Lefty friend about guns
(media.kotakuinaction2.win)
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (46)
sorted by:
What a stupid argument.
first aid: I have a gun so that I don't need to know it, the other guy does. It's also really fucking basic & I probably already know it just from playing fucking video games.
put out a fire: what kind of smooth brain libtard doesn't know how to put out a fire or sees this as a skill you need extensive training on? retard.
how to stay calm in extreme stress: the fuck? this isn't a skill taught in class, it's a combination of personality trait, genetics, & desensitization through experience. dumbass.
fucking lib kids man, so fucking dumb. & "loot drop" doesn't even make sense here, probably some dumbass battle royale video game reference.
Considering how many times I have seen videos of people trying to fight grease fires with water? Apparently it is indeed a skill that many smooth brains dont know.
You'd think public schools could cover this one. Kids are isually bored out of their minds; imagine giving them lessons involving actual fire. It'd be the single memory they take away from the experience.
Public schools explicitly don't teach useful life skills.
Too busy trying to groom them?
Perhaps my school was a bit different then, but I actually do remember them talking about how to put out a grease fire back from when I was younger (I think around 3rd or 4th grade). It was only once maybe twice.
"don't throw water at a grease fire" is literally the only non-intuitive thing when it comes to putting out fires.
other than that the answer is always to just throw anything non-flammable on the fire, generally water.
First aid is as simple as a tourniquet for limb bleeding, pressure on bleeds, maintain an airway if clogged (ie turn them on their side unless neck injury), and chest compressions if they have no pulse.
Beyond that there is not a lot you can do with no equipment.
Ya it's more like use normal hand pressure unless you are unable to stop it with all your force, then use a tourniquet as tight as possible on the limb.
Like 90% of the tangible benefits of first aid training are down to CPR, keeping people going long enough for proper life support/resuscitation is a big deal.
Aside from preventing a few niche injuries like crush syndrome, the rest is either only minor benefits or so obvious/common-knowledge that you don't really need training to mostly get the right idea.