Bishop David Sixsmith

4.4K posts

Bishop David Sixsmith

Bishop David Sixsmith

@Gitgitgitgit

I'm Mr Ludlow, blah blah blah. (me/myself/I)

가입일 Ağustos 2021
88 팔로잉147 팔로워
Pierre d'Alancaisez (is) Verdurin
@Gitgitgitgit The Stasi brought many benefits to the stability of East German society. It's helpful to bear this in mind precisely to remember that the solution lies entirely elsewhere.
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SPEAK UK
SPEAK UK@speakukorg·
The UK has reached the point where adults are being asked for ID or a credit card to access ordinary parts of the internet on their iPhone. No, really.
SPEAK UK tweet media
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Bishop David Sixsmith
Bishop David Sixsmith@Gitgitgitgit·
@verdur_in I agree there's a balance of positives and negatives. But the positives are omitted in the original post, and that's a bad thing.
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Pierre d'Alancaisez (is) Verdurin
@Gitgitgitgit The same technology that’ll control your access to information and curtail your communication at the whim of the state-tech nexus. This is not the solution.
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Bertha Dalziel (high value man)
Lads: i’m wanting to go away with a couple of people and a couple of kids to somewhere in between Edinburgh and London. Somewhere with lovely nature. All ideas welcome, thank you in advance. 🙏
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Bertha Dalziel (high value man)
She does indeed sound annoying and very irresponsible but this guy is not telling the full story. Why on EARTH would an experienced hiker take someone inexperienced on a hike in the grand canyon in July without doing practice runs to gage their competence and fitness first?!
James L. Nuzzo, PhD@JamesLNuzzo

The following is a true story from my life, which is related to the contents of this article in The Guardian: In July 2009, I hiked part of the Grand Canyon with an ex-girlfriend, who I will call Sara. Sara and I were both in our 20s, and we were accompanied by four high school-aged relatives/friends. The plan was to head off early in the AM to hike the 10 miles down, stay over night at the bottom, and then hike the 10 miles up the next day. During the hike down, Sara's walking was slow, and she was pre-occupied with taking nature photos at every possible opportunity. Her slow walking was a problem because, although we started early, it was July and the sun was starting to beat down on us--something that would only becoming progressively worse with more time on the trail. As I recall, everyone in the group recognised Sara's slow walking as a problem. Everyone but Sara understood that we needed to get to the bottom of the Canyon sooner rather than later, because we were in the sun doing strenuous exercise, and we didn't have endless supplies of water. It was also the first time any of us had hiked the Grand Canyon. Sara continued her slow walking and picture taking. At multiple points, we offered to carry Sara's bag for her so that her load would be lighter and she could walk more easily. Sara refused to give up her bag. She wanted to prove that she could do the hike without help. If my memory is correct, around the 5 mile mark, the group decided to split up. I stayed with Sara, and the high schoolers went on ahead of us, walking at their "fast" (i.e., appropriate) pace. Sara continued to walk slow, and signs of extreme fatigue / heat exhaustion were setting in. Sara became unwell physically and mentally. Again, I offered to carry her bag for her. Again, she refused. Though I was fit, I was also starting to feel unwell. In fact, I don't think I've ever felt that close to health exhaustion in my life. I was also not in a good place. Making matters worse, we ran out of water, and there were no water stations for the remainder of the hike. The key reason that why we ran out of water was Sara's slow walking, which continued to expose to the sun. Moreover, when we ran out of water, we weren't even close to the end. As I recall, we were still about 2-3 miles away from the end when we ran out of water, and we didn't even know where the end was because we were unfamiliar with the trail. Also, by that time, there wasn't a single soul left on the trail--no one walking down or up. We were alone. It was an awful experience. At one point, Sara had basically given up; she sat down in the middle of the path and wouldn't move. Eventually, perhaps through motivational efforts, Sara continued walking and we got to the end. When we got to the bottom, the high schoolers told us that they were so worried about us that were thinking about calling a rescue party to look for us. We slept over night at the bottom and then hiked the 10 miles back up the next day. Remarkably, after all that, Sara still would not allow anyone to carry her bag on the way up. Sneakily, when she was not looking, we would take things out of her bag to lighten her load. Bottom line: Sara's stubbornness, her desire to prove how strong and independent she was, her lack of adequate fitness, and her unwillingness to listen to people who understood nature, physiology, and physical fitness better than her, almost killed her...and me. She caused the high schoolers significant distress, and had they stayed with us, she might have also put them at increased health risk. During the hike, Sara exhibited a set of behaviors that I wanted nothing to do with moving forward. The "alpine divorce" can work in both directions but for different reasons.

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Bishop David Sixsmith
Bishop David Sixsmith@Gitgitgitgit·
@TheCriticMag Surely the only important thing is whether or not Christianity is true, and this is totally independent of culture
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The Critic
The Critic@TheCriticMag·
“If four times as many young people were really going to church, people would notice. Priests would shout it from the pulpit and young people would discuss it on social media” thecritic.co.uk/we-need-a-loud…
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existentialgoof
existentialgoof@existentialgoof·
It would be nice if you would not be so dishonest about assisted dying. People aren't demanding that the state assist them in death, they just don't want the government to STOP them from dying. If suicide prevention powers were drastically curtailed, then the demand for doctor assisted suicide might disappear entirely. It would be interesting to know what your argument is (if you have one) against simply letting people kill themselves without them having to appeal for mercy from the medical gatekeepers of death.
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Bishop David Sixsmith
Bishop David Sixsmith@Gitgitgitgit·
@BertDalziel Yes indeed. I don't understand why people think this polarisation of everything helps. Personally, I think if I had a diagnosis of a month of unbearable pain, and then death, I should be legally allowed to choose immediate death. Does that make me a monster?
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Bertha Dalziel (high value man)
someone who holds the above position might reasonably take exception to being told they must therefore think young girls being killed by the state like this is something they think is right.
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Bertha Dalziel (high value man)
So, I take the point assisted dying probably won’t work in practice because it’s impossible to police effectively and you can’t hand the power of life and death to the state, but this seems to me very uncharitable of most assisted dying advocates.
Kathleen Stock@Docstockk

The British defenders of assisted death respond to this sort of case by saying it couldn’t happen here. But I’d like to know what exactly they think is wrong with it.

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Bishop David Sixsmith
Bishop David Sixsmith@Gitgitgitgit·
@ShipleyWrites Much to agree with in this, I don't watch drama to be preached at. But I'm not sure it's fair to include Black Mirror, many episodes of which are fantastic viewing.
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David Shipley
David Shipley@ShipleyWrites·
As much as shows like ‘The Capture’ are sinister, they are also pathetic and hilarious. (Link below)
David Shipley tweet media
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Ben Sixsmith
Ben Sixsmith@BDSixsmith·
@BMcGrewvy Yeah I do feel bad for them here. I think they should have been a bit more sceptical about their own data but the data is the data.
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Ben Sixsmith
Ben Sixsmith@BDSixsmith·
The "Quiet Revival" report that the Bible Society released on the back of polling from YouGov has been withdrawn on the basis of unreliable data thetablet.co.uk/news/bible-soc…
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Lucy Sixsmith
Lucy Sixsmith@LucySixsmith·
On the Quiet Revival, or the Quiet Revival That Wasn't, I do find myself wondering how many people genuinely like Gen Z and how many people kind of prefer the exciting story *about* Gen Z
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