6
SixTeaNine 6 points ago +6 / -0

The opening is indeed a little odd, and Pelosi is closer but couldn't have used his left hand because it has a drink in it, and his right is tied up by Depape. However it could have easily been opened by Depape using his right hand and he pulled back after turning the knob and pulling the door open.

Occam's Razor says there wasn't a third person there.

1
SixTeaNine 1 point ago +4 / -3

It is important to also consider the footage they released of the guy breaking into the house. As much as I want to jump on the "gay tryst gone wrong" bandwagon because the Pelosi's are such corrupt elitist scumbags, the fact that the guy clearly broke into the house throws some doubt in my mind that there is anything conspiratorial going on here.

Pelosi could have easily been drunk after a night of jack and cokes sitting in his living room in his underwear watching movies while his wife was away. Then was too inebriated to respond more appropriately (urgently, worried, defensive) to the guy, on the 911 call, and in answering the door.

Just applying Occam's Razor is all. Not that I have ever myself been up at 2AM in my boxers after a night of jack and cokes watching movies or anything of that nature...

1
SixTeaNine 1 point ago +1 / -0

I'm still partial to my family's Massey Fergusons and my favorite, the Allis Chalmers D15. Hell we still have an old Minneapolis-Moline sitting around!

"Old but fixable" will always beat "new but not fixable".

2
SixTeaNine 2 points ago +2 / -0

Yep, it's why I have an Android and use PCs over Macs. Neither are perfect options of course, but are FAR better and more open ecosystems than the Apple's "walled garden". Cheaper too.

24
SixTeaNine 24 points ago +24 / -0

This is not small. This sets a HUGE precedent for the "subscription model" in numerous other industries. While it isn't a court filing...just an agreement...it still sets the baseline for the ability for consumers to own the products they purchase.

John Deere went a bridge too far, and it burned them.

1
SixTeaNine 1 point ago +1 / -0

There's some truth to this. I speculate that Hamlin's situation may have been handled slightly differently if it wasn't the only game happening at the time and the entirety of the player+fan base wasn't watching it.

1
SixTeaNine 1 point ago +1 / -0

I didn't hear anything about Hamlin having a pulse? I'm withholding judgement on his situation for the time being, although I agree there is some fishiness especially with the Feds now being involved (per Gateway Pundit).

For Savion Smith though, there's little-to-no evidence that it wasn't anything except a spinal injury:

https://www.freep.com/story/sports/nfl/lions/2022/10/26/detroit-lions-saivion-smith-details-scary-20-seconds-of-temporary-paralysis/69593757007/

And that's not coming from NFL talking heads. Occam's Razor supports it as spinal trauma too (not the case for Hamlin given the particulars of the hit).

6
SixTeaNine 6 points ago +6 / -0

Much different injury though. Smith's was neck/spine related, and I from what I can gather it seems he had a pulse and was breathing, even if he was unresponsive ("unable to move or talk for several minutes").

5
SixTeaNine 5 points ago +5 / -0

I'm as anti-death vax as they come, but SADS or vax injury is not what I would guess in this particular situation. It's certainly a possibility, but the timing is just too conspicuous for it to be my top guesses. Most likely a trauma-induced injury (heart, brain, spine, or otherwise). Commotio cordis is what I'm seeing referenced on Twitter the most often.

2
SixTeaNine 2 points ago +2 / -0

"We have never seen the need to bring an Alumbulance on the field"

Respectfully, this does happen, even for less dire injuries. A good example is a compound broken bone in a leg that is bleeding and the player is too big to easily carry. I've seen this a couple times in 13 years of playing the sport and 40+ years of watching it.

2
SixTeaNine 2 points ago +2 / -0

This is a good example of why mature adults should wait 72 hours for all the facts to come out before demonstrating outrage.

2
SixTeaNine 2 points ago +3 / -1

I really hate when literate people don't use the Oxford comma

14
SixTeaNine 14 points ago +14 / -0

Agree, this is a MAJOR issue. The plan better have not forgotten about those of us in blue/purple states with children who have risk exposure here.

2
SixTeaNine 2 points ago +2 / -0

What's an ath? Apparently that guy is going to kick mine. I'm so confused.

6
SixTeaNine 6 points ago +7 / -1

I am in the industry, this is called "Demand Response". These people signed up for this program, agreed to have their energy curtailed, and got paid for it. Going to the media and complaining about it is ridiculously hypocritical at best.

8
SixTeaNine 8 points ago +8 / -0

I'm a tech guy. F5 is well-known in the cybersecurity space. We use their load balancer and layer 7 firewall products. High quality stuff.

I would say that Dan Woods is extremely credible on this topic.

7
SixTeaNine 7 points ago +7 / -0

He's indian. He has brown skin. It's sarcasm.

1
SixTeaNine 1 point ago +1 / -0

Doomer porn is fun, but the reality is that we are light years ahead of the Russians and the Chicoms. Its obvious.

Now, do we want to try invading either of them? Certainly not. But our recent experiences in Afghanistan aren't comparable because we were under VERY strict RoE. That would not be the case in a peer-to-peer conflict. It wouldn't be a cakewalk like Iraq of course.

Such a conflict won't occur unless Putin loses his mind and invades someone other than Ukraine, or if the Chicoms decide we are stretched too thin to defend Taiwan. And even then, that will mostly be Naval and Air, not Ground.

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