Amanda

937 posts

Amanda

Amanda

@blurbversion

Born/raised in Old Canada. Proud Albertan. This account is (mainly) centered around #cdnpoli and #AlbertaSeparation; but comes with a few side dishes.

Alberta เข้าร่วม Mart 2025
715 กำลังติดตาม237 ผู้ติดตาม
ทวีตที่ปักหมุด
Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
I've had my profile pic as this reading robot for so long, I'm not sure if I want to change it as people might not recognize me lol. As a running gag, people often ask what the robot is reading... So I had Grok help out...
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Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
@RMoosant @globeandmail No need to apologize; I did get confused though. I should probably put that I'm quoting from the article or something beforehand, especially if my post continues past what you can just scroll by.
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Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
@RMoosant @globeandmail And when was that? After the part in quotations? You mean the part I copied and pasted from the article? Hence why it's in quotations... Those aren't my words. ROFL
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Richard Moosant
Richard Moosant@RMoosant·
@blurbversion @globeandmail Are you serious. Trudeau told Canadians that Canada has no national identity, and idiot Canadians still elected the Liberals. Now you’re accusing Alberta of having no national identity? What national identity does Quebec have?
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Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
@AndriaDont99498 This would be both hilarious and awesome at the same time 😂
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Iliftfordoughnuts
Iliftfordoughnuts@AndriaDont99498·
Petition to make x like old school MySpace. We can all learn to code again. Bring back themes. Profile songs. And just to add a little chaos, top 8.
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Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
Well, better late than never, I suppose. Signed the petition today. 😎
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Amanda รีทวีตแล้ว
nuni sas yu
nuni sas yu@Nuni_Sas_Yu·
I have a vision of The Republic of Alberta, where my friends and neighbors are smiling, the anxiety and worry of their financial situation resolved. Where families do not need to use a food bank, as they have enough money to buy the groceries they want. Where businesses start hiring more people to keep up with demand. Where my 88 year old neighbor can keep her apartment that has become unaffordable on her fixed income. Where people have freedoms enshrined in a bill of rights and are no longer scared to speak up. See it. Envision it. Make it real. Work for it, build bridges and make the vision a reality with Alberta Independence.
nuni sas yu tweet media
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Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
@buckeyebettie This is true. Those of us that have been "outsiders" from the get-go already know this. The question is how do we let those "on the inside" know? Because they will eventually hold an opinion that will make them outsiders 🤔
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Brooke
Brooke@buckeyebettie·
Feminism created a "sisterhood" that only accepts you if you think exactly like them.
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Amanda รีทวีตแล้ว
vintagelover
vintagelover@queennaurelia·
I’ve never seen anything more accurate
vintagelover tweet media
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J.K. Rowling
J.K. Rowling@jk_rowling·
No, I don't think 'all people should have the right to decide their own rights', because a pluralistic democratic society can't function that way. Which rights are trans women and 'fans of Pride' missing?
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Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
I haven't heard any for staying, but if Alberta doesn't separate and the mass exodus happens (as it's predicted it will), Alberta will die along with the rest of Canada. The empire known as Canada is currently near death, with no realistic way to "bring it back", or improve from the levels of destruction done. Alberta separation is the only solution to keeping (at least a small part) of Old Canada alive, while making dramatic improvements in quality of life for ALL Albertans. Just my two cents here.
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Rise Of Alberta
Rise Of Alberta@RiseOfAlberta·
Genuine question: has anyone heard a single compelling reason for Alberta to stay in Canada? Because I haven't.
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Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
@DerekRSpeed @Armed_Alberta Ok, Ontario can fund the rest of Canada. No need for Alberta, so we can be on our merry way? Works for me.
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Derek Speed
Derek Speed@DerekRSpeed·
Now explain it to me like I'm 6 years old, after 150 YEARS of "Canada" for some reason the oil in Alberta now belongs to anybody born in Alberta after 1950? What YOU don't realize is, the next 100 years will be ONTARIO Precious Metal footing the bill for "Canada" Get over yourself
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Armed Alberta, Firearm Rights
If you are against Alberta separation: I will listen to what you have to say. I mean that with all sincerity. - you will not be bullied or vilified. Here’s my question for you, please answer it truthfully: Why should Alberta stay within confederation? - what does Alberta gain from that?
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Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
Well, there are atheistic religions, so someone can be a religious atheist. But more importantly, Christians are theists. A theist is not an atheist, nor is an atheist a theist. What you said for that point makes absolutely no sense. But I do agree that "trans identified men" sounds a little off, as someone probably doesn't "identify" as "trans", per se. An accurate definition would be: An adult human male (man), who subscribes to gender ideology, and/or chooses to adhere to some or all of the societal constructs and expectations of femininity. Gender ideology and femininity are not required to be a woman. Those are choices we can make, yes, much like being a theist or an atheist is a choice we made. A woman can only be an adult human female. If you are not all three of those things, you're not a woman. It's really that simple.
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Orchia Minn
Orchia Minn@MinnOrchia·
@jk_rowling @theglassfish13 You can't wish transgender women anything but harm if you continue to use the inaccurate and insulting term "trans identified men" to describe us. Would you call a devout Christian a "Religiously Identifying Atheist?" No? Then don't call us something we are not.
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Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
This answer. To this post. (in the screen shot) Personally, I would rather live in a democracy, with the freedom to openly critique my own government, be able express my own thoughts and opinions, and to do so without the fear of having any of my civil rights or fundamental freedoms being stripped from me. If they're going to "jail me or worse" anyway, then I may as well make it worth my time, eh! Fortis et Liber
Amanda tweet media
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Amanda
Amanda@blurbversion·
🎯
SiriusB@SiriusBShaman

They did not take cursive from the schools because children no longer needed it. They took it because of what it was quietly building in them. Consider what the exercise actually is. A child, six years old, is handed a pen and asked to draw a single unbroken line that becomes a word. The wrist must float. The fingers must hold a living pressure, never quite the same twice, always correcting. The eye must follow the ink forward and trust the hand to finish what it has begun. There is no lifting, no stopping, no starting over mid-word. The loop must close. The ascender must rise and return. The sentence must travel from one margin to the other as a single continuous gesture, and at the end of it the hand must still be steady. Twelve years of this. Every day. Ten thousand small acts of sustained, self-correcting attention, carried out below the level of conscious thought, until the motion belongs to the body and the body belongs to the motion. This is not penmanship. It is the slow construction of an interior form. The hand that has learned to carry a line without breaking it is the hand of a mind that has learned to carry a thought without breaking it. The two are not metaphors for one another. They are the same faculty, trained in the same child, by the same daily discipline. Continuity of the stroke becomes continuity of the reasoning. The patience of the loop becomes the patience of the argument. The commitment to finish a word one has started becomes the commitment to finish a sentence, a paragraph, a life's idea, without reaching for the nearest distraction halfway through. Print is a different creature entirely. Print lifts. Print stops. Print assembles a word out of separate, stamped, interchangeable pieces, each one beginning and ending in isolation. A mind raised only on print learns to think the way print is made, in discrete tokens, in replaceable units, in fragments that can be recombined by any outside hand without the owner noticing the substitution. It is precisely the shape of thought a language model produces. It is precisely the shape of thought a language model can steer. Cursive is kata. This is the whole of it. A form repeated daily, for years, not for the sake of the form but for what the repetition lays down in the practitioner beneath the form. The swordsman does not train kata so that one day he may fight in kata. He trains it so that when the moment comes and there is no time to think, the movement is already inside him, older and deeper than thought, and it rises on its own. Cursive was the kata of the literate mind, the daily quiet drilling of continuity, of patience, of a line held steady under the long pressure of its own length. And the signature it produced at the end, that small flourished mark unique to a single human being on earth, was only the outward proof of an inward form no machine and no other hand could ever reproduce. Take the kata away and the practitioner is left with vocabulary in place of faculty. He can recognise a whole thought when he encounters one. He cannot carry one himself. He can admire a finished argument. He cannot sustain one long enough to close its loop. He begins books he does not finish, sentences he does not end, ideas he abandons the moment the screen in his palm offers him a brighter one. And when the machine begins feeding him tokens in the exact shape his schooling taught him to receive, he meets it with no interior resistance at all, because no interior form was ever built in him to push back with. They removed it quietly, across a generation, and they removed it in the last years before the machines arrived. Twelve years of daily practice in unbroken, embodied, self-authored thought, gone from the curriculum of almost every child in the Western world, just as the instruments designed to complete their sentences for them came online. The hand forgets. The mind, having never been taught the kata, forgets a thing it never knew it had. That is what cursive was. That is what was taken. And that is why the thought of anyone who still writes by hand, in long unlifted lines, remains, quietly, stubbornly, and without their ever needing to announce it, their own. Now the question stands open. What else has been banned, phased out, quietly retired from the curriculum and from common life over these same decades, under the same soft excuses? Mental arithmetic. Memorisation of poetry. Latin. Logic as a formal subject. Map reading. Knot work. The keeping of a commonplace book. The reading aloud of long passages in class. Singing in parts. What was each of those actually building in the child, beneath the surface of the lesson, and whose interest was served by its disappearance?

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