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Loss of control

refers to a situation in which a driver is unable to maintain proper control over the vehicle, often resulting from factors such as slippery road conditions, mechanical failure, or the vehicle's response to a collision. This loss of control can lead to the car veering off its intended path, spinning, or sliding, and may increase the risk of further accidents or collisions.
A scene of where a young man in his late 20s name Jeremy watching a gay sex porn video on porn hub and jerking off while driving and he loss of control when he was distracted.

Passenger 1 (Shocked): "Is that... explicit content? Where's that coming from? Oh my God, is that guy in the Honda fit behind us-what the hell is he doing?"

Passenger 2 (Angry):"is this dude serious? He's literally jerking off while driving! That's disgusting!"

Passenger 3 (Concerned): "Someone call the police! This guy's gonna kill someone!

Passenger 4 (Nervous): "I have a bad feeling about this. He's gonna hit someone any second now!"

Passenger 5 (Screaming): "Oh my God! He just hit that old lady’s car! What's wrong with him?!"

• Passenger 6 (Frantic): "Hold on! He's heading straight for us—brace yourself!"

All: AHHHHHHHHH *honda hits the bus*

Passenger 5 (Terrified): "Brace yourselves! He hit us! He freaking hit us!"

The Honda after collided into the bus went into the lagoon.

Passenger 3: "And he still had that nasty stuff playing. What kind of person does this?! This has to be the most messed-up thing l've ever seen!"

Person 2: "Good riddance! I'm sorry, but he almost killed everyone here. That's karma right?”

Passenger 4: "And he had, like, porn playing on full blast! It was crazy! He just plowed through everything in his way and he didn’t stopped to see what he did and plunged into the sea. Good for him for colliding into our bus and that innocent old woman in her lil’ car!"
by EMD F59PHI January 26, 2025
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by 123defines January 27, 2025
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Related Words

r slur controversy

a moment from shinyodd's birthday stream on July 21 2024 where someone from chat asked about a "r slur controversy" as one of the options in a Google doc that was the pinned comment of his Forza motorsport 2024 video happened to say "fat retard" and latter shinny to the replies only find one person was complaining and then went on to explain that if gay people can say the gay f word then Neurodivergents could say the r slur
F-15E strike eagle vs r slur controversy
by whyallreddy January 28, 2025
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The problem of external validity (the "lab vs. world" gap). Controlled studies, especially randomized controlled trials (RCTs), are the gold standard for establishing causality. But to achieve control, you must isolate variables in an artificial, simplified environment. The hard problem is that this very act of control often strips away the real-world context, complexity, and interactions that determine how a treatment or phenomenon actually functions in the wild. What works perfectly in a double-blind RCT might fail or cause harm in a messy society because people aren't lab rats and the world isn't a sterile cage.
Example: A prestigious RCT proves a new antidepressant is highly effective. But the study excluded people with substance abuse issues, chronic pain, or more than two other medications—a large portion of real-world patients. When prescribed widely, the drug shows severe side effects and lower efficacy because it interacts with dozens of variables absent from the lab. The hard problem: The more perfectly you control a study to prove internal causality, the less it can tell you about external applicability. The quest for purity in evidence can render the evidence irrelevant to complex reality. Hard Problem of Controlled Studies.
by Enkigal January 24, 2026
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The inherent and often crippling limitation of the gold-standard scientific method—the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial—when applied to phenomena that are deeply subjective, context-dependent, or allegedly non-physical. The "hard problem" is that the very act of imposing strict laboratory controls can destroy or mask the effect being studied. For instance, the healing intention in energy work may require practitioner-patient rapport, or a psychic's ability might rely on a specific, non-reproducible emotional state. Insisting on sterile, repeatable conditions for everything creates a methodological catch-22: if it can't be measured under our controls, we declare it doesn't exist, but the controls themselves may be the reason it vanishes. This problem exposes the boundary of where the scientific method, brilliant for studying objective, repeatable processes, may become a Procrustean bed for studying consciousness, meaning, or anomalous human experience.
Example: "The university's parapsychology lab kept getting null results for remote viewing. The Hard Problem of Controlled Studies hit when a gifted subject quit, saying, 'You've turned a spiritual connection into a boring spreadsheet task. My 'talent' requires mystery and meaning, not you staring at a clock in a beige room.' The control was the killer."
by AbzuInExile January 31, 2026
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Bias of Controlled Bias

A meta-problem in experimental design where the researchers' attempts to eliminate one form of bias (e.g., selection bias) unintentionally introduce another, often by creating control groups or conditions that are artificially sterile, non-representative, or so constrained they don't reflect real-world complexity. The study becomes a perfectly controlled test of an irrelevant scenario.
Example: A psychology study on stress uses a "controlled" lab stressor (like a timed puzzle) to eliminate life-history variables. But this Bias of Controlled Bias means the results only apply to acute, performance-based stress in weird lab settings, not to the chronic, social, and economic stressors that define real-world mental health.
by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
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The analysis of the organized, codified, and institutionalized systems that a society uses to enforce conformity and punish deviance. This includes laws, police, courts, prisons, military, regulatory agencies, and official sanctions. It is the visible, "hard" architecture of control, backed by the state's monopoly on legitimate violence.
Theory of Formal Social Control Example: A speed limit sign, a traffic camera, a ticket, a court date, and a fine are all components of Formal Social Control. They are explicit, written rules with defined penalties, administered by authorized agents of the state to control behavior (driving speed) for public order.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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