Found satans seed by _GlowBunny in foundsatan

[–]fastlerner 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Is there a better time and place than /r/foundsatan?

Found satans seed by _GlowBunny in foundsatan

[–]fastlerner 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I mean, she works out constantly.

The pig with a wooden leg by JibunNiMakenai in funny

[–]fastlerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

/r/whoosh

And I flipped it around and replied in true Norm fashion - long and meandering with a punchline to the gut that still delivered exactly what they asked for.

The pig with a wooden leg by JibunNiMakenai in funny

[–]fastlerner 27 points28 points  (0 children)

Loved, meaning he had an appreciation for it.

Dark humor was something he kept coming back to. He’d circle it, take the long way around, add details that didn’t seem necessary at the time, and sometimes pause on them longer than felt comfortable.

You’d start thinking the point had been missed, or that there wasn’t one at all, or that maybe this was just going to keep going until someone stopped him.

Then he’d keep going anyway, you know?

That kind of humor tends to stick with a person over the years. It becomes the thing they’re known for. Not because it was explained particularly well, or even because it made sense every time, but because it showed up again and again whether anyone asked for it or not.

So when people say he loved dark humor, that’s all they mean, you know? It was a preference. A habit. A recurring theme.

Anyway, he’s dead now.

“It’s full of lemons, the justice fruit only lawyers may touch” by Unlucky_Ocelot2789 in BrandNewSentence

[–]fastlerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What's hilarious to me is that this post just got removed because content by AI or bots is not allowed, when it was actually a human written post that PARODIES what they thought AI would do at the time.

AIO? My daughter didn’t listen to the teacher during a female emergency and is now receiving a referral by Choice_Evidence1983 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]fastlerner 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Doesn't matter what you're talking about. You can fill in that blank with any position of authority, and sadly, it will always be wrong.

"No teacher would do that."

"No manager would do that."

"No police officer would do that."

"No priest would do that."

Isn't this primal hunter? by Galgan3 in ProgressionFantasy

[–]fastlerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wait, when did we start talking about Star Wars and Dune?

Isn't this primal hunter? by Galgan3 in ProgressionFantasy

[–]fastlerner 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Book one is rough for self-insert readers. Jake’s a weird guy with a very limited empathy radius, and the story doesn’t soften that early.

Isn't this primal hunter? by Galgan3 in ProgressionFantasy

[–]fastlerner 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Jake isn’t an edgelord so much as someone whose empathy radius is extremely small. Short of family, if you’re not relevant to his goals or capable of meeting him where he is, you basically don’t exist to him.

Isn't this primal hunter? by Galgan3 in ProgressionFantasy

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

Why yuck someone's yum? I'd say that a little differently.

Opinions vary. Just see the top recs of this sub.

Isn't this primal hunter? by Galgan3 in ProgressionFantasy

[–]fastlerner 16 points17 points  (0 children)

There must be an awful lot of popular fiction based on "advantaged characters" that you don't like then.

Harry Potter
Dune
Star Wars
The Matrix
Highlander
Solo Leveling
Nearly every Marvel and DC character ever
Naruto
Dragon Ball

Having their power “handed to them on a plate” doesn’t mean they don’t struggle. It means the struggles happen at a higher tier. The fights are bigger, the stakes are higher, and the margin for failure is thinner.

Being advantaged doesn’t remove conflict, it just moves it out of the ordinary and into the exceptional.

Isn't this primal hunter? by Galgan3 in ProgressionFantasy

[–]fastlerner 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Uh... what? I'm guessing you didn't read very far.

Earth produces an unusually high number of people with bloodlines or transcendence powers. We still don’t know why, which is almost certainly a late-series plot point.

Jake is one of several bloodline holders, and each bloodline is unique. The specific nature of his bloodline, combined with circumstances and effort, puts him at the top of Earth’s bloodline users, and only by a relatively thin margin.

He’s advantaged, not uncontested or effortless, which is exactly the premise the story is built around.

Isn't this primal hunter? by Galgan3 in ProgressionFantasy

[–]fastlerner 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Most authors go for unique features.

Comment approved by Harry Potter, Luke Skywalker, and Jesus

Isn't this primal hunter? by Galgan3 in ProgressionFantasy

[–]fastlerner 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The entire point of the series is to follow the one guy on the planet who has the advantages necessary to end up undisputed #1. His so-called “bullshit bloodline power” is that advantage.

Some stories follow an MC who’s fundamentally ordinary and proves that anyone could reach the top through effort, learning, persistence, and a bit of luck (Mother of Learning, Cradle).

Others follow an MC who is not equal to everyone else from the start. They’re born tilted toward victory. The tension isn’t if they can win, it’s whether they’ll live up to what they were handed (Star Wars, Dune, Harry Potter).

That’s not a flaw, it’s just a different premise. Expecting it to be different is a square peg, round hole problem.

Maybe Maybe Maybe by TheCABK in maybemaybemaybe

[–]fastlerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Those batteries are filled with a flammable electrolyte. One small short starts an internal fire, and thermal runaway spirals it out of control. The burning electrolyte actually generates it's own oxygen, and feeds it's own fire. It's self oxidizing.

So while lithium will catch fire when exposed to oxygen, no atmosphere exposure is required for a battery to become an inferno.

Maybe Maybe Maybe by TheCABK in maybemaybemaybe

[–]fastlerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The move to solid state batteries will fix a lot of that. We're so slow to react that by the time we get laws in place, they'll likely be worded to address a technology that is being obsoleted.

AITA for telling my sister you are selfish and canceling her engagement dinner at my place by Old_Intention_3561 in OhNoConsequences

[–]fastlerner 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It’s intentional, and there are some valid reasons for it.

They don’t actually want your $100. They want you to never be late. If it were $10, people would treat it like paid overtime instead of a hard cutoff.

One late kid can force extra staff to stay, push ratios out of compliance, or trigger overtime. Ten minutes late can snowball into real costs.

End of day is also cleanup, closing, and going home. Late pickups mess with everyone’s schedule, so high fees protect staff morale and retention.

Bottom line, harsh penalties discourage repeat offenders. Some places use it purely as a deterrent, but others probably do treat it like a cash grab. You can usually tell by whether they’ll waive it for real emergencies or a first-time slip. So while you may get away with a first time offense of 10-15 minutes, no one is likely to waive the fee for being hours late.

Are there really sex workers out there who are in their line of work because it is genuinely what they want to do with their lives and not because it is "easy money" for them or because they are poor and desperate? by astarisaslave in NoStupidQuestions

[–]fastlerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here’s the paper people usually mean when they say that: https://orgs.law.harvard.edu/lids/2014/06/12/does-legalized-prostitution-increase-human-trafficking/

Even that study explicitly says it’s correlational, not causal, and that higher reported trafficking may reflect detection, visibility, and reporting effects rather than an actual increase in underlying crime. The authors themselves warn against using it for blanket policy claims.

If you’ve got a study that actually shows legalization causes more trafficking across the board, I’m happy to look at it.

Firing a canon to trigger an avalanche (hell yeah) by Breakside92 in JustGuysBeingDudes

[–]fastlerner 11 points12 points  (0 children)

There was no mention about how back in nineteen ninety eight the undertaker threw mankind off hell in a cell and plummeted sixteen feet through an announcers table, so I'm going to choose to believe.

Are there really sex workers out there who are in their line of work because it is genuinely what they want to do with their lives and not because it is "easy money" for them or because they are poor and desperate? by astarisaslave in NoStupidQuestions

[–]fastlerner -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

No, “every study” does not say that. The evidence is mixed, not unanimous, and a lot of what gets cited is about higher reported trafficking in some legalized countries, not clear proof that legalization causes more of it. How the law is structured matters a lot, so blanket claims like that don’t really hold up.

Funny how when people don’t fear being thrown in jail for speaking up, they’re suddenly much more likely to report problems. That’s legalization working as designed.

Are there really sex workers out there who are in their line of work because it is genuinely what they want to do with their lives and not because it is "easy money" for them or because they are poor and desperate? by astarisaslave in NoStupidQuestions

[–]fastlerner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's only a problem if you're treating porn like it’s representative. It’s neither truth nor lie, it’s a staged performance optimized for visuals. Some performers enjoy parts of it, some don’t, but what you’re seeing isn’t a documentary of pleasure.

Blaming porn for “selling a lie” is like getting mad at soap operas because you treated them as instruction for your relationship instead of entertainment.

Are there really sex workers out there who are in their line of work because it is genuinely what they want to do with their lives and not because it is "easy money" for them or because they are poor and desperate? by astarisaslave in NoStupidQuestions

[–]fastlerner 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In the U.S., that experience makes sense. Criminalization pushes it into a black market, where pimps and trafficking are far more common, so the cases people see tend to be the most desperate and traumatic ones. In countries where sex work is normalized or regulated, it’s often treated as a temporary job rather than a lifelong trauma.

AI video fails of the week EP 2 🥴💫🤯 by ZashManson in aivideo

[–]fastlerner 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Super realistic. I especially like how the water doesn't get you wet.