I saw that exact sort of thing happen numerous times. Teachers who habitually pick nemesis students year after year, to single out for uniquely harsh punishment and public derision. From what I've seen myself and heard…
The communist regime being mentioned by name in this discussion is Cuba. I'm not aware of any genocides attributed to Cuba, so where do you get this talk of genocide? Answer: It's your strawman.
> Teaching the kids about the power imbalance directly instead of just decreeing "you have to share" is outstanding teaching, and certainly much more effective. Uh huh, it sounds like you agree with me now? The article…
A man with a sword extolling the virtues of cooperation, empathy, and duty.
> This is article about teaching children to share Lego toys. No, it's about using lego to teach teaching kids about capitalism and power structures. > Exploring power, ownership, and equity in an early childhood…
Not going out of their way to put their kids into ethnically and culturally homogeneous environments.
When I was a kid my mother bought me and my two brothers a 5 gallon bucket of lego at a yardsale. We played with those bricks A LOT but no matter how much we built the bucket never seemed to drop below half full. There…
> " Into their coffee shops and houses, the children were building their assumptions about ownership and the social power it conveys — assumptions that mirrored those of a class-based, capitalist society — a society…
Using deltas for updates is a huge win for Fedora. On distros without delta updates, it's always a real pain in the ass when Wesnoth updates and you have to download half a gig of assets that are probably only a few…
> It works great if you're running a server with standard software from official distro repos that is infrequently updated. It's not frequent updates that screwed you, it's using third party repos. OpenSUSE Tumbleweed…
I specifically did not quote Fauci, so I did not misquote Fauci. I did not quote Fauci because similar sentiments were being expressed by numerous people, including: > “Seriously people — STOP BUYING MASKS!” the surgeon…
I didn't say people are good at sniffing out lies. I said that people are better at sniffing out lies than they are at sniffing out good intentions between those lies. I'll phrase it another way: When you tell a lie,…
Maybe editorialized a bit, though I didn't attribute the quote to Fauci particularly because the fib wasn't coming from only him. A lot of people were saying similar things. And the context, of course, is fear of mask…
An omission really only becomes a lie of omission if somebody would feel deceived upon learning of the omission. Nobody would reasonably feel deceived by your omission of the 0.000000001% cosmic ray hypothesis.
"Stop wearing masks, they don't work."
People are better at sniffing out lies than they are at sniffing out whatever good intentions might have motivated those lies.
I saw that exact sort of thing happen numerous times. Teachers who habitually pick nemesis students year after year, to single out for uniquely harsh punishment and public derision. From what I've seen myself and heard…
The communist regime being mentioned by name in this discussion is Cuba. I'm not aware of any genocides attributed to Cuba, so where do you get this talk of genocide? Answer: It's your strawman.
> Teaching the kids about the power imbalance directly instead of just decreeing "you have to share" is outstanding teaching, and certainly much more effective. Uh huh, it sounds like you agree with me now? The article…
A man with a sword extolling the virtues of cooperation, empathy, and duty.
> This is article about teaching children to share Lego toys. No, it's about using lego to teach teaching kids about capitalism and power structures. > Exploring power, ownership, and equity in an early childhood…
Not going out of their way to put their kids into ethnically and culturally homogeneous environments.
When I was a kid my mother bought me and my two brothers a 5 gallon bucket of lego at a yardsale. We played with those bricks A LOT but no matter how much we built the bucket never seemed to drop below half full. There…
> " Into their coffee shops and houses, the children were building their assumptions about ownership and the social power it conveys — assumptions that mirrored those of a class-based, capitalist society — a society…
Using deltas for updates is a huge win for Fedora. On distros without delta updates, it's always a real pain in the ass when Wesnoth updates and you have to download half a gig of assets that are probably only a few…
> It works great if you're running a server with standard software from official distro repos that is infrequently updated. It's not frequent updates that screwed you, it's using third party repos. OpenSUSE Tumbleweed…
I specifically did not quote Fauci, so I did not misquote Fauci. I did not quote Fauci because similar sentiments were being expressed by numerous people, including: > “Seriously people — STOP BUYING MASKS!” the surgeon…
I didn't say people are good at sniffing out lies. I said that people are better at sniffing out lies than they are at sniffing out good intentions between those lies. I'll phrase it another way: When you tell a lie,…
Maybe editorialized a bit, though I didn't attribute the quote to Fauci particularly because the fib wasn't coming from only him. A lot of people were saying similar things. And the context, of course, is fear of mask…
An omission really only becomes a lie of omission if somebody would feel deceived upon learning of the omission. Nobody would reasonably feel deceived by your omission of the 0.000000001% cosmic ray hypothesis.
"Stop wearing masks, they don't work."
People are better at sniffing out lies than they are at sniffing out whatever good intentions might have motivated those lies.