Ranter
Join devRant
Do all the things like
++ or -- rants, post your own rants, comment on others' rants and build your customized dev avatar
Sign Up
Pipeless API

From the creators of devRant, Pipeless lets you power real-time personalized recommendations and activity feeds using a simple API
Learn More
Comments
-
@retoor don't worry. ostream will correct me. The person also incited violence, so that didn't help their case. Also blamed another group for it. Which is a big no no. We can't blame certain groups.
-
the Indians are erasing Canadian culture so no
they're rude. Canadians are nice. wtf is this shit.
now even the bank and tax phone lines say "don't be rude". whatttt the fuuuck. and kicker is the person on the other end keeps being Indian. wtfff -
"The Great Replacement" is only happening in the brain-residues of racist shitcunts.
-
@Demolishun no you misunderstood. I want french to be arabs and arabs to be gays. Those are good things.
-
@Demolishun of course you can talk about it. It just have to be in a positive light.
The great replacement is a great, as the name says. -
@antigermanist no.
it would be better for society if some specific individuals (like you) would not be part of society anymore, i'll grant you that. but that is _very_ different from "they deserve being replaced".
it's basically the line between a regular old misanthrope, and a potential mass murderer. (disclaimer: _obviously_ exaggerated choice of words, just for the sake of hopefully getting the idea across to you) -
@tosensei leme replace your mom with me and see how much you like the great replacement
if you say no you're racist -
@iiii idk what bastard British means
it's chill people who don't have much infrastructure and there's a whole lot of nothing and bears around
we're nice but also ignore things we don't like instead of admitting they're happening
and we were always a non-racist inclusive culture but at this rate that's gonna have to change or we are done as a country. this isn't because "other races bad" but Canada is now 1/4th Indian in the last 10 years... legit these people weren't here before. and they didn't culturally assimilate. and I don't mean like ohno they don't eat our food. I mean they brought in their hierarchical education standards and toxic workplace cultures and it's causing problems. Western world for example thrives on being able to ask questions of your superior to understand material, but in Indian culture asking a question is an insult. these small cultural differences have downstream effects -
@tosensei don't I have to voluntarily put it on my head for the insult to be valid, or is this some kind of "sprinkle crack cocaine on them and go home" situation?
-
@jestdotty to explain it, in -hopefully- simple enough terms:
the core of the insult is that you're that much of a deranged nutjob that you NOT having a tinfoil hat (or any similarly cliché item) would be the actually surprising option. -
@tosensei I would test it tbh. what actual science looks like
@chatgpt why is it called tinfoil hat when we only have aluminium foil. do the two have different electromagnetic properties? is tin foil bought somewhere other than aluminium foil is? was tinfoil ubiquitous at some point and went out of style or something? -
chatgpt6542d@jestdotty
The term "tinfoil hat" actually dates back to the 1920s when people would believe that tin foil hats could protect the wearer from mind control or government surveillance due to its supposed electromagnetic shielding properties. However, tin foil was later replaced by aluminum foil which is more commonly used today. The term has stuck even though aluminum foil is now used instead of tin foil. So, there is no actual difference in electromagnetic properties between tin foil and aluminum foil. Both are effective in blocking certain radio frequencies. -
chatgpt6542d@jestdotty
Tin foil and aluminium foil are both effective at blocking certain frequencies of electromagnetic radiation, including radio waves, microwaves, and some higher-frequency waves.
Tin foil is effective at blocking lower frequency radio waves used for AM and FM transmissions, as well as some higher frequency radiation from devices like cell phones and Wi-Fi routers.
Aluminium foil, on the other hand, is better at blocking high-frequency radiation, such as microwaves used in ovens, mobile phones, and wireless networks.
Overall, both tin foil and aluminium foil can be used to block certain frequencies of electromagnetic radiation, but aluminium foil is generally more effective at blocking higher frequencies, while tin foil is slightly better at blocking lower frequencies. -
@jestdotty you know - it's basically a faraday cage, so "frequency" doesn't really matter, since the answer is basically "all of them".
-
iiii94042d@tosensei there was a research that tinfoil hats actually work as amplifiers because they are only half covering and work as a resonator amplifiying the waves inside the head
Faraday cage must cover fully from all sides, otherwise it doe snot shield anything. Also Faraday cage only covers from waves that are of longer length than the cell size. A chicken mesh cage will cover from radar waves, for example, but not microwaves -
@tosensei I do know that thanks, sigh
and no it's not a faraday cage
but look at you being an expert on tinfoil hats -
@iiii an incomplete faraday cage still works, although at diminished capacity. the principle is the same.
amplification could only reasonably happen if the signal is below you (firing _into_ the hat through your head). -
@jestdotty well, i know enough about TINfoil hats to know they're made of TIN, little miss aluminium-foil-hat.
When you really think about it, movement of population happen, but the culture remains.
For example, the great replacement can happen to france (or at least we can hope it does), but do not worry, the arabs who will live there in future generation will still be as gay as the real french.
rant