Just so you know, breakers are not on/off switches. Turning them on/off like that is awful for them, they degrade every time they’re tripped. The result of it is, best case, everything on the circuit eventually get destroyed because it’s doing weird shit to the electricity going through it because of a bad connection. Worst case scenario is that it can no longer trip when it should and your entire neighborhood burns down.
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While that’s all a good question and thought provoking… unfortunately it’s literally just word of god that if Qui-Gon won, the light would win.
A common problem in Star Wars- the fans have put waaaay more thought and worldbuilding into it than Lucas ever did.
It could, but the supreme Court and other Republicans would never allow it.
Canonically the actual gamble was qui-gon vs Darth maul. If qui-gon had lived, the universe would have been fine. But he lost, so it was doomed.
The force on star wars is weird, because if you’re strong enough in the force things are basically fated.
Anyway, that’s the long reason why the background music during that fight is called “The Duel of Fates”.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•FTC’s click-to-cancel rule has been struck down by federal judges.English21·25 days agoBy “people like you” I mean people that see this as a good thing. They’re picking and choosing what laws this applies to and what they let slide. This is just the “easy out” that prevents “people like you” from being outraged at the blatant corruption going on.
It wasn’t meant to be insulting.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•FTC’s click-to-cancel rule has been struck down by federal judges.English92·25 days agoOh, don’t pretend that a Republican measure is going to be put under the same scrutiny. This is just an easy excuse so to keep people like you placated with a thin veneer of respectability.
The administration is going to weaponize the FTC anyway, and the supreme Court will back THAT to the hilt.
As for economic effect… That isn’t something the court should be concerned with anyway! Who cares if it’s profitable if it’s illegal!
ysjet@lemmy.worldto 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone•Americans kinda don't like pickpocketing ruleEnglish1·25 days agoI took the lowest end measurement of the worst cohort in the study, actually, and even then they did over ten times the amount of walking you claimed. That’s not a ‘bit’ wrong, that’s off by an entire order or magnitude. And for the record, the entire rest of your post is made up as well- the studies are easily available, the fitness bracelet was given to them, it clearly delineates what bracelets are used, and a wide variety of ages, sexes, occupations, etc etc were studied.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone•Americans kinda don't like pickpocketing ruleEnglish3·25 days agoAgain with the strawman. Nobody said anything about fighting every time time, and nobody especially has said anything about killing anyone. Maybe try reading what people say, instead of just responding to whatever you hallucinate them saying.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone•Americans kinda don't like pickpocketing ruleEnglish61·26 days agoNobody ever said anything about superhuman. Put the strawman away.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone•Americans kinda don't like pickpocketing ruleEnglish8·26 days agoThe average american walks about 2 miles a day. 22km a week is definitely not 300 meters.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone•Americans kinda don't like pickpocketing ruleEnglish52·26 days agoIt was a Whole Thing on tiktok, with people filming the altercations/aftermath, to the point of where it became a meme and trended during the olympics.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone•Americans kinda don't like pickpocketing ruleEnglish112·26 days agoNone of that was an assumption I made, and I also very clearly stated that all of what I said was absent a weapon, like the knife you’re referring to.
Pickpockets typically aren’t trying to run, because that’s INCREDIBLY suspicious, they’re trying to slink away, and they certainly aren’t trying to slip or break a tackle that they probably don’t even see coming- again, they’re not going to be staring at the person they just pickpocketed.
Nobody is trying to pretend Americans are john mcclane. I’m simply pointing out a possible explanation for what has already happened. You can argue all you want, but the fact is, american tourists regularly do catch and win against pickpockets. That’s literally the entire point of this lemmy post.
It’s not going to be a MMA fight between an american and a pickpocket, except the american has to run down and catch the sprinting pickpocketer first, it’s probably going to be some 250lb dude wheezing for breath blindsiding him out of nowhere in something that is more accurately described a high-speed trip into inadvertent body slam, but it’s still gonna work.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone•Americans kinda don't like pickpocketing ruleEnglish72·26 days agoI think what you’re missing is that waaay more Americans than you think played sports as a kid (well over 60% of the population iirc), and still know how to tackle someone. Football is huge here, and baseball can get pretty nasty too (source: other kids would see the armor and think ‘well if I can knock the ball out of his glove I’m safe!’)
Yes, there are a lot of obese assholes, but it turns out lugging around an extra 100lb of weight is actually pretty good strength training for the legs. Yes, they’re going to be gassed nigh instantly because their cardio is shit, but they’re probably fast off the mark and weigh enough that just running into you will slam you into the ground pretty badly.
Weight classes exist for a reason, and most Americans are going to be in a much higher weight class than the average pickpocket. Absent any weapons, as long as they can catch them, the American has a decent chance of winning, statistically speaking. Paris pickpockets found that out to their detriment.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•Trucks Entering Alligator Alcatraz Are Hiding Their Logos, DOT NumbersEnglish192·26 days agoWhy are you defending the intolerant so hard?
You need to understand, this isn’t “adopting their tactics.” This is “if you do not tolerate others, you no longer are protected by the social contract.”
You can opt out if you wish, but that has to cut both ways, or your contract of tolerance is worthless.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•Trucks Entering Alligator Alcatraz Are Hiding Their Logos, DOT NumbersEnglish284·26 days agoPlease look up the Paradox of Tolerance, also known as the Contract of Tolerance.
Yyyyeah. Unfortunately we’re not actually a democratic nation- land and especially money count for more than actual people when it comes to voting. Gerrymandering just reinforces it, and ensures an undemocratic result.
Just to jump in here, git submodules and similar are a terrible design pattern that needs killed, not expanded. Create a library properly and stop cutting corners that will bite you in the ass.
Three seperate companies wanting to do it the lazy, wrong way doesn’t suddenly make it a good idea.
ysjet@lemmy.worldto politics @lemmy.world•US tries to deport stateless Palestinian woman again despite judge’s orderEnglish1·1 month agoCan’t tell if that’s a message of support or not, but just in case it’s not- trust me, we’re trying to get the republicans away from our table.
And before you say we should leave the table- not all of us have that option.
If it WAS a message of support… well, everything I said still applies in general lol.
No problem, thanks for being receptive!
Modern day breakers are better about failing safe than they used to be, but… still not an intended use, and all it takes it one bad roll of the dice and everyone gets to have a Bad Day. Hence me viewing them, much like you, as things Not To Mess With Unless Needed. :P