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Claire Keane
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ooops I made a production blog
What are they looking at?
A fun thing about fiction with large casts of characters is that sometimes you'll have a Spicy Bananas moment where every single character has an identical yet wildly atypical experience of some very mundane thing, and slowly you realise that the author isn't Making A Point, they just think that's normal.
כִּֽי־קָר֥וֹב אֵלֶ֛יךָ הַדָּבָ֖ר מְאֹ֑ד בְּפִ֥יךָ וּבִֽלְבָבְךָ֖ לַעֲשֹׂתֽוֹ
For it is very close to you, this thing; in your mouth and in your heart, to observe it.
A set of gifts for my partner's rabbis. You can check out more of my work on insta!
zi*nsts don't touch my post thanks
I saw a post about the antichrist and the fact that fundamentalist christians believe it'll come to end all wars. Is this true? Ans why would people belive this, like where does it come from)? I've never heard of it
Here is the post in question: https://www.tumblr.com/glacecakes/810621283626860544/hey-so-i-still-see-people-utterly-baffled-by-how?source=share
As a disclaimer, I don't know a lot about fundamentalist belief. That said, I would rate this post as basically true but unhelpfully sensationalist. I'm unfamiliar with this belief, but yes, it some people believe this or something like it. This is the end time variant of the "new world order" conspiracy theory, which political scientists warned in the early aughts could have drastic effects in the future due to right wing populism. That prediction has come true. This belief has outsized influence in American politics. For example, the Military Religious Freedom Foundation has received over 200 complaints from troops who were told that the strikes on Iran were necessary as part of God's plan.
I really dislike this person's framing, which asks you to be aware and freaked out without giving you anything you can do about it. They also frame it as if you can't argue with these people ("they'll think you're the antichrist"). We live in a time of rampant conspiracy theorizing. It's important to know that you don't have to abandon people to their conspiracy theories, especially if they've just started to be drawn in. This article from MIT discusses how.
There are people who will be too deep to be reasoned with. That doesn't mean all of them are and I remain committed to compassionate discourse as means of making change. If you don't know any of these people, all you can really do is keep voting for candidates that don't believe wackadoo nonsense and aren't driven by right-wing populism. Those are my main points, but I'm still going to get into the nitty gritty of how OP is overblowing the prevalence of this belief.
23% of the US population is evangelical. That gives them a majority as any singular Christian group, but mainline Protestants, historically Black Protestant and Catholics are 35% of the US population. These beliefs are fringe and most people find them strange and off-putting. 15,000 notes in agreement with this person don't prove that it's a majority belief, it proves that it's widespread. The notes aren't a randomized survey of diverse people, rather it's spreading among people who already have this experience (confirmation bias). Overstating how many people believe this isn't helpful. As the MIT article points out, most people don't like to be extremists, and extremists usually overestimate how common their beliefs are. OP is engaging in and supporting that overestimation in a way I think is unhelpful.
On the other hand, expressing disapproval and unfamiliarity about people's extreme beliefs is helpful! it can be as simple as like, "Wow that sounds scary, where did you hear that?" or "Weird, I've never heard that." Honestly, just being mildly disapproving and disengaging in someone's conspiracy can help keep them from continuing down that line, if you have a close and trusting relationship. What's not helpful is large amounts of fact-checking, freaking out, getting angry or anything else that makes people double down.
Although this is a fringe belief, it does wield a lot of power in politics right now. The problem isn't really that some people believe this, it's that it's a belief that's useful for manipulating people, which is what politicians are doing. Here are my favorite videos on the religious right's infiltration of politics:
Samantha Bee - "The Religious Right"
Some More News - "How (And Why) The Right Stole Christianity"
Some More News - "How The Right Sold Christianity"
(As a heads up, Some More News is quite crass.)
Tl;dr: Yes, some people believe this. It's weird that they do and we should tell them that (nicely).
Thanks for the question! I hope this isn't too long haha. And for the record, this belief is completely abiblical. "Antichrist" is used four times in the New Testament, in 1 and 2 John. People create this belief by attaching that word to Revelation and ignoring that Revelation is a coded letter about Christian opposition to the Roman Empire. So on the off chance you were asking me if it's true that the antichrist is coming, it's not. "Antichrist" is just a word the author of those letters uses to describe people who don't confess Christ.
Suffragette Dorothy Day in 1970, holding the dress she wore in jail in 1917, signed by other women arrested for protesting in Washington, D.C.
my fav calvin n hobbes joke and no one ever puts it anywhere
I know they certainly misread beetles as the Beatles but this is just as good
rlly fascinating phenomenon to me is when a character is extremely popular, and that popularity seems understandable enough because they've got something interesting going on, and then you look at the fandom and realize 99% of their fans don't actually care about engaging with any of the things that make them interesting and instead seem to be fans of an imaginary milquetoast version that exists solely for ship and/or angst content and is so far removed from the canon character they might as well be an unrelated OC at this point
truly breathtaking just how many series would be massively improved if the author gave a shit about women
I've noticed that so often people try to make "meta" musicals by really only having characters acknowledge that it's "weird" to be singing and dancing in one's day-to-day life. And yet no musical like that has an ounce of what High School Musical has - characters complaining about other characters wanting to sing or dance while singing and dancing.
If you cannot have a scene like Stick to the Status Quo in your musicals without feeling a necessity to point out the scene's hypocrisy within your own narrative, then you just fundamentally don't understand the purpose of singing and dancing in musicals and will struggle to bring anything new to the table in a meaningful way, sorry.
Can we all agree that Alex Rochon absolutely KILLED IT in this episode?
I mean… holy shit.
That performance, that song, that… EVERYTHING.
GIVE THAT MAN A FUCKING OSCAR.
What happened to good morning? Hi, how are you?
I made some more angry black cat sculptures! They will be available Friday, March 13th at 8pm Eastern time.
well i’m not recovering from ep 8 so here’s AM speech but with Caine in the meantime
Kinger tried to save caine. he selected no to deleting him. but this "wacky lockout" thing inverts his decision.