@camelfinance I think people can confuse being right as being arrogant. Honestly, we all have some unhealthy pride, but no, you do not stand out. IN fact, when you care less about being right than being on the right side of the trade, it shows some humility.
@camelfinance i think the most important part is living and sharing a real, active faith with love for people. If one does not fear getting dirty by being among the sheep, he will turn out well!
Off topic post but I would appreciate some opinions:
Background:
1) I grew up extremely poor
2) that is no longer the case
3) I am a recent father
I was going to send my child(ren) to private school because I think it is natural to want to give them the best opportunity.
I recently saw some private school kids, one of them nonchalantly said their ideal weekend was to go to hop over to Monaco and maybe ride a hot air balloon.
I realised in this moment, I did not want my kid to grow up that sheltered. Keep in mind my culture is not having an activated copy of windows and despite being a pro trader, I still use the free version of trading view. Worlds apart.
How do I navigate this? Is it as simple as teaching them how the world works? Am I overthinking it and they will just copy me, with my 20 quid trainers with holes in and a 'if my feet get wet I will dry them' attitude? Do I embrace the lucky situation I found myself in and spoil the kids - is there a happy medium somewhere in between?
How much is nature vs nurture? Is a casual approach to wealth better than low vibration / scarcity type mindset? Should I focus on encouraging them to put a dent in the universe? Does it even matter? Maybe he just lives that life and never needs to feel the struggle I did?
Private school applications need to be made in around 6 months time, so I need to figure this out by about August.
Would appreciate your thoughts
@mattvanswol@DanGreenMN Don't leave because there are problems in the Church. Imagine if the apostles had left because they saw there were knuckleheads among their number. How many times did one of the other of them say or do something stupid or ill-informed?
@DanGreenMN Statements like this from people who profess to be Christians often make me wonder if I made the right choice going back to church.
It is incredibly discouraging to read stuff like this.
I hope the Left has not infiltrated the Christian church...
As a Christian, it is devastating to watch other Christians try to justify what happened to Renee Good.
We have the video. We have eyes.
Trust your eyes (and more importantly) trust your soul. We are built with a moral compass to recognize right/wrong.
This was 100% wrong.
48,000+ Islamic terror attacks since 9/11 alone in 70+ countries in no way proves that Islam is not peaceful. You know why? Because I could point to three guys who play soccer with me named Ahmad, Muhammad, and Mohammed, and they are very sweet and fun. This proves that Islam is peace. Good night, the West. You had a good run.
@ursusdadguy@WallStreetMav Abu Bakr lived in a completely different time with completely different realities. One early ruler doesn’t get to define 1,400 years of Muslim belief.
@ninnodinero1@WallStreetMav If I can’t trust an apostle of a founder to get the right interpretation, then the religion is entirely subjective and there is no right or wrong interpretation: a terrorist‘s interpretation is just as valid as a peaceable Muslim’s.
@Soul_Of_Satoshi@WallStreetMav If the original founder's interpretation is in support of terrorist methods, then the creed is at fault as well as the terrorists. Fortunately, not all Muslims follow Mohammad's Islam. Islam is not a religion of peace. Read the Quran and study history.
@_theonlyplanet@WallStreetMav Your first sentence is true! Most Muslims are not terrorists. If the original founder's interpretation is in support of terrorist methods, then the creed is at fault as well as the terrorists. Not all Muslims follow Mohammad's Islam, but Islam is not a religion of peace.
@WallStreetMav Most Muslims condemn terrorism and live their faith peacefully. Reducing Islam to terrorism erases nuance, spreads misinformation, and fuels prejudice.
@ninnodinero1@WallStreetMav If the original founder's interpretation is in support of terrorist methods, then the creed is at fault as well as the terrorists. Not all Muslims follow Mohammad's Islam. Islam is not a religion of peace. Read the Quran and study history.
@bendollzz_@WallStreetMav Most Muslims are not terrorists, but it is a religion that if followed fully according to its founder's interpretation, promotes terrorism and pedophilia. Islam itself is evil, but fortunately not all Muslims follow it fully.
I can’t agree with that, and I won’t endorse attacks on an entire religion or its followers.
Islam is a world religion with nearly two billion people across every continent most of whom are ordinary civilians who condemn terrorism and are often its victims. Terrorism is committed by specific extremist groups and individuals, not by religions themselves. Conflating the two erases those distinctions and fuels collective blame, which historically leads to more violence rather than less.
@SatoshiSagamo2o@FlareBank If he sells, 10% goes to the holders of BANK who remain. That is built in. Make sure you know how the system works before you criticize
We've had a lot of questions on the protocol and how it works so we put together a short video explainer series.
Part 1: General Overview, What is FlareBank?
💥 119,085 traders were liquidated , the total liquidations comes in at $416.14 million.
As long as this keep on happening, you will not need another reason for why the market dumps.
Always look for the motive. Liquidation is always one of the top motive.
@FV887606 The best way to have a healthy neighborhood/environment is for there to be more property owners because we naturally take care of what we have over what is publicly owned
@FV887606 The problem with socialism itself in my opinion is that it takes away the opportunity for individual, loving care between people (replacing it with the state) while denying the laborer the fruit of his labor.