A list of puns related to "The Rigorous Fate"
Pretty much what the title says, but I guess Iβll elaborate a little bit.
A lot of people have been talking about increasing the salaries of teachers for similar reasonsβtheyβre important to society, theyβre paid too little for the demands placed on them, increasing pay would attract better candidates, etc.
The way that I see it, if we paid officers higher wages, it would become a more desirable position for people who are more educated/intelligent. Personally, I want officers who are smart and capable of thinking through ethical/moral/psychological issuesβand quickly. Sorta like how I want a doctor who knows anatomy and pharmacology inside and out.
Plus, higher wages would mean less stress in their lives in general. Less stress would likely mean less likely to fly off the handle or to take out built-up aggression on unwitting citizens...right?
Also, if we paid them more then we could expect more extensive education/training/whatever. Like, imagine if police officers were required to have taken at least 3 psychology courses? Or maybe instead something like a 6-month training course in de-escalation techniques?
I dunno. Iβm just surprised that I havenβt heard this discussed more often (or at all, really), so Iβm wondering if thereβs a good reason why this wouldnβt work well?
He should cite all the articles about using the 25th amendment to replace Trump that were circulating a while ago, and indicate he wants to assure the country they will not be facing the same kind of problem under a Sanders presidency.
He should end it by urging the other candidates for president to submit to a similar rigorous exam and publish their results.
This doesn't implicate or attack Biden, only Trump. But it would say what needs to be said.
He could also say he was releasing this additional information in response to complaints that he had not released enough medical records. π
For example,
Because I'm kinda bored with a story where "more yelling, more training" results in more power that able to overcome any problems.
Thank you
I have a friend who claims that Air Wisco is one of the most rigorous flight programs there is because they have a 40% success rate for pilots compared to other airlineβs average of 90% success rate. It sounds like bullshit to me, but Iβm not a pilot so I donβt know.
Thoughts and opinions?
EDIT: So I showed my friend this post and he admitted it was more like a 1/3 of the people wash out instead of 40% washing out (I posted the 40% backwards, Iβm really sorry about that!). Does that sound more correct?
Iβve been playing for about two weeks and I just cannot seem to catch a breakβalways logging on for those 2 hour barrels because lord knows youβll never get enough βcerealβ any other way. Itβs exhausting. Feels like I never spend time on the main game.
With all the datamining and YouTube videos for every facet of .12, I'm surprised this hasn't gotten more attention. I know a big chunk of the playerbase probably doesn't even have it yet, and it's further limited by only being able to test it every ~2 hours, but I wonder if anyone has a rough breakdown of efficiency from the 3 options.
IE: Did 20 runs from option 1, average income from flea marketing what can be sold there and vendoring to the best vendor was X. Repeat for 2 and 3.
Just wondering if anyone has done any experimentation yet for this at all. I'm assuming the devs aren't dumb and that the 65k option has the highest chance for a valuable, but it's still just gambling at the end of the day.
My anecdote is that a profit was much more likely with option 3 earlier on when ALL hideout items were crazy expensive. Now that a lot have dropped off, I'm not so sure anymore.
That said, the "find in raid" tag being added to all these items does increase the usability of it beyond just pure profit. Nice change.
I know this one, but it's in Portuguese. What english texts do you know of?
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