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23 votes
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The misogyny myth
30 votes -
Millennials didn’t kill the ‘organization man’ after all. Federal data reveals it was the boomers all along.
37 votes -
In Alabama, white tide rushes on
10 votes -
The number of strikes rippling across the US seem big, but the total number of Americans walking off the job remains historically low
14 votes -
US study: Law abiding immigrants: the incarceration gap between immigrants and the US born 1850-2020
9 votes -
Family who went 'off the grid' in Colorado wilderness died of malnutrition, autopsy finds
42 votes -
In Oakland's crime wave, unique problem hits waterfront: ‘Pirates’
16 votes -
How US labor movement can win at the bargaining table
14 votes -
To mark the 1920 ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the US Constitution, activist Crystal Eastman described the path to full freedom for American women
15 votes -
Insulation R-values and diminishing returns?
I'm looking into insulating the attic above a closed-in back porch & the estimate also included adding additional insulation on top of the blown-in in the attic. What kinds of factors can be used...
I'm looking into insulating the attic above a closed-in back porch & the estimate also included adding additional insulation on top of the blown-in in the attic.
What kinds of factors can be used to think about the value of additional insulation?
For reference, I'm in Florida & keep setpoint around 80 degrees F most of the time when home, and 86 when not home. Power bills in the summer are in the $150-$180 USD range.
It's currently R27 and the quote is to add R11 to bring it up to R38. Code here appears to put new construction at R38 as a minimum, but looking at some charts - it looks like I might have already hit diminishing returns?
This chart I found on "Energy Vanguard" seems to suggest that going from 27 to 38 isn't much of a difference.
Does anyone else have any insight on when those diminishing returns are hit, and if it can make any appreciable difference in power bills? The house itself is comfortable enough, without large swings in temperature.
13 votes -
A warning to employers that US NLRB labor agency has changed the rules governing formation of unions to be easier for workers and harder for employers to oppose
41 votes -
Retired US country singer tries clearing ‘vagrancy problem’ with his low-flying helicopter
20 votes -
Women working in Antarctica say they were left to fend for themselves against sexual harassers
50 votes -
The new (improved?) face of public housing in Maryland
10 votes -
My secret to dating in San Francisco is a spreadsheet
24 votes -
Texas has quietly changed its abortion law - explicitly allowing abortion for premature ruptured membrane and ectopic pregnancy - how it happened
31 votes -
Both parents agree: The child is being harmed. Which one will the US court believe?
26 votes -
One thousand inmates at a Wisconsin prison have been confined mostly to their cells for months, with little explanation
41 votes -
How a five-person team saved a dying woman on a sailboat in the Pacific Ocean
22 votes -
US 5th Circuit Court of Appeal rejects challenge to Mifeprestone abortion pill’s approval, but upholds some restrictions
20 votes -
New Jersey court sides with Catholic school that fired unmarried pregnant teacher
24 votes -
The trees on Xenia Street
6 votes -
More US baby boomers are living alone. One reason why: ‘gray divorce’.
27 votes -
Meet the American nomad prepping for doomsday by living in a homemade cart pulled by sheep and drinking their milk | World Wide Waste
20 votes -
Millions of kids are missing weeks of school as attendance tanks across the US
49 votes -
Montgomery dock brawl memes were part an internal conversation on race
21 votes -
Texas woman injured after hawk drops snake on her
56 votes -
Inside STAR Guides, Utah's abusive anti-porn camp for teens
36 votes -
The historic Gullah-Geechee community is fighting to retain its land and culture in South Carolina
24 votes -
The weirdly lucrative business of searching for old jeans
14 votes -
When help shows up after a house fire, it might be gang members
19 votes -
AP psychology effectively banned in Florida over lesson on sexual orientation, gender identity
64 votes -
First religious charter school in the US faces legal challenge
21 votes -
California hotel workers are on strike because app based staffing agencies punish them for refusing to cross picket lines
28 votes -
US schools lost track of homeless kids during the pandemic. Many face a steep path to recovery
14 votes -
Raleigh, NC hopes to develop plots on future transit corridor into affordable housing and mixed use
9 votes -
Inside American Starbucks' dirty war against organized labor
23 votes -
Study of elite US college admissions data suggests being very rich is its own qualification
55 votes -
US workers are dying in heat wave but Joe Biden administration is still working on federal standards for working in extreme heat
29 votes -
New Florida standards in schools
48 votes -
Idaho drops panel investigating pregnancy-related deaths as US maternal mortality surges
83 votes -
Three Texas plaintiffs testified about the trauma they experienced being required to carry nonviable pregnancies due to the Texas abortion ban
55 votes -
Policeman and reformed criminal who shot him meet face-to-face | Crime Stories
9 votes -
Remote work to wipe out $800 billion from office values, McKinsey says
84 votes -
Why can't we stop homelessness in the US? Four reasons why there's no end in sight
50 votes -
The best way to find out if someone is a Donald Trump voter? Ask them what they think about manhood.
29 votes -
Things to consider when viewing a house, not in regards to inspection concerns?
My spouse and I were recently pre approved for a home loan; this evening, we will be going to look at a house for the first time. This will be our first house, and unless truly extenuating...
My spouse and I were recently pre approved for a home loan; this evening, we will be going to look at a house for the first time. This will be our first house, and unless truly extenuating circumstances arise, we will not be looking to move or sell anytime soon.
There are plenty of existing threads and articles covering things to look for in terms of the state of the house itself, such as foundation cracks, new paint covering mold, water damage, etc; what I am looking for is more a question of things to consider potentially liking or disliking about a home, regardless of its state of repair, that we might not think of until it's too late.
For example, some things I've come across that are important and can't be changed about a house, but I wouldn't have thought to consider if I hadn't seen someone else mention them, include:
- whether we get good cell service when not using wi-fi
- whether the hallway is wide enough to move large furniture through
- what direction the house faces, and subsequently when/where light comes in
What other things might be easy to overlook about a property, but should be taken into account?
35 votes -
Abortion laws are driving academics out of some US states—and keeping others from coming
29 votes -
Nick Offerman’s annual family trip was always to the same lake in Minnesota, where he was taught things that really matter
25 votes