Hello, and welcome to my profile!
I'm just a Danish guy on the internet who spends a little too much time on Twitter (suck it, Elon).
I'll be tweeting whatever I want on this account, be it anime, videogames, or my opinion on various subjects.
Today, Russians once again struck the exclusion zone surrounding the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant.
A Shahed drone hit a building at the Centralized Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage Facility, a highly critical infrastructure site.
Attacks on Chornobyl does not just threaten Ukraine, it endangers the entire European continent. This must never be tolerated, yet Russia keeps doing it because there is absolutely no consequences.
Today, it is Sweden's national day, where they celebrate 503 years of being independent from Denmark. Congratulations, I suppose.
Norway's national day is also a celebration of being independent from Denmark. So is Iceland's national day. I guess, bascially, Denmark is the England of the North and Nordic countries love not being united.
The only Nordic country that does not have independence from Denmark as its national day, is Finland because they celebrate independence from Russia 👏
Denmark's own national day is the date that we got democracy in 1849. We were not ruled by anyone else so we can not celebrate independence.
We should also use science to fix the conditions that lead to children being born with severe disabilities, including down syndrome. I believe that it's compassionate in its own way to prevent children with such cases to be born because they will face a harsh and difficult life.
Unpopular opinion:
If I knew my unborn child would have a severe disability that would require lifelong intensive care, I would seriously consider termination.
Not because I don't value disabled people. Not because I lack compassion but because love alone doesn't provide specialized healthcare, financial resources, emotional resilience, or round-the-clock caregiving.
Raising a child with profound disabilities can demand sacrifices that affect parents, siblings, and the child themselves.
People should be allowed to have honest conversations about whether they are truly prepared for that responsibility without being shamed for it.