Comments by "Widdekuu91" (@Widdekuu91) on "Daily Dose Of Internet"
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@Nick-gq2du @Nick No, I'm saying that you claiming that women are overestimating themselves and men are underestimating themselves based upon a short video that has a woman joking to a Disneyworld character and then demanding proof from others to proof you wrong on your statement, is a bit weird.
There is a reason that women are targeted for the selling of beautyproducts and that men in general are known to be the more 'layback and wear the sweater thrice even if it smells' kindof type.
Sure that is stereotyping, but that doesn't just happen.
I think that if you want proof, it's out there, and you can find it for yourself.
If you want, I can give you a headstart, here's two:
A study of 26 cultures found that across them women worldwide score higher than men on Neuroticism, one of the Big Five personality traits. Neuroticism is a broad domain of negative affect, including predispositions to experience anxiety, anger, depression, shame, and other distressing emotions So yes, insecurity would fall into neuroticism.
A study at the University of Chicago Medicine found U.S. women experienced increased incidence of health-related socioeconomic risks (HRSRs), such as food insecurity and interpersonal violence, early in the COVID-19 pandemic. This was associated with "alarmingly high rates" of mental health problems, including depression and anxiety.
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@fbi2672 I'd prefer if you wrote all your comments in one go, it's much more overseeable.
Let me respond to what you just said.
1. 'She tried to kick him and she refused to listen, what is the cop supposed to do?' My answer I wrote in my original comment: "You can take her arm, pull her out of the car and place her (gently) on the ground and handcuff her."
2. 'he had to by law' you say. My answer No. That's not true. No cop is forced to defy his own judgement and taser everyone that kicks towards him. By that logic, he'd taser children playing football. Stop bullshitting.
3. 'besides you got 0 likes because u wrong' My answer No, I've got zero likes because I'm not pathetic enough to like my own comments. Good to see it doesn't bother you to like your own comment, you've got 'one like.'
4. 'And kill her what no bud.' My answer People with alzheimers, pacemakers, health-issues, bad conditions, neurological problems, heartproblems (like you often get with obesity) and mental issues (In the United States, almost half of adults (46.4 percent) will experience a mental illness during their lifetime. 5 percent of adults (18 or older) experience a mental illness in any one year, equivalent to 43.8 million people) will be very badly hurt and have the risk of dying. So yes, that is very possible.
5. 'and she was not letting him put her on the ground gently and in the full vid she would not let him handcuff ok, you did not see the full vid.' My answer Indeed I didn't see the full vid, I was too busy with important things. Even if the lady refuses to be handcuffed, you can still overpower her by (and I will not CTRL-V this again for you, so pay attention) 'take her arm, pull her out of the car and place her (gently) on the ground and handcuff her." A proper cop, that has a proper colleague, will have no trouble doing that.
That being said, I am not interesting in taking this discussion any further with you. Have a good day.
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@chloep9321
No, that's true, in immediate danger, anything's fine. :)
But in the case of an accident in the woods, for example and you want to drag him away, so you can flag a car down to help, you'd likely drag them by their chest, your arms under the armpits.
Especially because it's easier to carry them that way. :)
And I've been told that, if the firefighters are nearby (or anyone) you should leave them and call for help instead. Or drag them to a recognizable spot and let them know there's someone inside, next to the pole in the canteen.
And that if someone's really in danger, but the only solution would be to put yourself in danger too, that "the firefighters prefer it if you didn't do anything, because one victim is better than a potential two."
I've never had to drag someone far away from danger, but I've carried someone when they (probably) had a drug-overdose or weird drug-mix and were seizuring. And then they jumped up, all of the sudden and were standing in front of the canal and then slowly tipped forward.
Someone saw it, pushed him back and I 'caught' him, on my arms, and dragged him backwards, to a chair, where he woke up again and then the ambulance came. He was still heavy though, even carrying him that way.
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@Chris_Cross
He wants to imply that all other women wouldn't have accepted the ring and would've been upset about the waffleshop not being romantic enough.
My boyfriend said that he was going to propose to me in public, whether I wanted him to or not.
He said; You better accept it, if you dare to make a comment about doubt, we'll be over!'
When I said I did not want a diamond on the ring (I'm more of a blue-gemstone kindof woman) he said; it will be a diamond and otherwise, we'e over!'
So I saved him the trouble and the next time he threw a hissyfit and dumped me, I did not take him back. It was a very good decision.
TLDR; if you treat your lady like a special lady and you are lovely, you don't have to spend a lot of money, you can make it special and surprise her with a cutesy moment.
It's just ashame when people are a low-effort-boyfriend and don't do ANYTHING for their girlfriend, éver and then in public all of the sudden, they throw a showy diamond around to show how lovely of a boyfriend they are and then after they get married, never put any effort in again. That's not how that works.
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Call me boring, but if a woman yelled from her car; 'You're not allowed to drive here!' and told me that her mother was having trouble breathing, I would step off my vehicle and walk over. Step one.
Ask her what is wrong and whether I missed a sign. She then might explain this street is a private street, part of the neighbour's house or part of a community. Step two.
Three, wish the mother well (she might've wanted to have some fresh air after surviving covid or is having an astma-attack) and then you slowly go on your way and go left, when they go right. Problem solved. (Step three.)
We have a woman who lives on the second floor and has to use the staircase. We álways have youths sitting there, smoking weed, spitting on the floor and blocking the stairs.
Whenever I say; 'You are not allowed to be here' they reply; 'What? Why are you being difficult?'
I then explain to them that the neighbour has a lot of trouble breathing if she has to go up 2 stairs with thick smoke hanging around in the air.
Also, I emphasize that there are 3 signs saying they cannot be there.
They then usually call me a name and leave. Then they come back and set the information-papers on the wall on fire.
I mean, I don't want to generalize, but cutting a (loud) request off with an insult doesn't make you as cool as they think it does.
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