@juventekkers@0xmitsurii The .1% of the population with bad schizophrenia should be supervised. But ever since it has become culturally profitable to wear mental illness as a badge of honor, cases have risen tremendously. They are medicated and reinforced by doctors they need therapy/psychiatric help
@leshaami Bias of hindsight. If you were given the option inside your mom of birth or lack thereof, you’d choose birth. The mother’s duty is to protect her unborn child no matter what. You gain no virtue points from sympathizing with your own hypothetical abortion, because it didn’t happen
@OwenShroyer1776 Average leftist woman’s new family is now transgenders, gays, and illegal immigrants. The jewish media weaponized women’s divine empathy to further disassociate from wanting their own family. A family they actually have some control over, and can help cultivate in their image.
@Brother_Martell definitely bait, but look up what happens during crucifixion. much more painful than manual labor in the hot sun, and much more degrading than being a slave to somebody.
@D3MOCRAC7@CitrusfruitBoy Do you really think that 17 year old Jamal from Detroit is thinking about an eons-long White Christian Patriarchy when he pulls a gun on some random white guy by the corner store? No, he’s thinking about how he needs money to buy a PS5, or take one off someone if he’s able to
@MBV4lentin3@SquiffyR@HimejoshiLover On foreign soil against an enemy with a history of using children to further their goals, including arming children and using them as suicide bombers. Had the soldier not kept his sight on the boy, the kid could’ve picked up the gun and fired at the solider, killing him/others
@SebastianFrazer@Hitchslap1 IQ doesn’t operate on a basis where if it’s high enough you can’t fit in, the people alive today with the highest IQs, (160+) are characterized with savant level theory development occurring from their high level pattern recognition. The mental illness resides in 100-120
@tpotasuka@cremieuxrecueil The same high IQ that allows someone to be gifted in one thing or another would also allow that same person to rationalize themselves into or out of depression. Rationally it wouldn’t make sense for a very smart person to be depressed for long, only perhaps to learn from it.
@tpotasuka@cremieuxrecueil the transgender ideology stems from deep seated “liberal” value systems that tend to deny basic objective truths. Its modern creators used it as a weapon to destabilize Europe in the 19th century and was reestablished more recently to the same end.
@tpotasuka@cremieuxrecueil Mentally fucked people need to rationalize that they’re very smart or else they have zero comforts. Trans flag, assuming liberal; liberals have a hard time when confronted with unfortunate truths, including that you are not this tortured genius that you imagine yourself to be.
NEW: 13-year-old Australian boy swims for four hours in cold and dangerous waters to save his mom and siblings who were swept into the ocean, says God is who got him to shore.
The family was on kayaks & paddleboards when they were swept about 2.5 miles out to sea.
After a conversation with his mother, Austin Appelbee decided he would swim back to shore to find help.
Appelbee says he prayed throughout the four-hour swim and told God he would get baptized if he made it out alive.
"I don't think it was actually me [swimming]... It was God the whole time. I kept on praying, kept on praying. I said to God, 'I'll get baptized.'"
"The waves are massive, and I have no life jacket on… I just kept thinking 'just keep swimming, just keep swimming,'" he said.
"And then I finally made it to shore, and I hit the bottom of the beach, and I just collapsed."
Appelbee says when he got to shore, he had to sprint for about a mile to find help.
According to AP, the family drifted 9 miles from Quindalup and spent 10 hours in the water.
When he reached the shore, Appelbee alerted authorities, who then sent out a helicopter to find his mom, 12-year-old brother, and 8-year-old sister.
Austin's mother, Joanne Appelbee, said one of the hardest decisions of her life was sending her son to shore.
"One of the hardest decisions I ever had to make was to say to Austin: 'Try and get to shore and get some help. This could get really serious really quickly,'" she said.
What a remarkable kid.
Video: 7 News.