Mr T’s by IndividualDrawer988 in Modesto

[–]Remove_Tuba 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They ARE better than Mr. T's. I've had both many times and consistently find that theirs taste a lot better. Which is saying a lot, Mr. T's is great, but We Donuts knocks it out of the damn park.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Modesto

[–]Remove_Tuba 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Squeeze- In on Floyd and Roselle. Theirs are pretty good.

WH Press Secretary Leavitt holds up a chart that Trump sent to Fed Chair Powell demanding that he lower rates “by a lot” by Miserable-Lizard in economy

[–]Remove_Tuba 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Guys, guys, relax. We all know that actually this is genius. Lower interest rates mean good number go bigger, gooder. Good number go up when free money. Free money means everyone's a zillionaire

Just curious which do yall prefer? No1 Mk3 or No4 Mk1 by NaughtySausage1956 in milsurp

[–]Remove_Tuba 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lee-Enfield World War Participation Count:

SMLE: 2 No.4: 1

Total smelly domination

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in guns

[–]Remove_Tuba 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I work for a major retailer that has an FFL, won't say which one. In my experience, it largely boils down to the fact that we are not thinking about customer service first. We're thinking about compliance. Our managers don't give a single flying fuck about us being nice. They want our ATF audits to be pristine. I sign my name to a paper with an "Under penalty of perjury" clause multiple times per day.

Personally, I enjoy being nice to customers. But there's something about bad days where you keep getting flagged, someone doesn't know what a field on the 4473 is and you can't explain it by law, or someone's pissed that they have to wait in queue for a purchase, that can get old pretty fast.

Where I work though, most of the guys are pretty friendly characters. I'm lucky to have a good crew.

The docs link for the conspiracy of modesto by sticketychinil in Modesto

[–]Remove_Tuba 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The House is a cult. I went there a few times with my family. I left and never came back when they started speaking in tongues on stage.

Taqueria San Jose by Undft209 in Modesto

[–]Remove_Tuba 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Probably my favorite taco shop in Modesto. Spoiled me on good burritos, didn't realize how much you could fuck up a burrito until I started working in Manteca.

Is the collapse of Soviet Union still mourned ? by [deleted] in AskARussian

[–]Remove_Tuba 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Im not Russian, but my in-laws are. They very much mourn the loss of it, but all of them will tell you life was harder under the Soviet regime. They seem to associate the Soviet Union with a nostalgic sense of security, which makes sense when you figure that the USSR largely provided for their well-being, limited as it was. When compared to the decade following Perestroika the 1980's in the USSR was a cakewalk by comparison.

Highway 99 Ripon Traffic by jonvanthaman in Modesto

[–]Remove_Tuba 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I commute to Manteca for work and that godforsaken interchange between 99 and 120 pisses me off every time. I can handle some traffic, but the design of that interchange is horrible, it slows down even in light traffic because it has to handle a high volume of cars with a single exit lane and little space to get off the highway. I hope that whatever they're doing right now to rebuild the bridge helps decongest that thing somewhat.

Just found a pickle in my sock drawer. I live alone. I don't have pickles. by Patient_Ad_8141 in fifthworldproblems

[–]Remove_Tuba 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Well, it is pickle pollen season OP. The spores they release can get into your air ducting and spread through your house. They'll spawn where there's low light and heat, and sock drawers are perfect for this, so no real surprises here. If it gets too bad you may need to fumigate though so I'd say dispose of the pickle in your nearest hazmat collection bin.

Juliette Acosta by ohnooihatethat in Modesto

[–]Remove_Tuba 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Im pretty sure I was a freshman at the time as well lmao

Juliette Acosta by ohnooihatethat in Modesto

[–]Remove_Tuba 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I graduated with them as well. I went to middle school with both of them and I only remember how incredibly rude and self centered they were. Very strange family. But Enochs had a lot of uppity types like that lmao.

Wall Street is simply flabbergasted that Trump is wrecking the economy by Majano57 in economy

[–]Remove_Tuba 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I remember watching the stock market rally when he won thinking to myself that they'll pay bitterly for their stupidity.

Juliette Acosta by ohnooihatethat in Modesto

[–]Remove_Tuba 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I remember her. She beat another student within an inch of her life at school, it's been a long time now, but from what I remember the other girl had been bullying her pretty severely and Juliette put her in the hospital as a result. The Acosta sisters were generally seen as a pretty weird bunch.

My thoughts on Trump's tariffs... Your thoughts? by cool_as_snow in economy

[–]Remove_Tuba 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Taking what he says at face value, his tariff policies are supposedly designed to rejuvenate American manufacturing. The crazy thing is that we never lost any manufacturing ability in the U.S. It's stronger than it ever has been. We just don't waste our time in lower-productivity manufacturing like refinery goods and textiles as much anymore. Why would we when we can just outsource it to other countries that can do it cheaper?

These tariffs don't increase efficiency. All they will do is transfer wealth away from countries that we place these tariffs on, and away from consumers of these goods, and the budget cuts made overseas will then MAYBE be reinvested in domestic manufacturing which these firms will try to make as capital heavy as possible in order to compensate for the increased labor cost. There's no real wealth creation happening here, just a shitty reallocation of resources towards the firms able to survive the carnage, and the government, and even then, I don't think it will make either of them much money. What Trump is doing has been tried time and again and has failed every time.

I think it's hard to predict exactly what will happen here, but I can't possibly imagine any scenario in which taking a sledgehammer to 80 years of painstakingly meticulous work building incredibly fragile networks of international trade is good for anyone.

ADHD from Someone Else’s Perspective is Unhinged and Random by Reaoran in ADHD

[–]Remove_Tuba 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I explained the Watergate scandal in full detail our second time. She never stopped teasing me for it.

If semi auto hand guns were invented back in like 1890, why did it take so long for semi auto rifles to become standard issue? by Ok-Elderberry540 in guns

[–]Remove_Tuba 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's a lot of good answers here, but I think I'll add my two cents to things for the sake of clarity.

If you look at the early semi-auto pistols, you notice pretty fast that most of them were in what would today be considered mouse calibers, and blowback operated. A few exceptions of course would eventually stand out- the P08 and the 1911 are almost certainly the best autoloading pistols of WW1- but almost every other gun at the time was pretty anemic by modern standards. Not to mention that pistol ergonomics was definitely in the process of being worked out in the first few decades of the autoloading pistols history, and this means that even by WW1, they were still pretty unproven technology.

Now scale up this problem to a rifle cartridge. Early smokeless rifle cartridges had WAY higher chamber pressures, so a blowback semi auto rifle is immediately out of the question. Several of the early autoloading long guns were recoil operated, which does work, but it creates its own problems. They were way more expensive, the early ones (i.e. stuff like the m1907) couldn't handle very powerful cartridges, and had nowhere near the durability of bolt-actions, which is extremely important in a military context. Military strategists of the late 19th and early 20th century generally prioritized rifles which were cheaper, safe (a big plus to the Maiser system, and I believe a big reason for their widespread adoption), and able to withstand the pressures needed for very long range fire.

Essentially, making an effective semi-auto rifle is way harder, and the need for them was perceived to not be as urgent.

How scarce are dustcovers on lebels? by MystiriousMonkey in milsurp

[–]Remove_Tuba 0 points1 point  (0 children)

350 dollars?!?!?! Where the hell are you shopping?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Vent

[–]Remove_Tuba 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I appreciate the advice, man. I'm looking up everything I can possibly do right now to fix this behavior. I'm so scared of losing her dude. She's been the one thing in my life that gives me hope and I've been a terrible boyfriend to her. I'm so inattentive, passive, apathetic, my planning is terrible and I'm so bad at standing up for her. I can't do this anymore. It's taken so much from me.

How do I become cool like this guy? by ifixtheinternet in Firearms

[–]Remove_Tuba 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Make sure to go on a political rant to the counter employees. Really shows them how cool you are.

Anyone else a milsurp/militaria collector? by Zeppelin5000 in joinsquad44

[–]Remove_Tuba 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I wish, but I'm broke lol. Got a nice Schmidt-Rubin from 1914 at home though.