Madsuperninja

joined 1 year ago
[–] Madsuperninja@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago

After reading the article, your post seems hyperbolic. I don't find it surprising at all that long term use of some medications has some adverse health effects. Notably, the article mentions in the last paragraph that more study of the observed effect is needed before drawing firm conclusions.

Also notable that the medications studied also were correlated with some positive health effects as well. Additionally, the effects were not observed across all classes of depression medications.

Lastly, I feel like the drugs in question, even if they shorten someone's life, may improve the quality of their life, amd that's a trade many would be willing to make.

[–] Madsuperninja@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

I didn't see anyone recommend in the comments, but I very much enjoyed Dreamscaper. It has a nice story revolving around the main character confronting hwr psychological issues in the world of her dreams. Combat is fun, slower paced and a little more tactical than most.

Also, fwiw, I'm not generally a roguelike fan, but I liked this one. Whether that makes you more or less likely to take my recommendation is up to you lol.

[–] Madsuperninja@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

At 20 years, every active duty service member can retire with 50% of their highest three years of pay for the rest of their life. They also get evaluated for disability, and get that for the rest of their life. After 20 years, each year served adds 2.5% to their pension, so at 30 years, they would get 75%.

How much that pension adds up to depends on how high you moved up in the ranks. A 20 year enlisted servicemember will make a lot less that an officer. More senior enlisted will make a fair amount more than more junior enlisted.

Disability pay is based on how big of a mess you are physically and mentally, each disability pay band is the same, regardless of rank.

[–] Madsuperninja@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Depending on how far you get, it can be. My retirement without disability will be approximately 50k a year. That, plus disability in a LCOL area is enough. Retirees also get COL adjustments annually.

Current plan for me is to retire, attend law school, and work as a public defender to put my money where my mouth is as a filthy lefty, but the work is because I want to, not because I have to based on where I'm planning on retiring.

[–] Madsuperninja@beehaw.org 0 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Join the military! Pay ain't great, quality of life is sketchy at best, and you'll retire with plenty of physical and mental health issues, but you'll be retired at 20 years with the government paying you to go to school for 3 years so that you can start a second career. I guess it's a mixed bag.

[–] Madsuperninja@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago (6 children)

No shit....

This seems like the most obvious headline ever. I have my first retirement coming up in 3.5 years, and I'm holding on by the skin of my teeth. And I'm one of the lucky ones with a job that offers a flat pension at 20 years regardless of age.

[–] Madsuperninja@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago

Same problem here. Seems like a pretty basic feature. Not sure if I'm overlooking it, or if it's just not included.

[–] Madsuperninja@beehaw.org 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I'm a lifelong Diablo fan, so I'll probably pick this up next week. One thing that bugs me is that folks keeps saying "it's just cosmetics". To me, this ignores the fact that, since Diablo 3, your character's look is part of the fun. That cool armor you just found looks cool too. Now I worry that the gear is going to look boring so that you're subtly nudged in the direction of buying cosmetics.

Basically, I still want to be able to play dress-up.