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SocksOnCats
Member for: 3.9 years

scp: 1059 (+1090/-31)
ccp: 4595 (+4732/-137)
votes given: 3591 (+3407/-184)
score: 5654





Trophies
20
Big Blue and little sister Echo anxiously awaiting the Great Pumpkin.     (jssocial.pw)

submitted by SocksOnCats to Cats 2.5 years ago

9 comments

1
Do you have a charging shelf? What have I missed with this setup?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 2.5 years ago

16 comments

[Charging Shelf](https://pic8.co/sh/CSFMmu.jpg)

This is a 48" x 12" section of shelf, which gets power for 30 minutes every day at about 3:00am (simple light timer set up with a power strip). On the shelf are 4 walkie talkies, 1 HAM radio, 1 6-amp Ryobi battery, a DeWalt battery, three flashlights, three auxiliary USB batteries, one hand-warmer / battery, two big head lamps, and a vehicle jump-starter.

Connected to the power strip is a USB power hub which powers all the USB stuff. Using a foam pistol rack to hold the USB stuff.

I would eventually like to add some basic AA and AAA battery chargers.

This setup keeps everything charged and ready without overcharging anything. The reason for the DeWalt battery is that I was given a good DeWalt drill about 15 years ago and it's still going strong. I bought the Ryobi 6-amp battery specifically to power their 800W portable inverter. I will also be standardizing on Ryobi tools for my next purchases (looking at their chainsaws now).

So what have I missed? Is there a better way to do this?

A friend of mine and I discussed the possibility of making this setup portable by building it in to a rolling trunk. Thoughts?
39
How antifa thinks they look...     (files.catbox.moe)

submitted by SocksOnCats to funny 2.6 years ago

3 comments

24
914 on 9/14     (files.catbox.moe)

submitted by SocksOnCats to pics 2.6 years ago

32 comments

Sometimes I really miss that car.
37
Inflation Reduction Act     (files.catbox.moe)

submitted by SocksOnCats to funny 2.6 years ago

9 comments

24
Recruiting teams take note! Because they neither represent me well, nor serve my interests, I do not respond to Indian recruiters.     (TellUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to TellUpgoat 2.6 years ago

58 comments

If your organization uses Indian recruiters to find talent, you are getting very low value for your money. The Indian recruiters are not bringing you appropriate candidates, nor showing you the best of the people they represent.

Overall, Indian recruiters demonstrate a poor understanding of job titles and requirements. In almost every case, I am approached with a job only tangentially related to my very clearly stated job title and career. Most of the Indian recruiters entirely ignore the hard requirements described in my profiles, forcing me to ask them if the jobs meet those requirements. Inevitably the answers are not forthcoming, or clear, as the Indian recruiters attempt to hide the answers. I know why they do this, and you know why they do this. Please know this is a poor, and exhausting practice.

Most Indian recruiters have a pitiful grasp of the English language. How am I supposed to think that a person who cannot form a well-written and professional looking introductory email, can represent me to a client in a good light? Why should I spend time with a person who can't even read half the words on my resume? If I were looking for a job in India, I'm sure these recruiters would do me a great service. But this is America, and most people speak and use English.

Finally, because of their heavy accents and remarkably shitty telephone connections (seriously, most of them sound like they're calling me on a 1980's cell phone from inside a Chinese open market), understanding Indian recruiters is difficult and phone calls take far too long. What's this about? I have had to tell Indian recruiters I can't understand them so many times (equally because of poor connection or accent), I've determined it's not worth speaking with them. Can Indian recruiting teams not afford decent telephone technology? Are they simply unaware of how bad things are? If the answer to either of these is 'yes', then why would I trust my career to people who are so professionally or technologically out of touch?

Interactions with Indian recruiters are entirely a waste of my time.

Do not use Indian recruiters.
4
How does the MK Ultra program get new victims?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 2.7 years ago

14 comments

Do they kidnap kids? Brainwash current agents? How does this begin?
2
Infection with Toxoplasma gondii, the notorious feline parasite, is associated with more conservative political leanings.     (journals.sagepub.com)

submitted by SocksOnCats to Cats 2.8 years ago

9 comments

6
Have you ever been to the desert of the US Southwest? Ever explore the areas down near the border? If not, why not? And if you have, please share a story. It's a big, mysterious place.     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 2.8 years ago

7 comments

Some years ago (like 30 or so), a friend of mine and I were sitting in his parents' house down in El Centro, CA. We were a little bored, as there's not too much to do down there, and he asks me "Hey, you want to go down to the border and shoot illegals as they come across?"

I was much younger at the time, and still pretty wet behind the ears. I replied "What? Have you ever done that?"

And my friend says "Well, no. I haven't done it. But my dad has talked about it." And just then, as if on cue, my friend's father walks in to the room.

So I asked his father "Hey, uhh... Have you ever gone to the border and shot illegals as they come across?"

His father stopped, and shared a quick glance with his son before replying "Uhh... Well, it's a big desert... And, a lot of things happen out there most people wouldn't know about. I can't say really whether or not I've done any of that, but it sure does happen. And it happens a lot."

And after that little bit of conversation, my friend's father suggested we load up my truck with a bunch of his guns and go camping in the desert. As it happened, we decided to go north and wound up in the Chocolate Mountains (and there was a small incident with a military helicopter), but we had a really good time. Very worth the experience.

And my friend's father was absolutely right: It is a big big desert out there, and you might see an odd thing or two.
5
What is the best holster for hiking and camping?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 2.8 years ago

8 comments

A little bit of back-story: My son and I are going to go camp at a ghost town in the Nevada foothills / mountains (up at about 7,000 feet), northwest of the Faultless Test Site. (I learned a couple of years ago that I have quite a bit of family history with the area.)

Spoke with a local Sheriff and he said that although there aren't a lot of critters in the area, we should pack a couple of magnum pistols with us in the case of a mountain lion (although he did say they tend to stay to more forested regions). We were planning on taking a couple of magnum pistols (and quite a few more firearms) with us anyways.

But the question is: In the case of an emergency, what sort of holster is best? I was thinking a chest / hunting holster as it allows for quick draw and easy carrying for a larger pistol. Is there something better?
84
Yesterday I wore this shirt to CostCo and got a lot of interesting looks (both good and questionable). Actually looks a bit like me. And the big nigger who boxed my items kept staring at the shirt, looking very worried. I was surprised that nigger could read.     (jssocial.pw)

submitted by SocksOnCats to funny 2.9 years ago

54 comments

A White guy, obviously liberal and being sarcastic, said "Nice shirt dude." I turned, stared at him, and replied very loudly "Hey you have to support your own team, right?" He visibly shrank. When I turned away from him, an older White woman was smirking and very slightly nodded to me. Was overall a good interaction. I think I'll wear this shirt more.
17
What is the best vehicle to convert to run on alcohol?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 2.9 years ago

51 comments

The price of gasoline is out of control, and even if a conservative administration sets up shop in 2024, I don't see things going back to any semblance of normal. Propane is also gone pretty nuts, and thus isn't a viable (cost-efficient) gasoline alternative. And while diesel should be okay, I think we can write that one off as well.

Electric vehicle are a dumb idea for all kinds of reasons. We don't need to go in to that. Maybe having an electric bicycle around would be good, but certainly not a full sized vehicle.

Some people have proposed using ammonium as a fuel, and while it shows promise, I think the tech to make it practical and not super dangerous is still a little ways off - certainly for mass-production.

Which leads me to ethanol. Right now a gallon of ethanol is about $2.16 a gallon (or so my internet sleuthing tells me). And while alcohol as a vehicle fuel doesn't deliver near the same power as gasoline, I think this current price difference would make up for it. (Here in kommiefornia we're paying above $7 a gallon for gas). Am I wrong here? Let me know.

Ethanol isn't hard to find, and I don't think the world markets can manipulate the cost of this too easily without fouling up a whole lot of other things unrelated to transportation, so I'm guessing (again, maybe wrong) the price should stay pretty low.

And, ethanol can be produced at home. Sure, you need a pretty big amount of plant matter to make it, but you still can. By the gods, this is America, and we can grow corn.

So if I'm correct so far, that leads to the primary question I asked: What is the BEST vehicle to buy and convert to alcohol? There are, of course, some qualifications to this:

1) The vehicle needs to have a relatively simple engine, what an average person can do the conversion on as well as maintain.

2) The vehicle has to have been produced in numbers such that spare parts are pretty easy to get.
2
Go to Google Maps and look at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, TX. Tell me what you see. Does Google run their StreetView cars on weekends?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 2.9 years ago

5 comments

Seems odd there's not a single car or any degree of activity at that school. I'm not saying entirely that it's closed, but you'd think you might see something. Not a person, not a car. One the back side, you can see two cars parked, but then they're gone in the next street view pic. So maybe they took pictures on two separate days, sure. But on a weekend? Seems odd to me.
4
A simple search tells me there are a bit over 36,000 food and beverage processing plants in the USA. So far we're up to about 17 which have burned. But should we really be worried?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 3.0 years ago

10 comments

2
Labor Day, schmabor day, what a dumb day. Hire some jerk, then send him away, to celebrate work by playing all day.     (TellUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to TellUpgoat 3 years ago

0 comments

First read this quote by Garfield the cat (Jim Davis) way back in the late 70s, and I will never for get it. I guess Garfield (and Jim) are a couple of commies.

It seems to me more like people who work should celebrate the fruits of their labors. Perhaps the celebration could be no taxation of any kind for a day. That would be far more appropriate.
1
Is there a good film adaptation of 'The Merchant Of Venice'?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 3 years ago

4 comments

9
I need a new belt. What brand to get?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 3.2 years ago

44 comments

I used to use Carhartt belts. Definitely not interested in their brand any longer. So where to find a good, thick, sturdy black leather belt?
5
Does israel have nuclear weapons?     (www.globalsecurity.org)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 3.2 years ago

37 comments

Nuclear Weapons Testing
Some type of non-nuclear test, perhaps a zero yield or implosion test, occurred on 2 November 1966 [possibly at Al-Naqab in the Negev].

There is no evidence that Israel has ever carried out a nuclear test, although many observers speculated that a suspected nuclear explosion in the southern Indian Ocean in 1979 was a joint South African-Israeli test.

At precisely 0100 GMT [other sources claim 00:53 GMT] on 22 September 1979, sensors aboard the VELA 6911 satellite detected two closely spaced flashes of light. The event apparently occured over the Indian Ocean at 47 deg. S, 40 deg. E in the Indian Ocean, near South Africa's Prince Edward Island. The most obvious explanation was that someone had detonated an atomic bomb. The list of suspects quickly narrowed to South Africa and Israel.

In 1979, the South African government adamantly denied the test. Former Foreign Minister Roelof Botha said he knew nothing of the blast and suggested the American government question the Chinese or Russians. But Botha stopped short of saying that South Africa had not detonated a bomb or that the country had no intention of acquiring nuclear weapons. The flurry over the issue exemplified American nervousness in world affairs, Botha added.

The Vela satellites were deployed in support of the Limited Test Ban Treaty of 1963 and carried sensors designed at Los Alamos and Sandia National Laboratories to detect nuclear explosions in the atmosphere and in space. The satellites were launched in pairs beginning in 1963. The last and sixth pair was launched in 1970. Each satellite carried two optical sensors, called bhangmeters, to view Earth and detect atmospheric nuclear explosions associated with unique, telltale signatures of brief, intense light pulses. The satellites also carried an electromagnetic pulse sensor.

One of the problems with the Vela's optical data was that one sensor detected more light than did another, more sensitive one. The discrepancy suggested to the White House-assembled panel that the bhangmeters saw an event close at hand, perhaps sunlight glinting off a bit of meteor debris that had bounced against the satellite. The panel maintained their conclusions even though similar discrepancies had been observed in Vela signals from previous confirmed atmospheric nuclear tests.

In addition to the very bright optical signals, an atomic explosion also unleashes a pulse of radiation at radio wave frequencies which can be detected by EMP sensors. This electromagnetic pulse covers much of the radio wave spectrum.

Other radiation emitted by the blast includes gamma and beta rays and neutrons, which, in the case of a sea level or low-altitude explosion, are absorbed by the atmosphere giving rise to electromagnetic radiation at frequencies extending over the entire range from radio waves to the ultraviolet. Detectors on satellites are capable of sensing at least some of these instantaneous signals, but if the radiation is missed in the first instant, then they are gone forever, traveling away from Earth at the speed of light.

Although its optical sensors were still functioning, the Vela satellite that detected the 1979 event was operating beyond its seven-year life span. Because of the satellite's age, the EMP sensor was not operating.

After the detection of the September 1979 event, the United States government quickly launched a major effort to collect corroborating evidence that focused on finding radioactive bomb fission products in the environment. But the sampling attempts never entered the low pressure air mass that had been over the location of the time of the explosion. While low levels of iodine-131, a short-lived radioactive fission product, were detected in sheep thyroids in western Australia, these results were also questioned.

In addition to detection satellites, the United States maintains a global network for detecting other atomic explosion phenomena, including sound waves, seismic shock waves traveling through Earth, and hydroacoustic pulses traversing Earth's oceans. Of these, the best data were from the hydroacoustic signals collected on devices called hydrophones. The hydrophone data indicated signals both from a direct path and from a reflection of the Antarctic's Scotia Ridge. Analyses of these signals conducted by the Naval Research Laboratory confirmed that they had been generated at a time and location consistent with the Vela 6911 detection and that their intensity was consistent with a small nuclear explosion on, or slightly under, the ocean's surface.

More evidence came from a Los Alamos researcher using a radio telescope for an unrelated project in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, detected a traveling ionospheric disturbance - a ripple in Earth's upper atmosphere - moving south to north during the early morning hours of September 22, 1979, something researchers had never before witnessed.

But such evidence was discounted by the White House panel.

In 1979, this analysis had been vigorously challenged by the Carter administration. The challenge was driven by a general mistrust in aging satellites and an unwillingness to accept the efficacy of other evidence. Instead, the Carter administration assembled a panel of scientists from academia to review the data. After their review, the panel concluded that, lacking independent collaborative data to support a nuclear origin of the signals, the original interpretation of the satellite data could not be justified. The panel said the flash could have been caused by a combination of natural events, specifically a micrometeorite impact on the detector sunshade, followed by small particles ejected as a result of the impact.

But Los Alamos scientists were not dissuaded. "The whole federal laboratory community came to the conclusion that the data indicated a bomb," Los Alamos scientist Dave Simons said. "But in the administration's view, because the evidence was weak, they took exception to the information and our analysis. ... It was unsettling because we were quite thoroughly convinced of our interpretation," Simons said.

Los Alamos scientists remained convinced that the flash was a nuclear detonation and invested substantial effort in analyzing the signal. Subsequently, Los Alamos researchers published an unclassified paper describing the characteristics of optical signals caused by nuclear explosions.

In February 1980, CBS News was the first to suggest that Israel helped South Africa conduct a nuclear test. CBS received information from "informed sources," but until now, no South African government official was willing to lend the report any credibility.

In 1981 TIROS-N plasma data and related geophysical data measured on 22 September 1979 were analyzed by Los Alamos to determine whether the electron precipitation event detected by TIROS-N at 00:54:49 universal time could have been related to a surface nuclear burst (SNB). The occurrence of such a burst was inferred from light signals detected by two Vela bhangmeters approx. 2 min before the TIROS-N event. The precipitation was found to be unusually large but not unique. It probably resulted from passage of TIROS-N through The precipitating electrons above a pre-existing auroral arc that may have brightened to an unusually high intensity from natural causes approx. 3 min before the Vela signals. On the other hand, no data were found that were inconsistent with the SNB interpretation of the 22 September Vela observations. In fact, a patch of auroral light that suddenly appeared in the sky near Syowa Base, Antarctica a few seconds after the Vela event can be interpreted (though not uniquely) as a consequence of the electromagnetic pulse of an SNB.

In an 20 April 1997 article that appeared in the Israeli Ha'aretz Daily Newspaper, South African Deputy Foreign Minister Aziz Pahad confirmed for the first time that a flare over the Indian Ocean detected by an American satellite in September 1979 was from a nuclear test. This statement was confirmed by the American Embassy in Pretoria, South Africa, as an accurate account of what Pahad officially acknowledged. The article said that Israel helped South Africa develop its bomb designs in return for 550 tons of raw uranium and other assistance.

With Pahad's revelation, Los Alamos National Laboratory scientists said this controversy can at last reach closure. Original analyses conducted by Los Alamos scientists and others in the US intelligence community said the flash could only be from a nuclear test. Now, their studies had been vindicated.

Los Alamos scientists were worried that current satellites may have similar credibility problems in detecting atmospheric tests because of their ages. And for the next generation of satellites, the Pentagon has not decided whether budget cuts may affect decisions to place EMP sensors on detection satellites to be launched after the year 2000. Los Alamos and the Department of Energy had spent nearly $50 million to develop the next generation of sensors and officials are hopeful they will be included in the payload of future satellites. Researchers said that because the detection ability for underground and undersea tests is so good, today's rogue nations may choose to conduct clandestine atmospheric nuclear tests which is a good reason to include the EMP sensors on future satellites.

For the 1979 South African test, Los Alamos scientists were convinced that a functioning EMP detection system on the Vela satellite would have provided an unambiguous corroboration of their conclusion: the mystery optical flash of September 22, 1979, was a nuclear explosion.

Ironically, researchers said, one of the most compelling recommendations of the 1979 White House panel is in jeopardy of being overlooked. The panel said that because of the ramifications and possible consequences of nuclear explosions, it is imperative that systems be developed and deployed to provide prompt, reliable corroboration of the evidence.

But Pahad's office later responded that his remarks were taken out of context. His press secretary told the Albuquerque Journal in an article dated 11 July 1997 that Pahad had said only that there was a "strong rumor" that a test had taken place, and that it should be investigated. In other words - Pahad was commenting on actual knowledge of a test, but was repeating rumors that had been circulating for many years.

According to the information provided to the IAEA that South Africa fabricated its first nuclear explosive device in November 1979, two months after the flash, and that this first experimental device remained in the stockpile until 1989. The IAEA investigations of uranium production records, and actual inventories of highly enriched uranium, could not hide enough HEU to fashion a "missing" bomb.
17
I just tested positive for Covid. I am of pure blood.      (TellUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to TellUpgoat 3.3 years ago

64 comments

Been feeling ill for a couple of days and developed a whanger of a headache. Wifey suggested I use one of the home tests I got from Amazon a little while back. And it says I have Covid.

So out comes the Durvet horsey paste. Wifey cut up some apples (as I figured pretending to be a horse would help things), and I squeezed out a 250-pound portion on to one apple boat. It wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be.

My sinuses seem mostly unaffected. I’m coughing just a little, but am very able to clear my lungs of the small amount of whatever is there. My energy is way down (general fatigue) and I still have this massive headache. For that I’ve taken Tylenol, aspirin, and ibuprofen, but none of it has helped much.

Oh - and I had massive diarrhea and nausea yesterday and the day before. Is that a covid symptom? Took Immodium two days in a row and it seems to have helped. Stomach is still a little fragile feeling though so Wifey has limited me to rice with butter on it. (It’s like a fucking Nork prison here.)

Neither I, nor any of my immediately family, have gotten the shot - and we still will not.

Anyone else gone through this shit?
6
100% Cotton Crew Socks - Why can’t I find them anywhere?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 3.3 years ago

21 comments

Does anyone know where to find high quality (thick) 100% cotton crew socks? It’s like they’ve just disappeared.
5
People in San Francisco (sadly), how stringent are the vax card requirements to go to stores / restaurants / attractions?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 3.5 years ago

13 comments

I need to go to San Francisco and unfortunately need to take my kids there. (I know, I know - it's a family thing.) None of us are jabbed and I'm thinking of forging up some vax cards.

Are people asking for vax cards for restaurants or stores or attractions? If they do, do they require you show ID as well? Do they record any of the information from the vax card (lot #, date, name...)?

Would just be a one-day visit and it's unfortunately one I can't avoid. Any real help would be appreciated.
33
For every In-N-Out Burger restaurant the government shuts down, I'll go eat at two more.     (TellUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to TellUpgoat 3.5 years ago

14 comments

Contra Costa County in CA (kommieshitlandia) has shut down another In-N-Out restaurant for not enforcing the death shot status of customers. In-N-Out let it be shut down rather than enforce the idiotic draconian tyrannical practices of the current administration.

So I and my buddies will be celebrating by visiting more In-N-Out Burger restaurants.

Let's Go Brandon!
48
Our Halloween display this year (for real).     (jssocial.pw)

submitted by SocksOnCats to pics 3.5 years ago

58 comments

This is war.
12
HELP! How far will the CA student jab mandate go?      (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 3.6 years ago

52 comments

I currently live in CA.

I do NOT want my kids to get the shot.

If there are no exceptions, we are moving. Unfortunately home-schooling isn't an option for us (details on this would be too revealing for this forum).

First on our list of states is Texas for two main reasons: 1) We know some people there who can help us with the move and getting settled; 2) My wife's profession may allow her to work in Texas without any issues. Other options include Idaho and Arizona, but they may not meet our needs for other reasons.

HERE'S MY QUESTION:

If we leave CA for another state which is currently against jab mandates, will the federal gov't and the shitlibs push hard enough that states resisting the jab will cave?

This is obviously an enormous decision for us. I'm really asking for your views on this. Is this shit going to stop?
0
Why can't I access voat.co or talk.lol from my VPN?     (AskUpgoat)

submitted by SocksOnCats to AskUpgoat 3.6 years ago

23 comments