Excellent point, and always worth remembering.
This is interesting. I wouldn't personally class this as a "nice" truth - it's sort of worrying to me how much of our world seems built on sand while we convince everyone it isn't - but I can see how it opens up a lot of creative potential.
Hey! Sorry, I literally forgot about this place pretty much right after. But I'm back again! Nice to see you too.
I'll be having some of that inordinate wealth now, please.
Yeah.
I don't really know what the absolute "worst truth" I've had to acknowledge is, but I'm assuming Minuend wants to...
Hah! Sucked in, m8!
*sneaks in, fists Ceg in the mouth and rips out the blood diamonds they've been pretending to eat with*
And, uhh.... stay in school, kiddies.
*exits amidst an endless loop of overlapping dial-up noises*
Good summary.
Another easy-read summary in tweet form, good for foreigners in terms of indicating distance, heat, etc: https://www.boredpanda.com/australian-wildfires-new-south-wales/
How would you use it, and what's the advantage you see? (Assuming you're talking about affective empathy. If you mean cognitive empathy, then there are more obvious answers.)
Great point Jenny. (*edit and Hado!) I think that's the first new thing I've seen in a while on this topic.
Ridicule can also create its own kind of false equivalency. For the lazy moderate not sure what to believe, seeing two camps ridiculing each other makes it seem as if they're both equally...
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