• 2 Posts
  • 133 Comments
Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: February 23rd, 2024

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  • I might be entitled to a benefit, maybe. So you better give me that benefit just in case.

    Apply that same reasoning to other situations.

    Give the elderly disability benefit, they may be entitled, maybe not. Do it just in case.

    Or to another area: you may not need antibiotics, but just have them in case you miss out on them.

    Sure, you catch everyone but it costs a lot of money.

    To take this to an absurd conclusion: I a 29 year old, may be entitled to a pension. I haven’t checked, or applied, but give it to me anyway, just incase I am entitled.






  • The default answer is the Eisenhorn book series.

    There is a reading order here that combines three book series that have an interwoven story. However, you can just read the main Eisenhorn books for flavour:

    https://www.trackofwords.com/2021/02/14/a-guide-to-dan-abnetts-inquisition-series/

    If you like these, there are then some options:

    • The Horus Heracy ( a huge number of books and multiple reading lists depending on your approach I.e. full chronological list ~400 books, main story books ~50.

    • Caine Books (a more lighthearted take on 40k)

    Other mentions:

    • Watchers of the Throne
    • Vaults of Terra
    • Dawn of Fire

    ^These are a few Imperium heavy series. There are a ton of other faction books.

    If I we’re you I’d read Eisenhorn and if you like it, look at that top link. If you are hooked, look at the Horus Heracy. If you aren’t hooked then try the 1st Caine book and see if it pulls you in.

    Feel free to come back and ask again. There’s a ton of lore out there.



  • Did killing Cesar at the end of Fallout New Vegas teach us nothing?

    The war machine is too far along to be stopped easily.

    Or if WW1 is your poison:

    Initially, Wilhelm II wanted to halt the German mobilization, hoping for a peaceful resolution. However, Moltke insisted it was too late to stop the complex mobilization process once it had been set in motion. He argued that it was “like a wound-up clock” that couldn’t simply be unwound. His words essentially conveyed that the mobilization machinery, once started, would continue inexorably towards war, effectively removing any possibility of reversal.