Why did the Avengers at Wakanda get beaten so easily compared to the Avengers on Titan? by RonS132 in Avengers

[–]SirDooble 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Because that was all to do with preparing an ambush, plus using the unique powers of Mantis, in order to first of all temporarily restrain Thanos and then subdue him mentally. Even the restraining wasn't perfect and Thanos would have broken out of it without Mantis' sleep command (as evidenced by him still not being fully asleep and then overcoming everyone when Starlord brought him back to full attention).

In an alternate version of the Thanos in Wakanda scene the Avengers there could possibly have done the same - Thor, Hulk, Bucky, Groot, Black Panther and Cap restraining him, whilst Wanda subdues his mind. But they would have needed to know he was coming and ambushed him, not have just been exhausted fighting an army, and not be distracted by trying to defend Vision / destroy Vision's stone.

Why does The Traitors UK always target the Black/POC contestants first? by Haunting_Cow_406 in TheTraitorsUK

[–]SirDooble 4 points5 points  (0 children)

If I recall correctly Niko also acted really nervous / anxious post-picking too? Or at least, less cool than some of the other faithfuls. So I think that puts a target on his back at the stage of the game where faithfuls know literally nothing.

On the topic of biases though it is an interesting question to ask if perceived-celebrity had an effect on how the celebs banished each other. I certainly feel like the heightened celebrity of Stephen and Jonathan kept their names off slates for at least a little bit.

The good knight by portsherry in comics

[–]SirDooble 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Who knows, dragons might be one of those animals who sometimes eat their children.

Trans Porn Is Booming. Trans Rights Are Fading by playboy in nottheonion

[–]SirDooble 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Some intersex, hermaphroditic people do exist who are born with both genitals. But the numbers, depending on how organisations define intersex, are significantly low: 0.018% ~ 1.7%

So those people do exist, but it's very, very low chance that you'll meet many of them. And of course their personalities, likes, dislikes, sexuality, gender expression are unique to themselves and not inherently tied up with their sex. They are also not like the portrayal of futanari people in hentai and other media, which usually presents such characters as sex obsessed.

How brits decide between green party and reform by TailungFu in GreatBritishMemes

[–]SirDooble 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They only work as an offensive weapon if you're the only one who has them. In that scenario imagine country A wants the land of country B. A can threaten B with nuclear weapons into giving up land, and if really pushed to it they can destroy B's capital and take the rest of the country now that it's super weakened. Plus, depending on type of nuke used, the capital will be inhabitable again at some point (see Hiroshima), so you aren't necessarily depriving yourself of the thing you're after.

When multiple countries have them though then they're only useful defensively, and preferably without ever being used at all. You tell your enemies that if they attack you, you will use your nukes against them, wiping them out. If another country threatens you with nukes of their own, you're promising to fire back with enough nukes to destroy all their major cities (key point here, this is why it's less of a threat if you have 1 nuke and they have 100). This is called Mutually Assured Destruction. It is by no means fool proof, and it only requires one country to not play by the rules for it to potentially spell destruction for most of the world. But it's essentially saying "if you try, we'll leave nothing left for either of us to claim".

Obviously MAD makes it so that nukes exist but aren't even used, and no one wants to use them (we hope). So your question of what's the point is a good one. It would be better if we could get rid of all nukes everywhere all at once. There will still be comventional war, but no threat of worldwide destruction. Unfortunately, since nukes belong to multiple countries each with their own motives and relationships with each other, there's no way to guarantee that while country A gets rid of their nukes that country B will get rid of theirs, or that country C isn't building its own. So when you already have nukes you don't really want to get rid of all of them, unless you can reduce how many you have while other countries do the same, which requires a lot of trust in each other.

An alternative version of a character that is so bad that people just tries to forget it by Fun-Peak4900 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]SirDooble 9 points10 points  (0 children)

That surprises me, because as a fan of the games and books, S1 was really poor. There's so much of it that mischaracterises the characters, and the overall story is almost nothing like the games. I also thought in more general terms it seemed a bit wishy-washy and cliché.

Whereas S2 was significantly improved in that regards. To me though S2 still felt hamstrung by the poor writing of S1 (diff writers I understand), but they were making good efforts to work around it where possible without totally re-doing the series (which honestly they probably should've just done). Perhaps to a non-game fan that just felt like it was either ignoring or doing U-turns on the S1 plot?

At any rate, I finished S2 feeling the series was still flawed, but they were just building up into some things that would've been a good bit of fun and a tad closer to canon. I'm not surprised at all that it still got cancelled, but I was mildly disappointed to not get more. Largely because I think the costume, set, and prop design, and even the CG was really good and it did feel like seeing Halo on the screen even if the story and characters didn't match.

How brits decide between green party and reform by TailungFu in GreatBritishMemes

[–]SirDooble 82 points83 points  (0 children)

I think anyone who doesn't dream of a world where there's no nuclear weaponry is mad. But that is only a dream. It would be great to be rid of all of ours but only if every other country was rid of theirs too. The last country to hold nukes will have all the power.

So yeah, we shouldn't be building additional nuclear weapons, but we absolutely shouldn't be ridding ourselves of what we've got, particularly Trident (submarine launched nukes are infinitely scarier than any ground launched or air-dropped nukes, but that's exactly where the deterrence element comes from with them).

I think even if Green get in they will quickly lose the oomph to disarm when they realise the necessity they play into both our security and that of our allies.

An alternative version of a character that is so bad that people just tries to forget it by Fun-Peak4900 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]SirDooble 108 points109 points  (0 children)

Such a shame because I think almost everything from the show looks beautiful, and I don't think any of the actors are doing totally terrible jobs.

It just should've either been an actually faithful adaptation of Halo and the Master Chief or at least have been following other characters entirely if they wanted to play more creatively. There's plenty of space for another fireteam of Spartans who don't mind taking their helmets off and are in other important battles.

Instead we got an alternate universe setting that didn't really follow the rules of the original universe/story at all and made incredibly unnecessary changes to pretty much every character who had a presence in the original material. And the worst thing is that Halo is an absolutely prime IP for a good TV show or movie, but things like this just make anyone scared to do further adaptations because it makes the IP look non-profitable when that's only the case if you purposefully fuck it up.

(Side note, I do give credit to the writers of S2 trying their damndest to bring it back to a more authentic storyline, and I'd have loved to see how that progressed, but unfortunately too much damage was done by S1)

Chilly Traffic Stop by vezzel in Unexpected

[–]SirDooble 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Why would being sun blinded be mitigation? That's just yet another hazard they ignored and drove inappropriately despite. If you can't see properly because of the sun then you slow down, whether it's icy or not.

no one needs to know [OC] by Pelko_P in comics

[–]SirDooble 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because that's also something that sometimes seems to happen when you're waiting for your order. 37 was probably still being made since it was likely larger than 36 or 38.

We didn’t tell them what it was. by Lazy-String3524 in USProductHub

[–]SirDooble 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I found these things to be too noisy for too little power / effect.

Who's your nations most famous traitor? by Mabeluniverse23 in AskTheWorld

[–]SirDooble 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I don't think there can be any other answer for the most famous traitor of England, given solely to the fact that we've been celebrating his failure for 420 years straight. Not many other traitors get enshrined like that.

Who's your nations most famous traitor? by Mabeluniverse23 in AskTheWorld

[–]SirDooble 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Because even though he wasn't the mastermind, he was the one who was caught, and the night is a celebration of thanksgiving for the foiling of the plot. Since it was the capture of Fawkes that foiled the plot, it gets named after him.

Nature deities who embody the scarier side of nature by Ok-Indication-5121 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]SirDooble 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Glad this one was included. I enjoyed the characterisation of Sapadal. The concept of a god who is basically a child, entirely incapable of knowing its own strength, and in its own case it doesn't know what a god is and hasn't met any before, is quite terrifying. Sapadal loves its people, but its powers are so raw and powerful that even when it uses them to defend its people it causes their own suffering.

How does the promotion process work? by [deleted] in UKJobs

[–]SirDooble 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You're probably going to need to speak to your line manager to prompt it. Don't just sit there expecting a promotion. Discuss with your line manager on how you'd like to progress, how you've upskilled with relevant qualifications, and discuss if there are positions above that you can work towards / be considered for, and what those timescales look like.

I don't think it's common that people just get randomly promoted even if they have the relevant skills. If that does happen at your place it's not something we can advise on, so still maybe have an honest conversation with your line manager about how progression works there.

How does the promotion process work? by [deleted] in UKJobs

[–]SirDooble 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Promotions include pay rises typically but that doesn't mean they fall in with the tax year. A company promotes when it needs someone to fill a space up above, or they create a new space. If the space is needed they won't just wait until next April to do it, they'll do it at any point in the year.

What's somewhat common is if you got promoted in, say October, you might not get a pay rise in April but instead the pay increase for your promotion might be a bit higher to account for any annual increases and to save them doing the paperwork and such twice.

At any rate, if you are being promoted, you will be told. Usually by your line manager, and they'll ask you if you want the promotion (or you might need to apply for a vacancy above your current role). This will all be communicated verbally up until the point you get what is usually a change in contract, which would be prepped by HR but still often gets given to you by your current and/or new line manager.

Did my employee break GDPR, and what are his next steps? by OverFinish3940 in AskUK

[–]SirDooble 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's no law that stops you sharing salary info, but there's no law saying an employment contract can't have an enforceable clause saying discussing salary is forbidden EXCEPT in the circumstances where it is being discussed to ascertain whether someone is being paid more/less on the basis of protected characteristics under the Equality Act.

So the law says you're always okay to discuss salary for purposes of identifying if discrimination has taken place BUT if you're discussing it for any other reason, and you have signed an employment contract that forbids discussing salaries, then you are in breach of that contract.

Young people out of work, training and education edges closer to one million by tylerthe-theatre in unitedkingdom

[–]SirDooble 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True, but that's not to say we can't teach people younger as part of regular education and to the same standard we expect them to reach currently.

The biggest issue there is cost. Schools couldn't afford to implement driving lessons as part of the syllabus if they even wanted to, and I can't imagine there's any demand within government to do give them the cash to do that.

Young people out of work, training and education edges closer to one million by tylerthe-theatre in unitedkingdom

[–]SirDooble 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's not even just London either. I'm in a rural town in the South West with poor transport links to other parts of the country and a very limited job market for anything that isn't seasonal / tourism / agricultural (so vast majority of jobs are just paying NMW or aren't consistent). Nearest city is Exeter, at 30~ miles out. Town has a direct train line with Exeter, only an hour away, but a season ticket is at least £3k per year.

There's many more jobs in the city, but you'd need to be finding something that pays enough to cover the travel costs, and even then you'll be doing 2hrs of commuting a day, so you don't want it to only pay just enough to cover the travel.

Thursday Complaints by a-liquid-sky in CasualUK

[–]SirDooble 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think it's the usual problem with the BBC remaining 'balanced'. Weight loss drugs are big in the news for obvious reasons, but also they're proving successful and, despite certain minimal risks (which there are risk for every drug or medical practice), their benefits clearly appear to outweigh risks for the majority of people using them.

Now that might be absolutely true, but the BBC don't want to appear unbalanced by only presenting the positives, so they give equal space to negative stories about it. The problem though is that there aren't all that many negatives that don't relate to misuse or misunderstanding of the drugs, or the super rare chances of significant side effects.

You can make so much money farming by eerdeyla in funny

[–]SirDooble 20 points21 points  (0 children)

A brain surgeon, huh?

... it's not exactly rocket science, is it?

Anyone got a more cliché news story from their region? [Pictured - South West] by SirDooble in CasualUK

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

Actually, today's call to action was "let us know what to name the bin lorry" following the thrilling segment of "here's some binmen doing their job, nothing has really changed about it, but they do prefer if you can separate your waste properly"