(Part 4) Top products from r/MaliciousCompliance

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We found 20 product mentions on r/MaliciousCompliance. We ranked the 128 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 61-80. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/MaliciousCompliance:

u/cayleb · 2 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

I have, actually. You might try a couple books I've found to be very helpful in that regard.

Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong

A People's History of the United States

I'm only halfway through the second one, but there's really nothing quite like reading history through the words of everyday people like you and me. Rather than the heroic narrative that glorifies and omits based upon the preferred narrative of the writer.

u/deceasedhusband · 4 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

Sounds like you're doing good. Definitely better to start earlier rather than later with these talks. My dad always used technical terms for body parts with me (penis, vagina, etc.) and answered all my questions in a matter of fact and age appropriate manner.

I've also heard good things from this book though it came out after I grew up so I've never actually read it:

https://www.amazon.com/Care-Keeping-You-Younger-Revised/dp/1609580834

u/MethCookMontage · 6 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

> If you could explain how supplying school buses to students is a negative thing, even if it was started due to desegregation, I would appreciate it. I'm not asserting that it isn't, I just fail to see it.

Okay, essentially after the Supreme Court handed down Brown vs. Board of Education in 1954 there was a great deal of uproar as school districts found themselves newly unable to segregate schools by race by law or policy; there was a great deal of racist backlash against the implementation of SCOTUS' vision in Brown, i.e. that black and white students receive education in the same classrooms. The backlash took many forms as white school district and elected officials scrambled to find ways to obstruct the courts and maintain de facto segregation. By the late 60s and early 70s, the courts had become exasperated with the lack of progress in ending de facto segregation and began forcing school districts into more systematic schemes to achieve educational integration. Often these schemes involved requiring each individual school in a district to maintain a demographic balance that reflected the racial demographics of the school district as a whole. This resulted in students being assigned to schools on the other side of the district, and they would have to get there by bus. Opposition to busing was two parts. There was upset that white children were being reassigned to geographically closer schools to ones farther away. A great deal of the backlash, however, was whites angry that black students were establishing a presence in schools that were, until then, exclusively white schools. Black parents, on the whole, were pleased to have an opportunity to send their children to qualitatively better schools, and black bused students had better outcomes.

> States rights is NOT a legal justification to Jim Crow laws. Jim Crow laws are unconstitutional

Yes, because there was a series of federal legislation and judicial decisions through the middle of the last century that overturned previous precident and drumroll took away a state's right to enforce Jim Crow laws.

> I've admitted the areas in which I'm ignorant. I am completely open to other points of views, you have simply failed to provide any.

Look, real talk here. If you're an adult, it's no one's job to educate you. It's your job to educate yourself. And in any event you shouldn't be learning your historical facts from dubious strangers on Reddit, especially not one that is of such moral and social import as race and racism. Watch some documentaries about the Civil Rights movement on Netflix or youtube (ones produced by reputable people). Visit a civil rights museum. Read some books. I recommend reading two books concurrently, one a history of race in America (like this) and the other a collection of source texts (I recommend this one). Knowledge of the past should shape how you understand the present.

u/grammarxcore · 3 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

Re writing: Get yourself a copy of this, read it on the shitter or the bus or during boring meetings, and mess around with it. Your salary potential explodes with good tech writing capabilities. My blog is all about very niche code shit (eg xlib/xsb in Python to automate action) but I keep it up because it's a great resource in interviews that shows both code ability and writing ability.

u/alf666 · 33 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

That was probably the point, to add a little bit more malicious compliance on top.

"I said I would recover your files. I never said they would be easy to access, or that I would fix your computer."

On a side note, tape drives are real.

Their data capacity is pretty good, but the seek times (how long it takes to find the data the computer wants) are incredibly slow.

If the son really wanted to mess around with the eldest daughter, he could have a floppy drive and some disks shipped in from Amazon, stored the documents on a floppy disk, then hidden the floppy drive or held it hostage until payment was delivered.

Oh, you need help using it? Pay me $100 up front, and I will teach you once. Make sure to take notes.

u/crispychoc · 22 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

> Melany's Marvelous Measels

Try the "My Parents open carry"

I's nearly as good!

u/09Klr650 · 7 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

A lot of water bottles would not have enough taper to prevent that from slipping. However you do make a good point. How about something non-permanent yet reliable AND not ugly like tape?

https://www.amazon.com/Command-Refill-Strips-6-Strips-17023P-ES/dp/B000FCGS5Y/

u/S-Briggs · 1 pointr/MaliciousCompliance

The pens I now use are these . They're inky but not too much so. You can smudge it but it's much rarer than with a fountain pen as long as you're careful

u/kefaise · 2 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

That's why I hate corporations. I really love concept from "Reinventing Organizations" book about corporate organization.

u/gryphph · 2 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

If you want consistency (and want to be a little lazy), there is always the chip cutter.

u/hardrocknamigo · 1 pointr/MaliciousCompliance

I just had a large, black, rectangular cardboard box. I think it was before the tin was released.

https://www.amazon.com/Half-Life-2-Collectors-PC/dp/B0002X7Y2C

u/alexgodden · 408 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

I have the same approach with wine. Which is why I'm buying this

u/ppmiaumiau · 1 pointr/MaliciousCompliance

Lefty here: My uncle got me a Parker pen for Christmas. He is also a lefty and has used my Grandfather's Parker pen since the 70s.

He swears by the Parker Quink Rollerball ink and now I do, too. It is the only pen I've ever used that doesn't turn my hand blue or smudge all over the paper. Plus I feel fancy when I use it.

http://www.parkerpen.com/en-US/shop-online/writing-type-rollerball

PARKER QUINK Rollerball Pen Ink Refill, Medium, Blue, 1 Count https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00007JQRE/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_7L3xCbRQMK4AQ

u/CompWizrd · 2 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

Probably like this: https://www.amazon.com/Master-Lock-Lockout-Tagout-Electrical/dp/B001HWF4ME because if you remove one of those with my name on it without going through the proper procedures, you're getting written up and disciplined(and potentially fired) for violating our LOTO policies.

u/relayrider · 3 pointsr/MaliciousCompliance

eggsactly! i've got a 115V bus under the hood, goes to a lower hose heater, that gives you the instant heat; a float battery tender from harbor fright, an old electric blanket wrapped around the hybrid battery pack, and a dipstick oil heater... they all have their own tstats, but they're also plugged into an thrift store intermatic timer that turns them on about two hours before i'd normally need to go to work, and cycles every four hours on days when i'm home