This is why, when given the choice between CS:GO and predecessors, I'll usually pick CS:S. In the CS1.x days I had a "home" server, we BSed and played together all the time, and cheaters / troublemakers were promptly dealt with. Afterwards, I had a CS:S "home" server for years until it shut down a while back. Maybe 2018? I just don't get that same experience from CS:GO.
I've worked in the restaurant industry in the US. It's nothing short of horrifying, and often traumatizing for those involved.
I've seen no overtime pay happen, lies from management to get unemployment claims denied, management not actually firing people but just giving them zero or reduced hours to mess with the unemployment claim process, the VISA fuckery you mentioned, harrassment. Intentional scheduling of conflicting days for people with multiple jobs. Being made to work 7 days a week for long periods of time. Being made to repeatedly close late at night / early in the morning and then open the restaurant the next morning, a few hours later, and work a double. Being made to work while sick (this happens a lot).
A gold comment I heard from one manager was "I don't pay overtime because these motherfuckers already take enough of my money" (referring to the employees). This same guy was shaving time slips to keep them below 40 hours.
Anecdotal, but I'm from the south and learned it as the Civil War. However, I wouldn't be surprised to learn that many schools teach it as the "War of Northern Aggression" given how it's viewed in rural areas.
I've not used 1Password, so I don't know. The Yubico site should be able to tell you if a given thing is compatible.
> What do I do if I lose my YubiKey, are there recovery options?
Nope. Get two of them.
> Do you use it in addition to an authenticator app or instead of?
Sort of both. So if a site supports the use of an authenticator app but not FIDO U2F, I use the Yubico authenticator app. When opened, it stays locked until my Yubikey is tapped against my phone.
Go for it. They're inexpensive, handy, and easy to set up and use. I currently use it for everything from logging in to my laptop and using sudo (via PAM) to SSH (gpg-agent) to logging in to GitHub and other sites (via U2F).
For those wondering, the app was Strava. Through the heat map they publish, it revealed, among other things, patrol routes of military members wearing Fitbits.