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DK also says people with higher intelligence tend to assume those around them possess the same level of intelligence. And in this case, did you do that? Had you possessed that ability and assumed I knew what DK was, you wouldn't have mashed out on your keyboard a completely different definition of DK to make yourself sound smarter while telling me I didn't know what I was talking about and giving me some elementary example.... that's literally what DK says, smart people don't do that. Thanks for proving my point several times over and I apologize for overestimating you when I thought you were better than the other resident keyboard masher/reerun caller.... my bad. |
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Thanks for trying to dunk on me with it though. It was fun watching you fail. :D As you can see, the findings reported by Kruger and Dunning are often interpreted to suggest that the less competent people are, the more competent they think they are. People who perform worst at a task tend to think they’re god’s gift to said task, and the people who can actually do said task often display excessive modesty. I suspect we find this sort of explanation compelling because it appeals to our implicit just-world theories: we’d like to believe that people who obnoxiously proclaim their excellence at X, Y, and Z must really not be so very good at X, Y, and Z at all, and must be (over)compensating for some actual deficiency; it’s much less pleasant to imagine that people who go around shoving their (alleged) superiority in our faces might really be better than us at what they do. Unfortunately, Kruger and Dunning never actually provided any support for this type of just-world view; their studies categorically didn’t show that incompetent people are more confident or arrogant than competent people. What they did show is this: https://i0.wp.com/talyarkoni.org/blo...ng?w=434&ssl=1 https://talyarkoni.org/blog/2010/07/...t-is-and-isnt/ |
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Sec. 22.02. AGGRAVATED ASSAULT. (a) A person commits an offense if the person commits assault as defined in >Sec. 22.01 and the person: (1) causes serious bodily injury to another, including the person's spouse; or (2) uses or exhibits a deadly weapon during the commission of the assault. (b) An offense under this section is a felony of the second degree So at least one 2nd degree felony charge, that's bad. Per TRANSP § 550.021 it looks like the collision causing serious bodily injury is the charge that's tied to him having left the scene, which is to be a third degree felony. The other six counts could go either way. This is going to end in a guilty plea deal. |
I've got a bad feeling that Rashee Rice isn't playing much in 2024, if at all.
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Well I have it on good authority from the CP legal brain trust that I'm a ****ing moron for first suggesting that Rice would have to admit he was driving, then for suggesting he'd get suspended, then for putting the suspension at 4-8 games.
So don't worry, he good. |
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Kamara gets like 3 games for beating a dude within an inch of his life. And Rashee isn't playing much in a whole season. ****ing horrendous bullshit. |
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