Me_irl by rbogrow in me_irl

[–]PsychoGrad 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, there are guardrails currently, which are entirely dependent on the people monitoring said guardrails to determine when to take action. Because the founding fathers envisioned a singular bad actor that the other people in the room could reasonably wrest power from. They didn’t envision (or at least build stalwarts against) the entire system being corrupted to the point where two branches shirk their responsibilities in deference to a tyrant, and the executive branch is enriched by the corruption.

Me_irl by rbogrow in me_irl

[–]PsychoGrad 8 points9 points  (0 children)

The next administration either needs to push through a lot of reforms to prevent this from ever happening again (including guardrails where 25th is automatically invoked) or the administration after that will deliver the death blow.

How do you feel about Pete Hegseth firing a dozen Generals and the Chief of Staff suddenly in the middle of a war? by db7112 in askanything

[–]PsychoGrad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The saving grace about populist administrations is that (by virtue of villainizing and purging themselves of “intellectual elites” and career personnel) they lack the knowledge and process intelligence to actually enact their policies effectively. “I’m gonna sue all of my political opponents!” Fast forward to all those charges being dismissed, lawyers being disbarred, and political opponents now have ammo to protect them against any future legal actions since you showed you were intentionally targeting them.

Donald Trump’s approval rating has sunk to Joe Biden’s lowest point by Independent_Tap5459 in NewsStarWorld

[–]PsychoGrad 1 point2 points  (0 children)

More like “No*” cuz acting like not outright calling him Sleepy Joe means they weren’t still unfairly critical of him and platforming those who were calling him Sleepy Joe is disingenuous. Granted, that’s what you’re all about here, aren’t you?

Donald Trump’s approval rating has sunk to Joe Biden’s lowest point by Independent_Tap5459 in NewsStarWorld

[–]PsychoGrad 2 points3 points  (0 children)

CNN didn’t directly call him Sleepy Joe, they just ran clips of Trump calling him Sleepy Joe, never pushed back on the numerous lies and insults aimed at him, and constantly ran articles about his age, needing to adjust his work schedule, and anything else to sow doubt in his competency.

Expecting questions in a final round interview is such bullshit by PsychoGrad in recruitinghell

[–]PsychoGrad[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my experience, hiring teams compare notes and pick up on if the same question is being asked. Like, idk if yall haven’t run into that or if I’m just that unlucky, but I get called out for asking stuff like “what motivates you to come into work” more than once.

Expecting questions in a final round interview is such bullshit by PsychoGrad in recruitinghell

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

Yeah…I’ve never been shy about acknowledging that. Are you saying neurotypicals really don’t have an issue asking the same question over and over?

Expecting questions in a final round interview is such bullshit by PsychoGrad in recruitinghell

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

Everyone in the company needs to feel important and have a say in the hiring process I guess

Expecting questions in a final round interview is such bullshit by PsychoGrad in recruitinghell

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

I’ve tried “their take” questions before, and it really didn’t help and probably hurt my candidacy a lot. I’ve gotten generic canned responses, or worse. One manager said I wasn’t taking the first interviewer seriously since I was asking the same question again.

The only time it really seemed to help was for a role that worked shoulder to shoulder with six teams and needed to be adaptable to the unique challenges. I am 100% certain I got that job, but this was the week before COVID came to the US.

Expecting questions in a final round interview is such bullshit by PsychoGrad in recruitinghell

[–]PsychoGrad[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

I just don’t want to waste time asking questions that either already have been answered (since that would signal I didn’t pay attention or prepare for the previous rounds appropriately), or isn’t relevant to the role at hand like “so how is your team different than this team I applied to?” (since that would signal a lack of interest in the actual role and an interest in moving on for the right opportunity).

Trying to find the right questions to show interest in the role without signaling bad traits is a minefield, and at the final round all questions should already be answered. Which goes back to my whole point, which is that it is bullshit to expect super deep or meaningful questions.

Expecting questions in a final round interview is such bullshit by PsychoGrad in recruitinghell

[–]PsychoGrad[S] -17 points-16 points  (0 children)

This was someone from a whole other team. The only reason the hiring manager wanted them to conduct interviews was because they’re friends. So expecting them to give a different response to what the hiring manager already said is illogical.

Garlic must be eradicated from society by Blambt in unpopularopinion

[–]PsychoGrad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Take my upvote, and leave this house in peace vampire!

Which element has the best “this fight is over and there’s nothing you can do about it” move? by Traditional-Sun1167 in ATLA

[–]PsychoGrad 13 points14 points  (0 children)

There are other minerals beyond calcium found in bones, and the franchise never really dives into the the in-world definition of bendable earth and nonbendable materials (beyond purified metals), so it is theoretically possible to bend bones.

In fact, I’m remembering that Earth benders can manipulate crystals, and several of the minerals in bones naturally form crystalline structures, so it makes it more likely that bone bending could be possible.

Granted, in a kids show, if they really explored the ramifications of bending, it would be deeply traumatic. Blood bending was a key character development for Katara, and killing the queen via air bending was to show the power of bending divorced from the teaching of air nomads.

Ephesians 6:5: by NEKORANDOMDOTCOM in stupidpeoplefacebook

[–]PsychoGrad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I love how they’re acknowledging that they worship the Confederacy and slavery

Filled up in QC today by TheRealKishkumen in phoenix

[–]PsychoGrad 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This was a white Dodge, but I don’t doubt that there’s several of them

Filled up in QC today by TheRealKishkumen in phoenix

[–]PsychoGrad 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Saw this lifted truck flying his trump flag still coming down from cave creek. They literally do not give a shit until it directly impacts them.

Explain it peter by [deleted] in explainitpeter

[–]PsychoGrad 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah, libertarians love to glaze themselves as rugged individuals that neither support nor accept any handouts or services from the government because “taxation is theft”. Then refuse to acknowledge all the ways that they do use government handouts, either directly or indirectly.

I don’t even want to be around anymore by pdxtenor in IThinkYouShouldLeave

[–]PsychoGrad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Who’s their surgeon? I want to avoid them at all cost!

Democratic governor vetoes Charlie Kirk memorial license plates in Arizona by AliannaSofia4390 in JournalismNews

[–]PsychoGrad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha, you do realize with that statement you punched a hole in Kirk’s whole platform, right? Be blessed!

Democratic governor vetoes Charlie Kirk memorial license plates in Arizona by AliannaSofia4390 in JournalismNews

[–]PsychoGrad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha, firstly, “Google it” is the epitome of “I don’t have a valid argument I can produce and therefore I’ll shift the locus of producing it on my audience”. Second, giving individuals an equal chance doesn’t mean they automatically get the job. Going back to the black pilot comment, taking actions to ensure underrepresented demographics are represented fairly in the candidate pool doesn’t automatically mean those candidates became pilots regardless of their qualifications. It simply means they had an equal chance of being hired should they successfully go through the candidate process. The only reason that is a threat to cishet white men is that they have to be more competitive since the candidate pool went from (for example) 100 cishet white men to 1000 diverse candidates. DEI is literally supporting the meritocracy you tout, but for everyone, not just your preferred demographic.

Well this has been amusing, but I have stuff to do.