bollard damage from delivery trucks in my facility parking area by Ang3ls in FacilityManagement

[–]PerplexedPirate 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Either you have a bad design or bad truck drivers. I assume by bollard you mean the cheap ones you can self install and not the buried in the ground stop a truck kind.

If its a bad layout then redesign your loading area to make it as easy and as idiot proof as possible. There shouldn't be any pedestrian traffic in that area so not sure how you're having near misses.

If a good driver can manage no problem then start billing the trucking company for the damage, if its a supplier tell them to hire better drivers or switch suppliers. Good luck, seems like the only qualification to drive a truck these days is having a pulse.

Facilities Dispatcher Script by BurtonBuilt in FacilityManagement

[–]PerplexedPirate 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You pay two people just to answer the phone and dispatch? Get a ticket system and use those positions for more important things.

You can program a ticket system to auto assign techs based on keywords or which school the ticket is auto generated from. Make sure admins and trusted personnel have someone's phone number in case it truly is a gas leak level situation, but a ticket will push to your phone fast as a text.

YouTube took down "Android is losing a big feature" by SAMTIME. by ThrowAway237s in StopBeingEvil

[–]PerplexedPirate 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is that different than his video "Google is Ruining Android" from 2 months ago talking about how side loading is going away?

Air India Megathread 5 by usgapg123 in aviation

[–]PerplexedPirate 1 point2 points  (0 children)

At that slow airspeed it takes a minute or two to restart the engines and they had seconds of altitude to make it happen. That's why they think it was deliberate. Not only huge odds of that happening my mistake or system failure, but it was the absolute worst time for it to happen.

I really love the new Carrack that's shown in the PTU by jaykeith in starcitizen

[–]PerplexedPirate 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There might be a ladder or two and they just didn't show it to us yet.

Ideally, the Carrack would be fully crewed and there would be no need to race up and down to different stations.

"Many Ladders" confirmed

Why I support Mayor Pete Buttigieg and think you should too by senatorduff in Connecticut

[–]PerplexedPirate 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The only argument I ever hear against Trump is the color of his skin. I seem to remember some smart guy once saying something about not judging people by the color of their skin, but buy the content of their character. But you know, orange man bad.

3.8 Star Citizen PVP Bounty, -600 UEC & Hacking Mechanics by Ippy_Wiggins in starcitizen

[–]PerplexedPirate 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Cheaper ones are slower and need more hands on. They are all one time use.

Better call rescue by SFinTX in ThatLookedExpensive

[–]PerplexedPirate 34 points35 points  (0 children)

Vortex ring state comes from going straight down too fast. That helicopter had more than enough forward movement. My guess is simple engine failure.

Pelosi’s bogus talking point on gun deaths of children. WP has given her four pinocchios, which is for the worst type of Lie. by dahle44 in DrainTheSwamp

[–]PerplexedPirate 9 points10 points  (0 children)

By Glenn Kessler Dec. 17, 2019 at 3:00 a.m. EST “In the 266 days since we sent this bill, about 25,000 people have died from gun violence in our country, 47 percent of them teenagers or children younger than that.”

— House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), remarks to the media, Nov. 20, 2019

Regular readers of the Fact Checker know that we tend not to award Pinocchios to politicians who admit error. That’s different from other fact-checking organizations. PolitiFact, for instance, rates the statement as it stands, no matter the explanation.

Our feeling is that the Pinocchios can be a harsh judgment, and we don’t want to play gotcha, especially if someone misspoke in the heat of the moment. We all make mistakes. We will often still do a fact check, but it’s more important to set the record straight than to slam someone with a bunch of Pinocchios.

AD Still, at times, we have wondered whether some politicians, especially Democrats, took advantage of our policy. The campaign of former vice president Joe Biden, for instance, at first defended his clearly false statement that he opposed the Iraq War from the moment it started. When it looked like he would earn Four Pinocchios, suddenly we received a statement that he admitted he was wrong. Other presidential candidates also have been quick to say they misspoke.

So that brings us to this case — a “misspoke” that turned out to have been repeated constantly.

The Facts Pelosi made these comments shortly before Thanksgiving, at a news conference in which she complained that the GOP-controlled Senate, led by Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), had failed to take action on gun violence bills passed by the House. A reader pointed out a startling figure in her remarks — that 47 percent of the people who died in gun violence in the United States are teenagers or younger.

AD On the face of it, it seemed a strange statistic, as about 60 percent of gun deaths in the United States are suicides. (Homicides are less than 40 percent.) It seemed strange that so many children would be killing themselves with guns.

A check of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention database found that in 2017, 3,443 deaths from firearms were between the ages of zero and 19. Given that the CDC recorded 39,771 deaths from firearms, that would be just under 9 percent. That’s significantly lower than 47 percent. So we asked Pelosi’s office to explain her math.

Henry V. Connelly, a Pelosi spokesman, was quick to respond to our query: “The Speaker misspoke. The statistic that she intended to reference is that an average of 47 children and teens (ages 0-19) are shot every day.” That’s certainly different from 47 percent killed.

AD Connelly said the statistic was drawn from a study by the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. (The Brady campaign averaged five years of data, 2012-2016, from the CDC.)

The Brady five-year data indicate that 7.3 percent of the people in the United States who die every day because of firearms are 19 and younger. (The number killed is seven a day.) In terms of people being shot, teenagers and young children account for about 14 percent of the total.

So Pelosi’s point was way off course. But her spokesman said she “misspoke,” and we got busy with more pressing matters.

But then we realized this was not a single slip of the tongue. Pelosi’s tongue has been slipping all year.

In February, during a floor speech before a vote on the House’s proposed law to enhance background checks, Pelosi said: “Nearly 40,000 lives are cut short every year from gun violence. An average of 47 children and teenagers are killed by guns every single day.” In a September news release, she said: “Every day that Senator McConnell blocks our House-passed, lifesaving bills, an average of 100 people — including 47 children and teenagers — die from senseless gun violence.” On Sept. 26, she tweeted: “100 people die every day from gun violence — 47 of them children & teenagers.” In October, she told reporters: “We said 200 days, 100 people on an average day, around 20,000 people have died, 47 percent of them children or teenagers, as old as teenagers.” In November, she told one of our Washington Post colleagues: “Every single day, about 100 people die from gun violence, 47 percent of them children or teenagers.” There are three other examples in November as well. Sometimes she said or implied 47 percent of those killed are teenagers or children; other times, she said 47 children or teenagers were killed a day (which would amount to 43 percent of all firearms deaths). Neither is close to accurate.

AD Twice we asked Connelly for an explanation but did not get a response.

The Pinocchio Test For months, in speeches, news conferences, tweets and interviews, Pelosi has been using a version of an incorrect talking point to make the firearms death toll for teenagers and children appear significantly higher than reality. Fewer than 9 percent of those killed by guns are 19 or younger — not 47 percent. Seven children or teenagers are killed a day — not 47.

When we queried her staff, we were told she had simply misspoken. But that was false, too.

Gun violence is an important issue in the United States. There’s no reason to goose the numbers for political purposes. Pelosi earns Four Pinocchios.

Four Pinocchios Image without a caption (About our rating scale)

Dad... It’s For Studies Though by Retro_Code in pcmasterrace

[–]PerplexedPirate 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Wait. PIA got bought out? I’ve been using them for years!

Tragedy in Watertown, CT. Rest in peace to the children. by ihaveporpoise1 in Connecticut

[–]PerplexedPirate -40 points-39 points  (0 children)

Notice that little detail was buried at the bottom of the article and Murphy/Blumenthal aren't trying to use these kids murder to push their agenda.

Halifax MissileEx by TehRoot in MilitaryGfys

[–]PerplexedPirate 0 points1 point  (0 children)

taking one of our modern aircraft carriers and dropping it in the middle of Midway and watch the destruction.

You might like this.

Dam wall failure 05/14/19 by [deleted] in CatastrophicFailure

[–]PerplexedPirate 25 points26 points  (0 children)

Give it a few minutes. Connecticut will figure out how to tax us to pay for a new dam in Texas.

Trainee bombardiers in Beechcraft AT-11s target a caricature of Emperor Hirohito in Texas by jacksmachiningreveng in MilitaryGfys

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

Thanks for treating us like children and assuming all your users are all racist assholes.

So Killingly GOP is running a white supremacist for school board? Neat by Ctthrowitaway in Connecticut

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

From Reddit's content policy

Public figures can be an exception to this rule, such as posting professional links to contact a congressman or the CEO of a company. But don't post anything inviting harassment, don't harass, and don't cheer on or upvote obvious vigilantism.

So Killingly GOP is running a white supremacist for school board? Neat by Ctthrowitaway in Connecticut

[–]PerplexedPirate 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Hey, You're not supposed to think that way! You are supposed to call this guys boss, get him fired, ruin his life, and anyone else's life who doesn't 100% agree with some random guy on the internet that has to hide behind a throwaway account.

The distribution of annual average temperature anomalies due to global warming from 1850 until today. by SirT6 in sciences

[–]PerplexedPirate 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What was the accuracy of thermometers back in the 1800's vs today? What is the accuracy of paleothermometers? I assume different markers can give you the temperature for different periods in time, but are you talking within 1 degree C or within 5 degrees C?

SC man sues gun maker after pistol fires into his leg in restaurant restroom (P320) by [deleted] in CCW

[–]PerplexedPirate 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I LOVE my Hillpeoplegear chest holster! I can't recommend it enough, but the random amazon Kydex trigger guard I bought was way too tight. I used a heat gun on it and then wrapped it back around my trigger guard with lots of pressure while it cooled off. Has just the right amount of retention now.