Best products from r/tuesday

We found 22 comments on r/tuesday discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 29 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

1. A Renegade History of the United States

    Features:
  • 115 in 1 Screwdriver Kit: 115 in 1 Mini Screwdriver Set includes 98 types of screwdriver bits, 1 handle, 1 extension rod, 1 flexible extension shaft, 1 hexagonal sleeve, 1 anti-static tweezers, 3 plastic pry crowbars and 6 triangle pry tools, 1 screw memory mat, 1 magnetizer/demagnetizer, 1 SIM card pin, 1 suction cup.
  • Flexible Shaft & Ergonomic Non-Slip Handle: The 105mm extra extension rod to lengthen the handle, easy to reach narrow places. A flexible shaft is great for stereo work as well as other large electronics where the screws are not on the surface. Ergonomically designed electronic screwdriver set with non-slip handle is comfortable to longer hold.
  • Portable and Easy to Carry: Only 1.2 pounds light weight. This magnetic screwdriver set is equipped with a plastic storage case that is shockproof and is easy to open, it can be put in your bag. Perfect weight & compact design for easy carrying. In addition, a magnetic pad is equipped, which is used for collecting small screws, avoid the screws missing. Perfectly eliminating the possibility of missing screws.
  • Premium Quality Material: Our screwdriver bit sets are made of chrome-vanadium steel, strong hardness, durable and precise, will not damage the devices. All bits are magnetic, stably connect with the handle.
  • Small Screwdriver Set for Home Improvement and Daily Needs: Different kind of specialty screwdriver bits are carefully selected by ROADTEC to meet your all needs, excellent for repairing or opening iPhone, Android Phones, iPad, PC, Laptops, Electronics, Jewelers, Eye Glasses, Watches, Kid Toys, Home Appliances and Nintendo Switch, PS4, Xbox or Game Console.
A Renegade History of the United States
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5. Melting Pot or Civil War?: A Son of Immigrants Makes the Case Against Open Borders

    Features:
  • 【Automatic Recording and Shut Down】Saving your time is our goal. With the default setting, turn on the car engine, the dash cam turns on and enters the recording state automatically; Turn off the engine, the dash cam will save the video files on the TF card in segment and shut down. It is very convenient for your daily driving.
  • 【Looping Recording】With the loop recording mode, when the storage limit is reached on the memory card, the dash cam will continuously erase the old unlocked videos when it records new one. (Note: All locked video files on the memory card remain protected, and will not be deleted during Loop Recording.)
  • 【Built-in G-sensor Chip】This Byakov dash cam built-in high-sensitivity G-sensor chip with collision detection(the protect level should be turned on in the system setting). When the car is “hit”, the dash cam will automatically record and lock the videos that prevents the videos from being overwritten even in loop recording.
  • 【170°Super Wide Angle and 1080P High Quality Picture 】This dash cam employs a 170°super wide and 1080P FHD lens. It can deliver clearer videos and images, capture more details and reduce the blind zone in the recording, keep your safe and meet every driver's recording demands.
  • 【24 Hours Parking Monitoring】Supports 24 hours parking monitoring function. The dash cam will enter the all-day monitoring state after the parking monitoring function is turned on in the system setting whether your car engine is on or off. The camera will turn on and record automatically when it feels shaking.
Melting Pot or Civil War?: A Son of Immigrants Makes the Case Against Open Borders
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Top comments mentioning products on r/tuesday:

u/DoctorTalosMD · 5 pointsr/tuesday
> You guys rule

D

> hatred for increased taxes.

Well, I for one care considerably less about net revenue than how that revenue is extracted. I'm fine -- well, less not fine than I would be otherwise -- if the government extracts another $200 billion in revenue so long as it transitions the whole tax system to a consumption base, or raises it via a carbon tax.

> free improvements to quality of life

> I understand in a large society, it's not logical to want to hoard every penny for myself then demand the government give me everything I want for free.

I'm not entirely sure what you mean here. Pretty much the only departments of government I would countenance expanding right now would be defense and state (possibly education or transportation, depending on how federalist we are). Nothing is really "free," such that, even if you're not directly paying the taxes to finance it, the incentive effects -- particularly if we're talking higher corporate taxes -- of somebody else paying those taxes is going to effect you in the form of lower wages or higher prices. It's a careful calculus, therefore, when we must way the value of social programs.

Personally I'm not really in the business of asking the government to give me, or anyone else, free stuff. I would of course support certain improvements to the welfare system, some of them rather expensive: I'd quite like to see the Earned Income Tax Credit expanded, the Child Tax Credit made fully refundable, TANF turned into a full-blown unemployment insurance program, and comprehensive jobs-training programs established, but all this is a drop in the bucket compared to the real drag on federal deficits. The real problem is entitlements: without reform, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are set to incur $210 trillion in unfunded liabilities over the next seventy-five years.

If we can privatize Social Security, and look at alternative methods of healthcare delivery, we can achieve many of the same welfare goals as current programs with a great deal less long-run expenditure. A Universal Catastrophic coverage program or universal premium support, for instance, would drastically lower long-run costs, with just about the same budget impact today as current practices. Ultimately when it comes to healthcare, the greatest issue is in delivery policy, and how regulations effect pricing.

My real problem is marginal phaseout rates that can create welfare cliffs that prevent people from working. I'm more than willing to trade higher social assistance spending for entitlements privatization, and higher net tax revenues for reduced penalties on investment and lower long-run outlays.That most of my policy prescriptions tend to involve cuts in taxation, spending, and deficits is a preference, but not a hard rule.

(But don't worry, my real anti-government side comes out when we start talking housing and trade regulations).

> Christianity

I'm thoroughly agnostic, so I don't have to worry about that. I do, however, view Christianity as a wonderful force for social cohesion, such that government should incorporate those portions of Christian moral teaching which foster civil society, but not involve itself in imposing religious doctrines on its people. We do, after all, have a First Amendment, and as other posters have pointed out, it's not exactly charity if someone's forcing you to do it.

On a completely unrelated note, Peter Brown's Through the Eye of the Needle is absolutely fantastic if you're interested in the early development of Christian doctrine on wealth (or Late Roman stuff generally).
u/geeoph · 16 pointsr/tuesday

> Ted Halstead, who leads the Climate Leadership Council, applauded the new legislation. His group is pushing another proposal to tax carbon dioxide emissions and to return the money to taxpayers, an effort backed by former Republican political leaders including former Treasury Secretary James Baker and former Secretary of State George P. Schultz.

> Halstead said in a statement that the bill “provides a clear proof of concept that a conservative-inspired carbon dividends framework can attract bipartisan support.”

If you haven't before, watch Ted Halstead's TED Talk on this carbon tax + dividends solution that his current group endorses, as mentioned: A climate solution where all sides can win.

Ted Halstead co-founded the New America Foundation, a non-partisan think tank, and is co-author of the book The Radical Center: The Future of American Politics, which I also highly recommend!

u/CenterRightInEurope · 3 pointsr/tuesday

I’m not an expert on foreign policy by any means, but I was a fan of Special Providence: American Foreign Policy and How It Changed the World by Walter Russell Mead. Mead taught Foreign Policy at Yale and the books provides a decent base for Foreign Policy over the history of America.

Link

The book as good reviews pretty much anywhere you look. Here’s a link to some, but feel free to look up more.

u/Edgy_Atheist · 5 pointsr/tuesday

I think Reihan Salam has made a pretty good case that unless you are very confident in the upward mobility of low-skilled immigrant's children, it's probably best the U.S. pursue high-skilled immigrants more exclusively and the country back away from the status quo of heavily family-based policy. If you're interested there's a book he recently wrote on the topic, but I'd generally agree there's a reason most lasting low-skill immigration regimes are like the harshly enforced ones you can observe in Singapore and Qatar.

u/poundfoolishhh · 2 pointsr/tuesday

A Renegade History of the United States is a book I recommend to everyone. Lent it to my lefty father, who then lent it to my Trumpy brother. They both loved it.

u/veriworried · 3 pointsr/tuesday

The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy is always a good source/jumping off point. A more recent book is Scruton's How To Be a Conservative. There's also Oakeshott's On Being Conservative and Rationalism in Politics essays. Modern american conservatism imports some libertarianism, for that I would read some Hayek, econlib has a number of his essays and there's this essay that goes over his thoughts, and relates it to traditionalism. Hope that helps.

u/oilman81 · 5 pointsr/tuesday

One of the best books written on the theory of money, its evolution, and the role of Central Banks

https://www.amazon.com/Money-Mischief-Episodes-Monetary-History/dp/015661930X

Written by who you'd think

u/Autarch_Severian · 9 pointsr/tuesday

Oh dear Lord.

This looks like the same sort of hyperbolic screeching as Jane Meyer's Dark Money. Some of these muckrakers need a heavy dose of Hanlon's Razor.

u/EatherSpren · 2 pointsr/tuesday

I think foreign aid has it's place, but people should be wary of the limitations of conventional aid in helping people in the long term.

Note: I am not advocating cutting foreign aid.

u/Lighting · 5 pointsr/tuesday

Nope. Read up on Tom DeLay who was a key figure during this time of RINOing out many conservatives.