Scripture is clear, “You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor." Exodus 20:16.
Building an audience is one thing. Building it by fueling suspicion, rewarding gossip, and turning people against a widow is another.
Christians should be the first to value truth over clicks, facts over rumors, and charity over outrage!
250 years after our Founders declared that all are endowed by their Creator with the unalienable right to life, America still denies that right to an entire class of human beings: preborn children.
Read my latest op-ed on this by clicking the link in the comments below.
THIS IS HUGE 🔥 President Trump announced he will be asking the Supreme Court of a rehearing for the Birthright Citizenship SCAM
The Supreme Court needs to do the right thing
AMERICA IS CLOSED
IT GETS WORSE
Fort Worth police officer says that calling a biological male a "sir" is a "grey area" and that he would potentially ticket @wfcpreacher for "offending" a man pretending to be a woman.
The cop then says he WOULD NOT ticket the LGBTQ activists for offending the preacher by marching around half-naked men in front of children.
"Unfortunately, there's not much on our side to do anything about it"
This is absolutely INSANE. These cops are supposed to enforce the LAW.
$ADBE update
One thing I keep coming back to is that people almost always overestimate how many jobs disappear when software gets better.
In creative work, better tools usually do not shrink the pie, they increase the amount of output demanded from the same teams, which is why the number of people employed in these areas has stayed stable or even grown despite huge gains in efficiency.
If a designer can produce five times more work in the same amount of time, that does not automatically mean the company hires one fifth of a designer, because the business usually just asks for more campaigns, more versions, more experimentation, more speed.
That is why I think the market’s fear around Adobe is probably too linear.
It assumes efficiency gains translate directly into less demand, when history in creative industries keeps showing the opposite: better tools tend to create more work, not less.