brotheroflogan

15.5K posts

brotheroflogan

brotheroflogan

@Collin4Congress

My pronouns are "Inevitably Successful in All Circumstances." Married. Father. Disciple of Christ. LDS.

Katılım Nisan 2014
576 Takip Edilen381 Takipçiler
brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
@RLStollar Homes can be much safer on average and still have the most abuse because there are far more homes than schools.
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R.L. Stollar
R.L. Stollar@RLStollar·
"Even the best public schools are significantly less safe than an average home." This is highly inaccurate. The vast majority of child abuse happens at home and is perpetrated by parents.
Abby Libby@abbythelibb_

I was homeschooled, I loved it, and I'm excited to homeschool my children. I was also abused, both physically and spiritually, within that context. Here are some things I think are true at the same time: 📚 The best of homeschooling is far better than the best of public schooling. You simply cannot beat one-on-one, personalized instruction from an adult who deeply knows and loves you. I got this from my mom. It's an extraordinary gift. 📚 The worst of public schooling is better than the worst of homeschooling. A more severe level of educational neglect is possible in homeschooling. A more severe level of social isolation and malformation is possible in homeschooling. The abuse of a parent is more harmful than the same abuse by a teacher, and the impact of parental abuse is magnified within homeschooling. If a child is being abused at school, they can go to their parents for help. If they're being abused at home, they can go to the school for help. At the very least, the hours at school are not spent in the abusive home environment. For an abused homeschooler, there are few accessible places to go for help, and there is no reprieve. Additionally, if sufficiently isolated, the abused homeschooler often has no idea that what is happening is not right. This was my experience with my dad's abuse. However, the positives of my homeschool experience vastly outweigh the negatives. 📚 There are far, far more opportunities for abuse at public (or even private) school than home. From bullying by fellow students to sexual abuse by any of the staff, even the best public schools are significantly less safe than an average home. 📚 A school has hours and hours to indoctrinate your child into whatever they want, teachers can easily convince your child they know better than you, the parent, and you have only a few hours a day to discover, much less fight it. And that's not to mention what your child is exposed to via other children. However, the level of brainwashing possible within homeschooling is higher than public school. Cults typically rely on homeschooling to maintain control of the children. All this is a function of access, control, and time. 📚 Socialization IS a valid concern. There is no reason why a homeschooler must be socially maldeveloped, but I have met plenty who are. It is necessary for homeschooling parents to be intentional about it. One aspect of this I never hear talked about is feminization of boys. I have seen worse feminization of boys who grew up in deeply conservative families than boys coming out of feminism-soaked public school. Why? Lack of male role models. Generally the mother homeschools. Often the father works long hours to make homeschooling possible. The boy may get lots of socialization, but in homeschool groups run largely by homeschool moms, and, by sheer accident, little influence from male authority figures and even less relationship and guidance. 📚 CONCLUSION 📚 It is a MASSIVE mistake to tell yourself, as a parent, that public schooling is so bad that no matter what you do in your homeschool, your child will be better off than a public schooler. No. False. It matters a great deal how you run your homeschool. You, as the parent will make or break your child's education and social development. If you choose to homeschool, you accept a massive responsibility that you ought to take very seriously. I'm of the opinion that it was always your responsibility, and it's not good to abdicate that responsibility to the government, but I see far too many homeschool parents, especially those in this post-COVID, post-LGBTQ, social-media influenced homeschooling boom being far too dismissive of all the valid concerns associated with homeschooling. If you homeschool, it is in your power to massively bless and advantage your child and launch them far further than public school ever could. But it is also in your power to deeply harm your children and hamstring their futures, so please take care.

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brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
@jmillincook I've been there. Express tons of confidence. Lots of "wow, you sure are strong!" Does wonders for a man. If women only knew what power they have ...
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Count your Jam Blessings 🍓
What advice would you give a young father who is overwhelmed as the sole provider to take care of his young family? Especially when he has worked so hard to prove himself in his career, and yet he isn’t seeing the fruits of his labors quite yet? Asking as the wife 🥺
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brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
@ednewtonrex Yes. I have found it both useful and harmful at work. There is danger of cognitive off-loading, especially for our youth, but adults as well.
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Ed Newton-Rex
Ed Newton-Rex@ednewtonrex·
Pretending AI is useless will get you likes, but is one of the most misleading things you can say about the technology. It is obviously useful, which is why so many people use it. There are very real reasons to object to AI. Focus on those, instead of easily disprovable claims that it doesn’t work.
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brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
Conscious experience is a miracle we're witnessing every moment. Every time you see the color green, it's a miracle. Even feeling pain is a miracle. Why should matter be conscious? Is the table conscious? If not, why not? Because it's not a brain?
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brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
@RigdonNancy3 Do you expect 100%? Not judging, but I had to let go of perfection for prophets. I do think they still get revelation. I know that I've had true revelation, but I'm also a very imperfect person.
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Nancy Rigdon
Nancy Rigdon@RigdonNancy3·
@Collin4Congress I get second opinions with dealing with doctors. I acknowledge, there are lots of great teaching in general conference. I’d even venture to guess, at least 95% of talks are great, things most of Christianity would accept.
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Nancy Rigdon
Nancy Rigdon@RigdonNancy3·
Prophets are wrong, parents are wrong, teachers are wrong. This stuff is frustrating. Apologetics of the church are teaching me that the church has no value. My faith is my own responsibility, fine. God “one true church” sure does suck.
Troy Sariah@BlackBlessedLDS

@RigdonNancy3 I said parents AND leaders. “Our faith and understanding is our responsibility alone and no one else’s to blame.”

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brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
@ASFleischman And I have to remember that often building an argument but leaving out the conclusion is the most persuasive.
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Andrew Fleischman
Andrew Fleischman@ASFleischman·
A thing I learned a while back is that when your opponent does something bad, if you overreact, the judge will likely tone down his planned response. And if you underreact, a judge might very well amp it up. Being calm helps your client.
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Gary Simon
Gary Simon@designcoursecom·
Anyone who thinks AI is a bubble is not actively developing and working with it.
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brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
@RigdonNancy3 The person with the map can occasionally misinterpret the map, but they have the map. The prophet has probably been right far more often than you think.
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Nancy Rigdon
Nancy Rigdon@RigdonNancy3·
Growing up, I was taught that if a prophet speaks from the pulpit, it was as if Jesus Himself was saying it to us. Nowadays, after prophets have been proven to misinterpret and make mistakes, I have a hard time seeing the value of a prophet. Someone help me please.
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brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
@JamesonCamp "then it clicked" and I had a ton of data and talking points at my fingertips immediately to sell this dystopian idea to the public. Our children will never see the stars. Just bury them in concrete already.
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James Camp 🛠,🛠
James Camp 🛠,🛠@JamesonCamp·
$5,000 an hour. for sunlight. from space. a startup putting 50,000 mirrors in orbit to sell sunlight anywhere on earth I thought this was the dumbest idea Ive ever heard then it clicked - firefighting aircraft get GROUNDED every night at sunset. pilots cant see terrain. fires burn unchecked for 10 hours straight. and heres whats wild - water drops are 60% more effective at night. cooler temps. less wind. but nobody can fly. light up the fire line from orbit. let them work. the US spends $3-5B a year fighting wildfires. this is a rounding error. - a single late frost in Napa or Florida citrus can wipe out an entire season. $854M in frost losses last year alone. but the crazy part - the real buyer isnt even the farmer. its the crop insurance company trying to avoid a $500M payout by spending $50k on a few hours of orbital sunlight - fog costs London Heathrow over $100M a year in delays. fog burns off when sunlight hits the ground. you speed that up by 30 minutes and the value per hour is $500K-$1M. $5k/hour is pocket change - military forward operating base at night? forget night vision goggles. just light up the whole compound from space and go get it - 4 million people above the Arctic Circle live in MONTHS of total darkness. depression. productivity drops. everything slows down. you could give entire communities twilight during polar night - 150,000 babies die or get brain damage every year in developing countries from jaundice because the cure is literally just light and they dont have electricity for it. beam it down from orbit. no power grid needed. I went down this rabbit hole for an hour and every use case is more insane than the last 260,000 people from 157 countries on the waitlist. each dropping $1,000-5,000. Sequoia backed them - first space investment since SpaceX. the Air Force already signed a contract. mirrors weigh 35 lbs and theyre the size of a basketball court. 4-10x brighter than a full moon. built by a 28 year old ex-SpaceX engineer. this went from "dumbest thing Ive ever seen" to holy shit in about 10 minutes...
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Matt Fradd
Matt Fradd@RealMattFradd·
Out NOW: Catholic apologist, Joe Heschmeyer joins me to absolutely DESTROY Mormonism (in a nice way).
Matt Fradd tweet mediaMatt Fradd tweet mediaMatt Fradd tweet mediaMatt Fradd tweet media
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brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
@j_divis The idea was that you should have a temple where there's a stake.
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James Divis
James Divis@j_divis·
Thoughts on a temple ship that could visit all the areas that don’t have temples?
James Divis tweet media
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brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
So, I keep thinking that we're richer than our ancestors, but why do my wife and I have to both have stressful full time jobs just to pay our mortgage, food and crappy, used cars? Seems like we could cut way back on electronics, for a start.
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Sen. Bernie Sanders
Sen. Bernie Sanders@SenSanders·
Call me a radical, but NO. We should not be replacing teachers in America with robots. We should attract the best and brightest in our country to become teachers and pay them the decent wages that they deserve.
Headquarters@HQNewsNow

Melania: The future of AI is personified. It will be formed in the shape of humans. Very soon, artificial intelligence will move from our mobile phones to humanoids that deliver utility. They fit well. Imagine a humanoid educator named Plato

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brotheroflogan
brotheroflogan@Collin4Congress·
So, can I sue Twitter for addicting me?
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ThePrimeagen
ThePrimeagen@ThePrimeagen·
I admit it Typescript is ok
notch@notch

@ThePrimeagen I heard you confessing to using TypeScript in your recent python video (which earned you a subscription, btw!). As a fellow TypeScript user, I wouldn't worry. Surely nobody uses an LLM to generate typescript instead of javascript, right? What would be the point? Right? .. right?

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