- trivia -

#60 meme summons to mind the expression "spoiled brat".
"upset" #60
Constructive dialogue can involve more than one person.
Involving more than one does not necessarily render a conversation constructive, particularly if there's a MAGA involved.
for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. Galations 6:7
Utopian fantasies tend to fizzle.
"Crime will wither away after the fall of capitalism." an anarchist that posted under the pseud sanarchus
 
"The Bible" #62
Supercilious critics prop up their dismissive condemnation of holy scripture based only on >99% of its contents,
thereby dismissing the vast remainder of ancient wisdom disclosed therein.

"The Golden Rule":
"Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets." KJV Matthew 7:12

Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.

If there's any more concise fundamental standard for human behavior, suitable for students at nursery school through doctorate level please post it in this thread now.

crickets chirp
 
"The Golden Rule":
"Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets." KJV Matthew 7:12

One verse that Evangelical "Christians" conveniently ignore.
 
"One verse that Evangelical "Christians" conveniently ignore." S2 #64
"Going to church doesn't make you a Christian any more than going to the garage makes you a car." Dr. Laurence J. Peter [S2's point w/ #64 scare quotes]

Pete !

"One verse that Evangelical "Christians" conveniently ignore." S2 #64
"The fact that somebody over-sells an idea doesn't make it a bad idea. It makes them a bad salesman." Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA ret)
In matters theological / philosophical it helps to distinguish faithful practitioners from poseurs that falsely claim the mantle for advantage.

"Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful." sometimes attributed to Seneca the Younger (c.3 BCE - CE 65)

I know this quote is commonly attributed to Seneca, but it is mistakenly attributed to him. How do I know this? In Volume 1 of "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire", written by Edward Gibbon, he writes, "“The various modes of worship which prevailed in the Roman world were all considered by the people as equally true; by the philosopher as equally false; and by the magistrate as equally useful. And thus toleration produced not only mutual indulgence, but even religious concord." making sense Administrator Rob W. Case https://makingsense.proboards.com/thread/720/young-boys-search-god
 
Something for the gearheads among us

 
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A Canadian student built a $30,000 dialysis machine for just $500 using recycled parts
🌍
🧠


Anya Pogharian was only seventeen when a school assignment became something far bigger. While learning about dialysis, she noticed how exhausting the long treatments are for patients. That moment sparked an idea that refused to fade. Instead of writing a basic report, she chose to build something real.

Using recycled and cheap materials, she focused on helping people, not winning praise.

The result stunned many experts. Her dialysis prototype cost just five hundred dollars, compared to machines costing tens of thousands. During testing, it worked far better than expected. Even more surprising, it showed signs of reducing treatment times from hours to minutes. For families dealing with constant hospital visits, that change could mean freedom, rest, and dignity.

What started in a classroom is now being discussed worldwide. In places where medical equipment is rare or too expensive, ideas like this matter deeply. Anya’s project proves innovation does not need massive funding. Sometimes empathy, curiosity, and courage are enough to spark real change...could this inspire a new wave of student-led medical solutions?

#fblifestyle #MedicalInnovation #TeenInventor #DialysisCare #FutureMedicine
References:
CBC News, Teen builds low-cost dialysis machine for school project
BBC News, Student invention could transform dialysis access worldwide
Global News, Canadian teen gains attention for affordable medical device

SOURCE
 
Hardly trivial but it doesn't fit anyplace else

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He published her diary as his bestseller. When she finally wrote her own book, he had her doctors silence her. Then she died in a locked ward—but her story refuses to stay buried.

Montgomery, Alabama, 1918. Zelda Sayre was eighteen and unstoppable.

She smoked in public, danced until sunrise, and kissed whoever she pleased. In conservative 1918 Alabama, she was a scandal—beautiful, fearless, and unforgettable.

When a struggling young writer named F. Scott Fitzgerald met her at a dance, he fell instantly. He proposed. She refused.

"I can't marry you unless you can support me," she said.

So Scott wrote a novel to win her. When This Side of Paradise became a sensation in 1920, he sent a telegram: "BOOK SOLD. MARRY ME NOW."

She did. She was nineteen. For a few dazzling years, they were the golden couple of the Jazz Age—rich, famous, and living recklessly.

But Scott had a secret.

He was reading Zelda's intimate diaries—her private thoughts, beautifully written—and copying ....

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