So let me get this straight…
A drama about a fictional government agency stepping into schools to deal with violent bullies is causing outrage because it supposedly promotes violence and portrays schools negatively? 😭
At this point, it feels like some people are more offended by the bullies getting punished than by the bullying itself. 😂🍿
I haven’t even watched Teach You a Lesson yet and the discourse is already giving me a headache. 😭
Artificial intelligences do not undergo experiences, do not possess a body, do not feel joy or pain, do not mature through relationships, and do not know from within what love, work, friendship or responsibility mean. Nor do they have a moral conscience, since they do not judge good and evil, grasp the ultimate meaning of situations, or bear responsibility for consequences. They may imitate or even simulate, but they do not understand what they produce, for they lack the affective, relational, and spiritual perspective through which human beings grow in wisdom. #MagnificaHumanitas
Ingat baik-baik namanya, Nalince Wamang
Pelajar asli Papua, 17 tahun, tewas ditembak oleh tentara saat sedang mendulang emas di wilayah bekas aliran limbah tambang PT. Freeport demi mencari uang untuk kuliah
Dimiskinkan sistem, dibunuh aparat negara
Never forget, never forgive
this is kind of an amazing parable about scientific materialism. it speaks for itself but i'm going to autistically overanalyze it anyway, for fun -
the question pretends to ask about what a person would do in a social situation but it is actually asking for the "right answer," and the "right answer" involves looking at the situation "objectively," which means completely ignoring the relational texture of the little brother being upset in favor of an abstract argument (which the teacher's comments leave implicit) that he "shouldn't" be upset because the situation is "actually" "objectively" fair even if he doesn't feel that way
this is a very specific way of looking at the situation which school trains you to think of as universally correct, not even a choice that you're making, just the way things "really are." the kid's answer ignores all of this to interpret the question literally as written, maintain focus on the relational texture, and see the situation as a relational rupture they can repair through kindness. instead of teaching the little brother to prioritize abstract concepts over their feelings he teaches the little brother not only that kindness is real and that his family has his back but also that, since the older sibling finds it easy to give up their cornbread, perhaps the cornbread doesn't matter that much anyway