@dtrunk90@Itsfoss@brave I need to be honest, I used Firefox for many years, until they started to fuckup. Then I switched to @brave.
I would love to have a braver version using the same engine as Firefox, but I know this will not happen…
@electronical This might be the single dumbest take on that video.
Alistair Brownlee was in a genuine fight for gold (literally half a kilometer from winning the world title). He sees his brother Jonny collapsing from heat exhaustion, barely able to stand, meters from the finish line. Instead of sprinting past him to take the win, Alistair stops his own race, uses every bit of his remaining strength to support and push his brother across the line so Jonny can finish 2nd and get silver. Alistair drops to 3rd (bronze) because of it.
That’s not cheating. That’s the purest example of sportsmanship in modern sport. He sacrificed his own gold medal chance (and effectively the silver position too) to make sure his brother didn’t DNF in agony. Jonny was also sacrificing everything — his body was shutting down and he still fought to finish.
Your “car + run over the leaders” analogy is embarrassingly stupid. One is a competitor using his own body to help another human being in real medical distress. The other is bringing an external vehicle to assault people and cheat. These are not even in the same universe.
The Brownlee brothers both gave up something real that day. The South African who “won” gold while that was happening? Hollow victory. The world remembers the brothers for their character, not him.
Mas pqp querem ditar até que música eu quero gostar? Porra se eu quiser ouvir milhões de vezes a mesma musica não vai mudar nada pra ninguém!
Agora a principal pergunta é:
A psicologia diz, que parte dela? Segundo quem? Baseado em que pesquisa? Quem pagou pela porra da pesquisa?