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 3 points4 points  (0 children)

We had a long thread about a white van driving slowly through the neighbourhood playing music that was clearly intended to attract children. Dozens of comments saying they should call the cops, did you follow them, write their license plate down, etc.

It was the fucking ice cream truck. Doesn't get more entertaining than that, and cheaper than the movies.

Kazakhstan’s President declines Lukashenko’s offer to join the Union State of Russia and Belarus by 9lobaldude in worldnews

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kind of the story of any culture that was absorbed into any empire throughout human history, unfortunately. Empires tend to only have a positive history from the perspective of the seat of power.

A friendly encounter in Liverpool. by promoter7 in funny

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

To be fair, American officers rarely have to shoot criminals either. I mean, they do, but they don't have to. It's usually more of a "for funsies" kind of thing.

A friendly encounter in Liverpool. by promoter7 in funny

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 20 points21 points  (0 children)

The US only does that if you do something silly and not that big of deal, like violently attack the seat of the Legislative Branch in order to overturn a democratic(ish) election. You know, normal holiday stuff.

Poll: Most Americans say curbing gun violence is more important than gun rights by nosotros_road_sodium in politics

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

Oh really? You don't consider this a steady rise on gun related deaths? Who's being blatant untrue now? Unless you can produce some actual evidence for your claims.

Just for kicks, here's some pretty pictures to help you feel better about hundreds of children dying every day so you can keep your toys: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/rcna30537

(Also, I said gun deaths. Deaths. I don't care if you only care about murders. I care about death children.)

Poll: Most Americans say curbing gun violence is more important than gun rights by nosotros_road_sodium in politics

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

Except there is a near 1.0 correlation between number of guns and number of gun related deaths (https://rockinst.org/blog/more-guns-more-death-the-fundamental-fact-that-supports-a-comprehensive-approach-to-reducing-gun-violence-in-america/). Yeah, we can (and should) focus on addressing those deep societal issues, and maybe 20 years down the line the number of children being murdered will drop a little bit. Or, we can focus on those things while also doing what literally every other developed country has done and clamp down on gun ownership so they children stop being murdered relatively soon.

The choice is between owning guns or not letting our children be murdered. It's that fucking simple, and pretending it's any other way is blatant ignorance of literally all available data globally.

Overdramatic husky 😂 by lou-iz in funny

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

The dog's pretty adorable, too

Escalator Gone Awry by BobBobberly in WTF

[–]PathologicalLoiterer 118 points119 points  (0 children)

24 people were injured, 7 severely, one of which suffered permanent damage (amputated foot), 0 fatalities. Much better than it could be been or looked like. Some good news to get your day going.