Quit Your Bullshit!
Rules:
1: Bullshit must actually be called out.
Posts must be a screenshot of a lie/bullshit, and a call-out.
The lie and its direct responding call-out must be included in the screenshot(s) you provide. Context/call-outs in the title or comment section don't count.
Screenshots with overlaid text or other screencaps do not count: use them to call bullshit and screenshot that! Posts without proof will be tagged as such and could be subject to removal by the moderators.
2: Screenshots only. No links, stories, or videos!
Images / Screenshots only. Don't link to the location of the bullshit. No reddit and lemmy links allowed.
Don't link to a news article, or post a text story or a video. Your post must consist of screenshots only -- including the lie/bullshit and the call-out.
3: Remove all personal information -- even your own.
This decreases the likelihood of brigading/harassment and proves that we do everything we can to avoid it.
Basically, don't include a username that can be used to locate the bullshitter.
This means the reddit username, lemmy username, facebook name, twitter handle, and all other forms of identifying info (including your own username!) must be blocked. Posting user information in the comments circumvents this rule and will result in a ban.
4: Don't call bullshit on Trolls/Jokes/Memes/Bots/Honest Mistakes
Deliberate trolls or jokes don't belong here. This includes content from meme/joke communites -- jokes are made to be shared.
Posts involving honest mistakes don't belong here. Sometimes, people are wrong. Sometimes, users are mistaken or mislead. Being wrong isn't bullshit. Being a hypocrite isn't bullshit. It happens.
Calling out repost bots can also fall under this rule.
5: Political content is not allowed.
We don't want to push any political agenda. We don't support one side or the other -- we're simply observers. Basically, any content taken from a political subreddit or mentioning politicians will be removed. For political discussion head over to /c/Politics
Current news events may fall under this rule. Mods discretion.
If your post falls into a grey area, don't be afraid to message us before posting!
6: Stay civil. No hate speech or slurs!
Remember the human. Keep it civil. Don't use racial slurs or homophobic language.
7: Don't link to the bullshit, the bullshitter, or any covered info.
Don't name the bullshitter in the comments, or link directly to the bullshit involved. Similarly, don't request personal info/usernames that are covered up in the post.
8: Downvote/Harassment-brigading isn't allowed. No witch-hunts.
This subreddit does not allow downvote-brigading, harassment-brigading, or witch-hunting. This behavior will NOT be tolerated, and is the quickest way to net a permanent ban. Always follow Lemmiquette. If a post generates a downvote brigade, it will be removed even if it doesn't violate the other rules. We are merely observers.
9: Common Repost.
Posts in the Common Reposts Folder are not allowed to be reposted.
If the bullshit you're posting isn't in the folder, it's up to the moderators to determine if a repeated post is "common" or not.
If you repost old content with an identical title, we'll assume you're a bot and give you a permanent ban.
10: Recent Repost.
Please, check if your post has already been posted recently before submitting. Also, no reposts of Top/Popular posts!
Reddit:
(https://www.reddit.com/r/quityourbullshit/)
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Yeah, the issue with the old moon landing tech is that the success chances were so low. It was worth it to them when it was the first, but now that it's been accomplished, there is less reason to take something that only has a 50/50 chance of working. Now, we want the odds of a successful complete trip to be at least 99%, ideally much higher. That is a much higher burden on the technology. I mean, consider the percent chance of a successful launch alone so far.
In 2023, there were 210 out of 222 successful rocket launches, about 95%. That's just launch, the part we have the most practice with... once it leaves atmosphere, the number of things that can go wrong dramatically increases. Granted, that includes a lot of unmanned launches, which have a lower burden of safety. So far in the entire history of manned rocket launches, the success rate has been 98%, have to assume including only more recent data would probably pull that up a bit. If launch alone is barely hitting 99%, how many people are gonna sign up for something much more complicated, with much less motivation than they had in the 60's.