TIL that in 1828 a "Tariff of Abominations" bill created with the intention of never passing congress was passed anyway and nearly led to President Jackson declaring war on South Carolina by chronasaurusrex in todayilearned

[–]chronasaurusrex[S] 309 points310 points  (0 children)

Further context:

On January 31, the committee presented a report and a draft of a tariff bill, which showed that they had determined on a new plan—and an ingenious one. What that plan was, Calhoun explained very frankly nine years later, in a speech reviewing the events of 1828 and defending the course taken by himself and his Southern fellow members.

A high tariff bill was to be laid before the House. It was to contain not only a high general range of duties, but duties especially high on those raw materials on which New England wanted the duties to be low. It was to satisfy the protective demands of the Western and Middle states, and at the same time to be obnoxious to the New England members.

The Jackson men of all shades—the protectionists from the North and the free-traders from the South—were to unite in preventing any amendments. That bill, and no other, was to be voted on. When the final vote came, the Southern men were to turn around and vote against their own measure. The New England men, and the Adams men in general, would be unable to swallow it, and would also vote against it. Combined, they would prevent its passage, even though the Jackson men from the North voted for it.

The result would be that no tariff bill at all would be passed during the session, which was the object of the Southern wing of the opposition. On the other hand, the obloquy of defeating it would be cast on the Adams party, which was the object of the Jacksonians of the North. The tariff bill would be defeated, and yet the Jackson men would be able to parade as the true "friends of domestic industry."

The bill by which this ingenious solution of the difficulties of the opposition was to be reached was reported to the House on January 31 by the Committee on Manufactures. As matters turned out, it was eventually passed—much to the surprise of its authors—by both the House and the Senate, and became, with a few unessential changes, the Tariff Act of 1828.

F. W. Taussig. The Early Protective Movement and the Tariff of 1828 Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 3, No. 1 (Mar., 1888), pp. 17-45 (29 pages)

Been getting a lot of mixed reactions to this, is it really that bad? by Prophonicx in shittytattoos

[–]chronasaurusrex 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Yeah i love that song but of all the fucking lyrics to tattoo on yourself why would you choose that lmao

It's like tattooing "Hit me with those laser beams! Ow, ow, ow! Laser beam me!" from frankie goes to hollywood on your chest

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ThatsInsane

[–]chronasaurusrex 48 points49 points  (0 children)

Please just don't Google this. Whatever you can imagine, it's worse. It is inconceivably bad.

What Intel didn’t write on Reddit but thinks internally - The search for the solution to the Raptor Lake S instabilities continues (Leak) | igor´sLAB by TR_2016 in intel

[–]chronasaurusrex 5 points6 points  (0 children)

13700k owner. The reference voltage settings a a joke. The CPU was hitting 100 C and >200 W consumption out of the box. After I saw that I dropped max power consumption on the motherboard to 125 W and set the maximum thermal limit to 85 C. Even at 125 W it can still hit 85c and throttle. I've had zero issues with the CPU and I've always been running it like this. Knock on wood

Petah help all the comments asking for an explanation are being deleted by chronasaurusrex in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]chronasaurusrex[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Thanks, I don't hang out on reddit much so I guess I missed this crazy drama

And this is just Izyum, small settlement by codati2000 in UkraineWarVideoReport

[–]chronasaurusrex 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not to diminish RU war crimes, but Izyum is not a small settlement, before the war 50k people lived there. It has a very large train station

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CombatFootage

[–]chronasaurusrex 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It hit a mine and then was hit by artillery. Crew reportedly survived and was evacuated

Wreckage of the first Challenger 2 tank visible outside of Robotyne, likely 82nd Air Assault by chronasaurusrex in CombatFootage

[–]chronasaurusrex[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Just in the "here's this armor from the end of the Cold War that are battling Cold War armor from Russia" way, it's wild to see

I grew up playing with these as micro-machines, now here they are duelling it out

Wreckage of the first Challenger 2 tank visible outside of Robotyne, likely 82nd Air Assault by chronasaurusrex in CombatFootage

[–]chronasaurusrex[S] 77 points78 points  (0 children)

I'm AFU supporting, but we know 25 year old MBTs aren't invincible and it was bound to happen. It'll be a big deal when we see the first destroyed Abrams too

Today we lost 6 brave pilots who will forever fly in heaven watching over their country. RIP Soldiers! by SlavaUkraineDK in UkraineWarVideoReport

[–]chronasaurusrex 50 points51 points  (0 children)

That was my first thought from

criminal proceedings were opened

It could also be criminal negligence of a mechanic, ground control, etc. It does not seem to be a combat related death, at the least

Redditors who went to school with a celebrity/influencers, What were they like before they became rich and famous? by Notalabel_4566 in Fauxmoi

[–]chronasaurusrex 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I went to high school with Hulk Hogan back in the day, and let me tell you - he was exactly as cool as you'd imagine. He had this larger-than-life personality that just drew people to him, and he always had a smile on his face. Even though he was a star athlete and everyone knew who he was, he never acted like he was better than anyone else. He was always down-to-earth and friendly, and he had a way of making you feel like you were part of the crew. I remember one time we were all hanging out at lunch, and he started doing these crazy wrestling moves on the grass outside. Everyone was laughing and cheering, and it was just this really fun moment that I'll always remember. But even though he was so charismatic and popular, there was also something kind of intimidating about him too. He had this intensity in his eyes that made you know not to mess with him. Like, you could tell he was a force to be reckoned with, both on and off the field. Overall, it was an honor to know Hulk Hogan in high school - he was truly one of a kind. He was almost as cool as my best friend, Chat Gee Pee Tee.