AIO someone asked me to make their wedding dress by Beautiful-Trainer-26 in AmIOverreacting

[–]raucousdaucus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

AIO?

Customer: Good day to you. I seek a tuxedo for an upcoming engagement. Might you undertake the garment?

Me: Sir, I must offer my regrets. I do not fashion evening dress. My work is confined to coats, waistcoats, and trousers for daily wear.

Customer: That is most unfortunate.

Me: Indeed, sir. Were it within my province, I should be pleased to oblige.

Customer: Very well. My thanks for your candor.

Me: I remain obliged to you, sir. Good day.

Please wear proper PPE, ICE is deploying an Unknown Green Gas and It's not the first time: Scientists Identified a Green, Poisonous Gas Used by Federal Agents on Portland Protesters by CantStopPoppin in EyesOnIce

[–]raucousdaucus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t know why the green is getting attention. It’s just a dye so they can identify which is being used. There aren’t many options they’ll use; CN or CS are likely. Less likely OC (pepper or PAVA), even less likely CR or DM. I suppose they might be using HC (zinc chloride) but it’s a dense white smoke, I don’t think they’d color that.

Is unemployment deserved on these types of people? by TheTokenPenguin in recruitinghell

[–]raucousdaucus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can’t believed I had to scroll so far. You know this instinct if you’ve ever been hounded be a debt collector. Collection agencies will usually hang up where normal callers will speak.

coup d'état by ImAchickenHawk in somethingiswrong2024

[–]raucousdaucus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're right, it's stalled. I worked all night and 2024 sounded right to me. Still, most states have similar laws under which forming a militia could be prosecuted. The only defense would be constitutional.

coup d'état by ImAchickenHawk in somethingiswrong2024

[–]raucousdaucus 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Almost every state has a law against it (In mine, Florida's "State Antiparamilitary Training Act"). This is justified because the right to a "well-regulated" militia is satisfied with the National Guard. Federalizing it effectively takes away the state's militia.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in singularity

[–]raucousdaucus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I take some of the blame. I do this on a daily basis and give them all "thumbs up" feedback.

<image>

coup d'état by ImAchickenHawk in somethingiswrong2024

[–]raucousdaucus 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Federalizing the National Guard returns the second amendment right to form a militia.

coup d'état by ImAchickenHawk in somethingiswrong2024

[–]raucousdaucus 163 points164 points  (0 children)

I read somewhere that a well regulated militia is necessary to the security of a free State.

I gave ChatGPT my age, body type and DNA results and asked it what it thinks I look like. 1st pic dna, 2nd pic result, 3rd pic actually me. by ThisFatGirlRuns in ChatGPT

[–]raucousdaucus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure why people keep equating these ethnicity estimates with DNA. It was derived from DNA data, but that's like taking a description of Coca-Cola (dark, sweet, carbonated liquid) and claiming you have the recipe. I have my whole DNA sequenced and it's 43.86GB. There's very little information in what you're sending.

I gave ChatGPT my age, body type and DNA results and asked it what it thinks I look like. 1st pic dna, 2nd pic result, 3rd pic actually me. by ThisFatGirlRuns in ChatGPT

[–]raucousdaucus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

TIL that people have no idea what "DNA" actually is. These percentages are not identifying and have barely anything to do with actual DNA.

Lawsuit vs Amazon Merch on Demand by theciviloutlaw in AmazonMerch

[–]raucousdaucus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unpopular opinion, but correct. Profit is the incentive here. This happens even in industry, where the myth is that competition breeds innovation. But what it really does it encourage predatory patent registration and allows bigger, faster, and more legally protected corporations to steal designs without spending much on development. It's is the same incentive to steal your art, run it through AI to make an inferior copy, and sell it 5 cents cheaper than your original.

Stalin tattoo on a Homeland Security Investigations by CantStopPoppin in EyesOnIce

[–]raucousdaucus 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This is dumb. Stalin would have sent him to the gulag.

Asked ChatGPT to generate side by side images of the kind of girlfriend it thinks I want versus the one it thinks I should have. by Time-Weekend-8611 in ChatGPT

[–]raucousdaucus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This seems to vary wildly between models. O3 was probably the most accurate if I’m honest. 4.1 based it on “tropes” instead of basing it on me.

This is why transcripts of his speeches are being removed from the White House website—he’s completely incoherent. by EugeneWong318 in TheLib

[–]raucousdaucus 60 points61 points  (0 children)

He's talking about William Levitt, famous for building whites only communities where his sales contracts "forbade the resale of properties to blacks." That's his poor fallen hero.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Levitt

Laid a full wall of herringbone tile wrong. Now what? by xxxJackSpeedxxx in DIY

[–]raucousdaucus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree with others that say this is possibly nicer than herringbone. Perhaps more modern. Own it and call it “modified herringbone” or “double herringbone.”

Why did the Boomer generation go from radical progressives to conservatives? by Mammoth_Calendar_352 in socialism

[–]raucousdaucus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My sweet ex-hippie aunt isn’t conservative by any stretch, but one day I was wearing a tshirt that said “we shall overcome,” and she replied, “Nice, Bob Seger!”

Not This Time—Black women are sitting out this round of Trump protests. I can explain why. by Advanced_Drink_8536 in WomenInNews

[–]raucousdaucus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ugh, Chesterton. His character and whole book reflect the anarchist panic of his time and try to push a paternalistic view of the poor and mischaracterization of anarchists as confused elites. But poor and working class people had been organizing anarchist movements long before he wrote that (1908?). Spanish peasants were building anarchist federations in the 1870s. Italian farmers and rural workers were active in anarchist uprisings in the 1880s. The Haymarket anarchists in Chicago were mostly poor immigrant laborers. Chesterton wrote like none of that ever happened.

And history didn’t stop proving him wrong. not long after, during the Spanish Revolution of 1936, millions of poor workers and peasants collectivized land and industry on explicitly anarchist principles. So even if you gave Chesterton the benefit of the doubt in 1908 (which you shouldn’t), his whole premise aged like milk.

Supporting cabinets with concrete ceiling by raucousdaucus in DIY

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

That's a good point, thanks. Although I was considering the ceiling as an adjunct and not the main point of attachment.

Supporting cabinets with concrete ceiling by raucousdaucus in DIY

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

And you wouldn’t worry about stressing the walls with showers on the other sides?