What's the most danger you're in on a given day?

What's the most danger you're in on a given day?

250 Piece Survival Gear First Aid Kit

LifeStraw Water Filter for Hiking and Preparedness

250 Piece Survival Gear First Aid Kit

  1. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I shot myself with a nail gun today

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous
    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      To see if you still feel???????/

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      How's the recovery?

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      23gd is the worst tbh
      framing hurts but the pins cause spirit damage

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      repairing tools while they're still plugged into mains, sometimes I forget to unplug the stupid thing after the initial test
      I put my thumb into a pin nailer while the spring was still loaded and got a nice blue thumb for a couple of days.

      I almost put one in my kneecap while walking around with a gas nailer.

  2. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I used to work around high concentrations of Sodium Hydroxide, Chromium and Sulfuric Acid, amongst some other chemicals mixed in with those depending on the tank, each of those we had around 17,000 gallons between 2 main tanks not factoring in rinse tanks. We also shot lead based primer sometimes, and a Chromium based primer daily, and several hundred gallons of MEK/Xylene blend, and numerous 400-500*F ovens, one of which was 4'x8'x80' and open to the elements.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      Used to work at a powdercoater and the oven was supposedly the biggest in the state at the time. 15' tall, 15' wide about 20' deep.
      Pulling out racks with just hot gloves would singe the hair on my legs. It felt like walking into a portal to Hell.

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        I used to work around high concentrations of Sodium Hydroxide, Chromium and Sulfuric Acid, amongst some other chemicals mixed in with those depending on the tank, each of those we had around 17,000 gallons between 2 main tanks not factoring in rinse tanks. We also shot lead based primer sometimes, and a Chromium based primer daily, and several hundred gallons of MEK/Xylene blend, and numerous 400-500*F ovens, one of which was 4'x8'x80' and open to the elements.

        https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/bumble-bee-pay-6-million-over-employee-cooked-tuna-oven-n408721

        I shot myself with a nail gun today

        I read this as “I shat myself” for a split second till I read the rest of the sentence

        • 3 months ago
          Anonymous

          They paid out to the family and then had to replace all their ovens with ones that have release handles inside the oven.

          The dude was pounding on the door until he stopped moving from being cooked

        • 3 months ago
          Anonymous

          what is that thing for, melting the cans?

          • 3 months ago
            Anonymous

            ….did you read the article? It’s literally in the first paragraph.
            >frickin zoomers

        • 3 months ago
          Anonymous

          >6 Million

          Doubt

          Probably more like 300k

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        I used to work around high concentrations of Sodium Hydroxide, Chromium and Sulfuric Acid, amongst some other chemicals mixed in with those depending on the tank, each of those we had around 17,000 gallons between 2 main tanks not factoring in rinse tanks. We also shot lead based primer sometimes, and a Chromium based primer daily, and several hundred gallons of MEK/Xylene blend, and numerous 400-500*F ovens, one of which was 4'x8'x80' and open to the elements.

        also something largley ignored by the industry are crack products of the paints used in the ovens.

        burn in primer contains isocyanate blocky by oxime, liked together there pretty tame low volatile etc. in the oven the MEKO is splitt of which causes the iso to harden the paint, but where does the cancerous oxime go? in the oven air.

        or TDI which is suspected to cause cancer gets split up into 2,4-Toluenediamine which is really cancerous. none of these are listed on a sds or get air monitored.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      My dad used to shovel some kind of a lead powder at a chemical plant. He's a weird son of a b***h and I think the lead has something to do with it.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      >MEK/Xylene blend
      Back in the day I used to have to wash vinyl based ink out of giant silkscreens in a wash station that pumped that shit out of a garden hose...the fact that the reservoir had an electric motor submerged in 25 gallons of the stuff always gave me pause, but the worst that ever happened was the day I splashed a bunch of it on the crotch of my pants and it soaked through to my junk...

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      Gas fumes filled with lead and whirling death blades running around controlled by moronic boomers with too much money.

      None really, just slow death by chemicals. I'll probably have cancer in 10 years or so give or take

      My dad used to shovel some kind of a lead powder at a chemical plant. He's a weird son of a b***h and I think the lead has something to do with it.

      Look into calcium EDTA. It's a chelation substance that draws heavy metals out. Iodine, too, at 50mg/day. If you get cancer, fenbendazole.

      Over 90% of workplace injuries and deaths are men.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        Redpill me on fenbendazole.

        Also, should I take a low dose of Ivermectin? I have heard basically most every person has some parasites in their guts and ivermectin kills them.

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          Yeah you can take ivermectin. You can also microdose a dog with heartworms with ivermectin to kill them. Vets are a bunch of fricking crooks that want you to believe the dog is just going to die horribly within 10 minutes of dosing them so you'll pay $800 for 15 cents worth of arsenic

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            To kill the heartworms, just to clarify

  3. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I sometimes have to go into downtown Minneapolis.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      You get hazard pay for that?

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      You poor fricking soul

  4. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    >What's the most danger you're in on a given day?
    I exist in (current universe):
    asteroid impact
    black hole
    solar flares

    on earth:
    extreme temps
    high winds
    earthquakes
    volcanoes
    disease
    war

    in city:
    crime
    selfish butthole motorists
    trigger happy primates
    us v them
    crazy fricks

    I mean maybe you should ask when am I NOT in danger?

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      in home:
      electricity
      sharp objects
      chemicals
      literally trapped in a woden box that could go up in flames at any given moment

      in body:
      AIDS-cancer
      flesh eating bacteria
      sudden aneurysm or heart attack
      spontaneous human combustion may or may not be a myth
      succumbing to urge of self-deletion

  5. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Once on a lunch break I walked into a KFC in a bad neighborhood unarmed to take a piss.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      Seek help. That's fricked up even for /b/

  6. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I work with LPG so nice and high if I felt like being a moron

  7. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Gas fumes filled with lead and whirling death blades running around controlled by moronic boomers with too much money.

  8. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    None really, just slow death by chemicals. I'll probably have cancer in 10 years or so give or take

  9. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    >What's the most danger you're in on a given day?
    Boomers and non-whites driving

  10. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    My cat might decide he needs to attack something so attacks me. Happens a couple of times every week

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      Why dont you get rid of it?

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      kitty just wants some love and affection you need to toughen up

  11. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    people, i trust machines but not people: idiots and psychopaths are everywhere

  12. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Use to refinish Steinway pianos.
    Used straight Methylene chloride souped up with ammonia to strip the old finish.
    The shit was wicked mean.

    Worked at Pfizer bagging Mecadox and Banmith class a carcinogen.

    Walked roofs hanging gutter for 15 years

    Married a stripper that shot a guy

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Used straight Methylene chloride souped up with ammonia to strip the old finish.

      I think you just found me the ingredient I didn't know about on the old Hydro-Seal carb dip because methylene chloride alone doesn't work as well.

      Do you remember roughly what ratio you used? I miss real carb dip and no one sells it in the US any more.

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        Actually no I dont. That was 20 years ago. Only MC ive found lately is 400+ for 5 gal.

        >Married a stripper that shot a guy

        So a crazy b***h, but more importantly,was/is she good in the sack?

        I married it…she was a freak. Even a bad piece of ass was great

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Married a stripper that shot a guy

      So a crazy b***h, but more importantly,was/is she good in the sack?

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Married a stripper
      This is by far your most dangerous endeavor

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Married a stripper
      savage

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Walked roofs hanging gutter for 15 years
      >Married a stripper that shot a guy
      Go together like a horse and carriage!

  13. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    1. the perpetual desire to off myself by driving head on into a semi or rock wall or something
    2. heart attack
    3. old age

    probably a high risk of skin cancer because of perpetual sunburn throughout childhood, but it won't kill me if I take care of it.

  14. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I stand under cars all day.
    I made the boss buy new lifts since they were over 20 years old.

  15. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I have to cut trees right now. So probably cutting my own hand off or getting flattened by a tree landing on my head

  16. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I work with a lot of Hispanics.

  17. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Driving (city/suburbs. Surface streets and highway - doesn't matter) is by far the most dangerous thing I do daily. Most of what I do at work (and hobbies) involve dangerous processes with electricty, motors, machinery and combustible compounds that I have sole control of safety factors. Driving, on the other hand, involves trusting all the other drivers around me to have similar skills, training and well maintained machines sharing the same dynamic space. And that's a 'Vegas level of gambling and good luck (that for some bizarre reason is acceptable risk).

  18. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I've been about two months back in the office after 2 years working on site and now I want to blow my brains out from Monday to Friday.

  19. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Lethal danger, unironically.
    I work in a german automovitve company that's full of morons. They didn't put emergency stops on the machines for cost reasons, instead putting them all into the power room - which, as required by law, is kept locked...
    Add to that that a fair portion of the programmers here can't even do a hello world right, and you end up wth situations like 100V sparks on a machine that was turned off, shorted and measured to have 0V just a few seconds before, battery testing equipment randomly changing polarities or (just last friday) me working on a battery tester only for the responsible engineer to storm in and shout at me to get away because the battery was known to be unstable - which, as I learned later, he'd told my superior hours before. But that moron apparently didn't know what "risk of spontaneous thermal runaway" meant and thought it had something to do with the temperature control...

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      >They didn't put emergency stops on the machines for cost reasons,

      yup, sounds like German automotive, maybe of the beer-drinking, lederhosen-wearing tribe. Sounds somehow illegal not to have emergency stops on the machine though. Pressing them would get you into trouble for slowing ze Produktion anyways.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous
    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      How? I work a lot in German foods and beverages plants and everything has to be straight up perfect for them to pass inspections. Every staircase has a sign ‘hold handrail’ and every warm faucet has a sign ‘caution hot water’. I need a permit for making coffee, and if someone gets a minor injury with a machine they ban everyone from looking at the machine until they are done taking precautions

      How are they so lenient with car plants?

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        >How? I work a lot in German foods and beverages plants and everything has to be straight up perfect for them to pass inspections. Every staircase has a sign ‘hold handrail’ and every warm faucet has a sign ‘caution hot water’. I need a permit for making coffee, and if someone gets a minor injury with a machine they ban everyone from looking at the machine until they are done taking precautions

        same in german auto can only imagine that guy work at some small zulieferer.

  20. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    People with dementia
    400 pound people that think 1 person can lift them
    Piss with every sickness MRSA, UTI's etc
    Rarely AIDS (Thank God)

    Covid isnt even in the top 10 or 20 imo.

  21. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    get sprayed in the face with chemicals

  22. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I drive 40 tons worth of truck through the country.
    Snow storms, rain, traffic. I stopped caring years ago

  23. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    objectively probably driving to/from work, apart from that just the usual shit that comes with industrial equipment and overhead cranes

  24. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I cut out timber frames from large pieces of wood, usually 50-150lbs and 16'-20' long
    all of our tools are upsized versions of what regular woodworkers use, so they're maybe a bit more dangerous idk
    >circular saw with 16" diameter blade
    >portable bandsaw with 12" of exposed blade (on both sides of the loop)
    >chain mortiser (basically a plunging chainsaw with 1/2" thick chain)
    >hole hog drill for auger bits that has enough torque to snap wrists

    I just work carefully and wear steel toes, it's only dangerous if you're not paying attention or using the tools wrong

  25. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    My boss blaming things on me that are none of my responsibility.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      I got tired of being blamed for every time I notice something is fricked. Now I say nothing and just let it fail.

    • 3 months ago
      Bepis

      Kek. This reminds me, a coworker was driving a Freightliner, actually a rental from Penske. He shuts it off at a stop, comes back outside a few minutes later and the whole cab is up in flames. He was worried about getting in trouble because he didn’t do a good enough pre-trip inspection and they would blame it on him.

      IIRC, I think there was actually a recall on those things and I believe the fire started somewhere in the front, like shitty headlight connections that somehow burn the whole truck to the ground. Or maybe the alternator wiring.

      • 3 months ago
        Bepis
        • 3 months ago
          Anonymous

          uh oh gotta check if the catalytic converter is ok

          • 3 months ago
            Bepis

            I don’t think they have cats, they’re new diesels so they have the stupid DPF and take DEF. You can see the DEF tank covered in diamond plate just in front of the diesel tank.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      YOU RAN OVER FLUBBER

  26. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I frick OP's mom a lot and she has aids so I guess aids

  27. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I risk my life on my job.
    Im a comercial diver. That means that any normal acident on another construction work, can compromise your gas supply and drown you. Atempting a rescue is also far riskier for the descompresion obligations that the diver has, so even if he survive the accident a blood embolism can kill him. There is also very bad visibility eviroments, so be careful when using heavy loads, they could be directly over you. Also things dont only fall downward, they can fall upwards. And dear god you better trust the surface team because sending you the wrong gas can kill you.

    But the thing that kills 1/3 of the divers is pressure diferentials, and its invisible to the eye

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      Larp on homo

      Its spelled commercial. So what outfit do you dive for.

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        >Its spelled commercial.
        long as you're being the spelling nazi what about descompresion, eviroments and diferentials

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        >So what outfit do you dive for
        What? You arent the greatest expresing yourself either

        • 3 months ago
          Anonymous

          Post paystub or be known as a larping Black person for the rest of the thread.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      I was considering the commercial diving career, but I waited on my hands for too long and now I'm too old for it. Went into the marine industry instead. Got any stories of close calls?

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        I just recently finished diving school, so Im new to the industry. Ive heard lots of stories

  28. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Worked in roofing. You can die at any time from any number of things. People throw heavy shit that can land on you. There is the risk of falling. Lots of stress, so suicide is a problem as well. Lots of people getting all fricked up on the job too. So, there is a reason it is ranked as the 4th most dangerous job in the US.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      aren't most roofers on meth too?

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      When I bought my house and started to move in some construction guys were still around and one roofer came up and it was like
      > Yeah man I fell off the roof of the house when I was working on it
      > Woah really? that sucks man
      > Yeah I fell off this really steep side
      > Damn dude, hope you're alright and stuff
      > Yeah I fell off. I almost broke my back.
      > Man, that sucks.
      > I got really hurt, landed right over there.
      > Uh yeaah, Damn sorry dude. Well I better keep moving
      > I fell off your roof

      Like christ dude do you want compensation? It's your job. Sue gravity or something.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        Should've acted real indignant that his company didn't provide fall protection harnesses and then ask for info like his name, boss, etc and say you'd report it to OSHA. He'd disappear for the rest of the job.

  29. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    I do inspections and testing on building mechanical systems, so I'm up and down ladders and on roofs all day, poking my head inside electrical shit, fiddling with pulleys and belts, and god knows whatever kind of chemicals are floating around on the construction sites I visit.

    All this hazard is multiplied by the fact that I work in Miami so all the work is guaranteed to be fricked up thanks to the shit head Cubans here.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      Ever inspected THIS property?

      ?si=mOv4164eJL-WBa5j

  30. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    I'm exposed to tweekers and other colorful folks who like to take drugs on a daily basis
    >t. ER nurse near an Indian res

  31. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    fire from old batteries i keep at home. fire from daisy chained extension cords running my render farm while i'm sleeping.

  32. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    >What's the most danger you're in on a given day?
    Driving to work in a country that's imported millions of browns and yellow.

    t. Canada.

  33. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    falling asleep while a cycle is running, forgetting where i am, crashing the frick out of something.

    >hasn't happened yet
    >probably will
    >1 year on night shift almost to the day
    may god, caffeine, and nicotine get me through this trial

  34. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Breathing in all the fluorine and chlorine fumes from the plastic making process. I plan to escape in a year and hope it's not too late.

  35. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Every time I walk in smell distance of the Walmart tire+auto section I feel like I'm going to pass out from the thick chemical fumes hanging in the air. And the staff working in that area have become visibly and cognatively more moronic over the past 4 years.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      Do you regularly check the coin reject slot in the coin star? I feel like I would regularly be doing that all day checking for silver

  36. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    During my uni years I had a summer job where I worked as a CAD designer for a luxury light fixtures manufacturer. Every now and then I would be required to go to the warehouse to help the workers assembling stuff, do some packaging, and so on. It was nice to assemble the shit I designed, it was very formative and fun, but I digress. It was a family run company, everything was extremely sketchy and in no way OSHA compliant. One day I go to the warehouse and there's this massive light, for a Saudi I would then learn, it was as tall as the whole warehous, gold and glass, it was obscene and secured with a chain to a small hoist. Then it was one of the times I felt most unsafe, because I was fricking sure nobody did one calculation on that beast. I then had to design the structure of a light covered in bubbles of glass, it was massive, only the glass must have weighted 200 pounds. The structure then must have been at least another 100 pounds. When I had to assemble it the base structure was hanging from a chain wrapped around a 2x4 perched haphazardly on a ladder on one side and on one of the warehouse's shelves. As I was working that thing dangled horribly. It was getting late, I'd always had to do overtime because those frickers were always late with the deliveries, they couldn't have some organization to save their lives, I was tired, and when I turned around I struck against the ladder. Luckily the 2x4 didn't slip away, but I could have found myself under a significant amount of steel and glass, so I said frickit, I went upstairs, announced I was going home. Later that day I got a message telling me it was unprofessional of me and they were firing me. I hope they're rotting broken now.

  37. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Quite alot, stonemason who does his own quarrying, working alone all day, moving and splitting very large blocks of stone, the masonry side of things is pretty safe, standard trade dangers, the quarrying is fricking wild, one near death experience a week on average......i do however love it

  38. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    trainman
    probably protecting grade crossings or lacing up air hoses between cars counting on the engineer to not run me over

  39. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    A lot

  40. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    As with most people, driving. Most dangerous jobs generally include driving or existing around traffic. Most likely injuries for police for example are traffic involved

  41. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Blood clot, probably.

  42. 2 months ago
    Smiles from an Angel Soul

    I cart my fiancé around on a toilet I place on my skateboard. She has tourrettes and muscle spasms, falls over and flails often. It comes out of nowhere. I could easily tip her over and break her legs or worse, crush her with the toilet and rupture her organs causing internal bleeding.
    If anything like that were to ever happen to her I would be feeling guilty and feeling extreme guilt is dangerous for me in this season of my life.

    I take that risk though, for her, because she has been through so many traumatic and terrifying, horrible and awful experiences recently, and she appreciates the thrill of it all, and respects my ability to handle and maneuver her while keeping a close eye on her and the road, while managing her flailing and spasms while she is going 5mph through the 'hood on our "ye ole camode-o-dragon".

  43. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Some 26 year old dude just died yesterday "fixing" a boiler and I avoided it by 25 seconds simply because I went out for a smoke break so I'd say I'm pretty safe.

  44. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    I’m a cable/telecom technician; it ranges from super chill to better tell my wife that I love her before climbing this pole. Funnily enough my closest calls have been inside customer’s houses; you meet some real fricking characters

  45. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    [...]

    >Explain fall upwards?
    They float up or being pulled up.

  46. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    carpal tunnel syndrome

  47. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    [...]

    >Explain fall upwards?
    Sometimes things float out of control, and if you are unluky they will drag you with them

  48. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    I frequently have to dig around in telecom vaults and sometimes hornets nests like to show up. you can't tell until you go in and once you go in you have to just pray they leave you alone.

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