Lucky11

lucky11


— Lucky11 Report User
We got em boys 4 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Hmm. I see that bots have their timing spot on as usual.
It's a mystery 8 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Right up until it doesn't for some reason. To me that's the best part. Not that it sometimes just does what it wants but finding out what it is that's making it act weird. There's some really cool stuff that we've found and now use because someone did something or used something that should have worked just fine but didn't or acted really really strange.
1
*wiggle wiggle* 3 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Yeah, no.
1
heh 3 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
It's almost like stereotypes consist of normal behaviors. Huh, who would of thought.
6
Your Well Being is important 3 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Also, there's something screwy going on. It's 12:01am EST. I just posted this and it says "lucky11 · 4 hours ago · FIRST". Guess my posts are traveling through time.
3
Your Well Being is important 3 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Must be a change of language thing because to me being loved is all those other things. If you don't have them you are not being loved. Now I'm fine with changing it up a little so that is says "Being loved, meaning respected, prioritized, supported, desired, and understood is the minimum". Of course that takes work on both sides. And there is nothing worse, in a normal relationship, than one side taking advantage of the others love for them. So if you're not "being loved" in return it may be best to find someone who will.
3
I'm grateful to have been born when I was 24 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
"Give me Liberty or give me death". A famous quote though mostly not understood today simply because of the things you've said. Context is everything.
noun: liberty
1. The state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one's way of life, behavior, or political views.
In today's society people equate it to things like wearing a mask. Yes, it can be taken that way but what the person at the time meant was the freedom to not have your house burnt down or arrested and thrown in prison because you might be a criminal or related to one. I whole heartedly agree it's phenomenal that this is not the case, at least in the US. But we also need to be vigilant we don't recreate the same type of society that birthed that quote. I don't want to see that other famous quote come to fruition either. "Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. Weak men create hard times."
1
Fillosuffee 21 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
That goes right into the whole "my truth" crap. Which is unfortunately, propagated by many media outlets. And you're right, asking questions while not actually looking for the objective truth but instead the one that fits your narrative is all too common. The older I get the more I dislike it when someone asks a question but either doesn't listen to the answer or has already decided what the answer should be and refuse to understand why your answer isn't the same. I also find I don't have a problem if the answer is "this is what we know so far" or "honestly, we just don't know yet we need more time". Of course I seem to be in a minority on that opinion and alot of people, groups, news agencies etc... are more than happy saying something is an absolute fact, end of, just to seem like an authority on a subject. Then instead of admitting if they were wrong they just gloss over it and pretend they did no such thing.
2
One of my favorite books 1 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Of course this does require people to actually read. I swear so many people are almost proud of the fact they haven't read a book in years or since school.
P1: I just finished the best book you should read it.
P2: Yeah no, I haven't read a book in years.
P1: But you get so much out of them.
P2: I just can't get into them.
P1: Well what genre do you like?
P2: I don't know, I don't read books. I just wait for the movies.
P1: But the books can be so much better.
P2: It just takes too long to get through them.
P1: Well this book only has about 200 pages. It's real short.
P2: That'd take me like 3 weeks to read.
P1: You suck at reading then. Of course you don't like reading if you can barely do it. It's just like everything else you have to get better at it and the better you get the more you like it.
P2: Whatever you nerd. I'm perfectly fine not reading.
P1: You really frustrate me.
1
Fillosuffee 21 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
That being said, even people who know nothing on a subject can ask good questions. They might not even be able to understand the answer but if they ask those who do know the subject sometimes those people take the answer and work with it. On the flip side this is also how you learn about something. If you know nothing about a subject but hear something you think is fishy and question it; you learn about said subject. That doesn't make you an expert right off the bat but just because you're not contributing to scientific advances doesn't mean you shouldn't question things. Asking the questions, valid, stupid, ignorant, or genuine is better than not asking at all. After all that soccer mom may be an idiot but hopefully after she's told, no it does not, she'll at least be less ignorant than she was before. Many of today's problems occur because people aren't asking. Instead they just take it as fact and heaven help you if you question them.
Build Back Slimmer 2 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
I just play the over under game. I look at what little is in my cart and guess if it's going to be over or under $100. Used to be I could really take up some space in the cart and still be under but today? Let's just say I'm carrying a whole lot less bags than before.
1
Age is just a number 2 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Lol. As I get older I can totally relate to the what my parents meant when they said I was a still a kid. Now that it's been 20 years on, teens really are just kids. Somewhat reliable, okay conversationalist (sometimes), and totally not mature enough to be in a relationship with. And I swear I was never that dumb, though I probably was. I imagine after a 100+ years they'd feel like they were robbing the cradle with 20-30 yr olds.
2
There you have it 2 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Now is there a response where someone takes this seriously and has to have it explained that pop is used because they pop out of the toaster? That's the one I want to see.
Imagine having principles 1 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Oh, you mean a for profit business is catering to their market base. Shocking. It's almost like they like making money over doing what should be each individuals job in their society.
4
Factual 3 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
I can confirm that there are in fact colors on this map.
The trouble with an open mind .. 3 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Being open minded means you're willing to think for yourself. Alot of people would rather not. Alot of close minded people think they're open minded when they're not. An open minded person can have very definitive beliefs. Rejecting an opinion is completely normal for both open and close minded people. Claiming that rejecting an opinion is proof of close mindedness, is in fact, proof of their own close mindedness.
1
The trouble with an open mind .. 3 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
8. Thinking that because it's on mainstream media it's probably true makes you the same type of idiot who believes the small time content providers over the big ones.
9. Mainstream media pretends to have experts too, doesn't mean they're any more real.
10. Real experts lie all the time when it suits their purposes. Just because one says something doesn't mean you shouldn't double check it. Getting a second opinion is perfectly acceptable behaviour.
11. If a bunch of experts say one thing and a bunch of experts say the opposite doesn't mean one is wrong and the other is right. It can, but it may also mean that we just don't know enough yet and they're both actually right, or both wrong.
1 · Edited 2 years ago
The trouble with an open mind .. 3 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
An open mind only means you're willing to listen to what someone says not that you have to except what they're speaking as anything more than trash. So let's break this down.
1. Okay, you put this out there.
2. Doesn't make it true, also doesn't make it false.
3. You're a scumbag if you're actually "pretending" and not a real one.
4. May be entirely true, you might not hear it on mainstream media. They may in fact be ranting. Lots of people rant doesn't mean anything. Doesn't make the thing true or false.
5. Yep, lots of people do this. Lot's a people put stuff on the internet and make money from the content. No difference between them and main stream media who make money on the same thing as these guys.
Now lets add some.
6. Thinking something has to be false because some nut says it's true on youtube means you're close minded.
7. Thinking that unless mainstream media takes it up it's probably not true or researched correctly makes you close minded.
1
Quack! 9 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
The best part is if you swap Woman and Man the conversation is still true.
You either keep religion out of politics or you pay taxes 17 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Granted this only works on certain churches. If it's a regular church it'll do nothing since they're following the rules. Just so everyone is aware churches, all tax exempt organizations, do still have to pay some taxes called Non Ad Valorem tax. This covers things like emergency services, utilities(local infrastructure), lighting....etc. That's not to say some aren't abusing the exemptions but it runs similar in frequency to normal businesses that commit tax fraud.
6
I just wanna tell you .. 5 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Rick roll........
Had to save it to my computer then rotate it since some of us don't use this site on our phones.
1 · Edited 2 years ago
The damn confidence!! 5 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Not if the quiz is literally:
Write your answer
1.
2.
3.
etc...
I've had a few of those. You were allowed your homework but not the textbook. So if you didn't do it you wouldn't even know what the question was, let alone answer it.
The damn confidence!! 5 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Teacher: All right pop quiz time. This is worth %30 of your grade. Don't worry this is completely based off the homework so if you did it you'll have the answers. You have 5 minutes.
6
Probably should stop dating the girlfriend and start dating the brother now 15 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
That's generally the most common theory of why the most abundant metal on the surface was not used whereas "shiny" metals like copper or tin were used first. Aluminum is actual one of the most common metals but since it takes so much processing to use it didn't really show up until the industrial revolution and even then was akin to gold in price. Copper however, can be easy to spot and can become malleable with just a camp fire making it a metal that was used. Combine it with tin and you get bronze. Iron takes a bit more effort and unlike gold you generally don't find it just lying around on the surface since it tends to turn into iron oxide (rust). Interestingly iron oxide was used as a coloring agent long before iron tools came to be. After all who would look at this red dust stuff and think it was a metal.
1
Bye bye man bun 1 comments
lucky11 · 2 years ago
Umm, no. Instead I think we should treat it like you do any dangerous hornet hive and light it on fire.