• @SwingingTheLamp@midwest.social
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        218 months ago

        That wasn’t a lie, exactly, it was just Baby Boomers not realizing how much the world changed since they were in school. It used to happen that way. My mother got her first job out of school when the employer came to campus to recruit through a job fair.

      • @ulterno
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        88 months ago

        It’s just an overly positive way of saying, “If you don’t get good grades in uni, many HRs will de-list you before looking at your resume”.

        • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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          158 months ago

          I literally have never come across a job posting that asked for GPA. Unless it’s like an academic internship or something. Get the degree, and nobody cares about your grades.

          • @SwingingTheLamp@midwest.social
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            48 months ago

            I don’t know if they still do, but Epic Systems (the medical records company) asked for GPA when I looked at their job applications. I’m not sure if they care about the GPA, per se, so much as using it as a way to practice their notorious (but hard to prove) age discrimination.

    • DessertStorms
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      548 months ago

      Relevant quote:

      If wealth was the inevitable result of hard work and enterprise, every woman in Africa would be a millionaire

      -George Monbiot

    • @Empricorn@feddit.nl
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      8 months ago

      You’re allowed to be atheist of course, but do you have any more proof that there are no gods than they have that gods exist?

      EDIT: Y’all can have your opinion, no one’s questioning that. You’re allowed to believe there are no higher powers, but I’m not allowed my personal belief that there is?? Not one person has provided proof that there is no Higher Power. Grow up…

      • @billgamesh@lemmy.ml
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        608 months ago

        I’m not against religion, but that’s not how evidence and proof works. Do you have any proof that tiny invisible pink elephants aren’t hiding in your fridge?

      • @Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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        418 months ago

        That’s not really how it works though. If I tell you there’s an invisible dragon living under your bed who will burn your house down at some time in the future if you don’t give me $10. You can’t disprove it, but because I’m the one making the claim that the dragon exists the burden of proof is on me.

        • @Sotuanduso@lemm.ee
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          -398 months ago

          The burden of proof tennis is quite tricky here because it’s not about whether you claim something exists, it’s whether you claim something that goes against what’s generally accepted. If I claim quantum mechanics don’t exist, it’s not on you to prove they do.

          And that’s before we get into the fact that there isn’t a general consensus on whether God (or any gods) exist.

          • @TheDoozer@lemmy.world
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            368 months ago

            Your premise is incorrect. The burden of proof for quantum mechanics is on the people claiming they exist. They provided those proofs, which is why people believe in them. I haven’t studied quantum mechanics, but if you asked somebody who does, they could offer proof or evidence. And if they couldn’t, then your claim it doesn’t exist (until proof was proffered) would be correct.

            • @Sotuanduso@lemm.ee
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              -288 months ago

              It was on them until society generally accepted it. Now if I claim it doesn’t exist, the burden is on me.

              Or how about this: if I claim dinosaurs never existed and thus the fossils didn’t come from them, it’s not on you to prove they did.

              • @TheDoozer@lemmy.world
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                278 months ago

                You’re missing the point. It’s not a one time thing. Evidence existed, that evidence was found, and that’s what made it change to being accepted.

                That evidence still exists, so if you claim dinosaurs don’t exist, we can just point to the evidence that still exists. That evidence didn’t get spirited away like golden plates to heaven. We’re still finding dinosaur bones.

                If you claim dinosaurs don’t exist, I would point to the wealth of evidence that they do. If you were raised in some religious cult that never taught anything about dinosaurs and taught that the Earth was 6000 years old, and therefore didn’t think giant creatures existed hundreds of millions of years ago, it would absolutely be on the person claiming they exist to show you dinosaur bones. Which is evidence.

                • @Sotuanduso@lemm.ee
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                  -258 months ago

                  I see your point, but the idea here is that, since I’m starting from the assumption that dinosaurs don’t exist, I conclude that the fossils came from some source other than dinosaurs, so they can’t be used as pro-dinosaur evidence. But at the same time I don’t offer an alternative explanation on where they came from.

          • @Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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            238 months ago

            So if everyone believed in the invisible dragon under your bed, would that shift the burden of proof to you? I don’t see what the general consensus has to do with anything.

            The people who say quantum mechanics exists don’t just claim it, they can demonstrate it through peer reviewed evidence. Quantum mechanics is also a theory based on observable facts intended to propose testable mechanisms by which those facts can be explained. My claim of a dragon under your bed has no such backing.

            As smarter people than me have said, that which is asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence.

            • @Sotuanduso@lemm.ee
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              -198 months ago

              Yeah, if everyone believes there’s an invisible dragon under my bed, then that means the burden of proof is on me to claim there isn’t. And I’d probably address that with a stick.

              As for assertion without evidence, how do you feel about eyewitness accounts of miracles? Or sociological reasoning on the odds of the disciples keeping a conspiracy for their whole lives? Or how about the origin of the universe - we had all the matter in the universe condensed into a single point, complete with laws that would lead to such interesting things as nuclear fusion, complex planetary orbits, and even pockets of life. Do you take it as a given that it’s far more likely for that to have come out of nowhere than for a higher power to exist and have arranged it as such?

              You’re free to discount the evidence (though I’d be happy to debate it with you,) and dismiss the claims because it doesn’t align with your experiences. But note that the idea that all this happened without God is as absurd to me as the existence of God is to you, and equally unsubstantiated.

              • @Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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                No no a stick won’t work, the invisible dragon is very small and agile and would easily dodge your stick. It only makes itself known when it wants to.

                I feel the same about eyewitness accounts of miracles. Eyewitness testimony is not evidence. It could be a good place to start to investigate miraculous claims but that’s all.

                I’m not dismissing claims because it doesn’t align with my experiences, but because there is no reliable evidence. In fact depending on the type of diety you propose I think many claims can be shown to be false because they a contradictory with reality.

                I’d be interested to hear the evidence you have for sure. I’m open to changing my views. I’m not scholar but my understanding is that the best we have is a collection of anonymously written books which isn’t enough for me to accept such a huge claim.

                I don’t know about the origin of the universe but I don’t think anyone claims things came from nothing, we simply don’t know what was before the big bang. Not knowing the answer to me isn’t a good enough reason to assume a divine entity is responsible.

                • @Sotuanduso@lemm.ee
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                  -78 months ago

                  Eyewitness testimony isn’t evidence, eh? Before I get too invested in this, I want to know what you do consider to be evidence. Suppose that, hypothetically, I run a study where I recruit 1000 people off the street. I tell them that at some point over the next 10 days, I’m going to pray for them to experience peace. For each person, I roll a 10 sided die to choose which day to pray on, do so, and record the result. Then at the end of the 10 days, I bring them all back and ask them to indicate on which day they felt the most peace. ~600 of them say the same day that I rolled for them, ~150 of them are one day off, and ~100 can’t give an answer. If this were to happen (solely hypothetical, ignoring any arguments about whether God would play along for a study,) would that count as evidence?

          • @Azzu@lemm.ee
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            8 months ago

            Not really though? Non-existence of anything is the default. Existence of something puts the burden of proof on whoever claims this something exists. “Quantum mechanics” is a bad example, it’s a set of theories, not a single theory (like “a god exists”). Depending on what is being claimed, you can easily show people papers, such as this one which shows experimental observable proof of principles of quantum theory.

            At one point, quantum mechanics didn’t exist and wasn’t generally accepted. Physicists like Heisenberg took upon them the burden of proof and provided it.

            General acceptance is how it is treated since then, by non-physicists, but it is simply possible to follow the proof of it if you really wanted to. There are experiments that have been performed and that can be performed again that create observable evidence of the principles of quantum mechanics.

            The burden of proof still lies on proponents of quantum mechanics. What you’re talking about is more of a societal shortcut, accepting that the burden of proof has been verified by other people, not by yourself, as it’s impossible to go deep enough into every subject to actually verify every proof you come across. That’s why specialization exists.

            The difference is that 99% of physicists confirm the proof of quantum mechanics. Specialists on religion are all very much divided on which god(s) or whether at all one exists, and no proof exists for any religious theories.

      • @dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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        268 months ago

        You should familiarize yourself with the concept called Burden of Proof. They (those who believe in God, and claim he exists and created all things, etc) are the ones where the burden lies. It is not for the rest of us to prove their beliefs for them, or you.

      • JackGreenEarth
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        108 months ago

        The default position is that we don’t know if a specified thing exists. To prove or disprove it, you need evidence. I can prove that the Christian God doesn’t exist, as it is logically impossible, but it’s possible that some other version of a god might exist, I don’t know. I don’t have evidence either way.

              • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                It’s impossible to prove the non-existence of something. It’s on those who believe in god to prove its existence.

                And the Bible doesn’t count as sufficient evidence because that would be like believing Harry Potter exists because JK Rowling says so.

                • daddyjones
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                  38 months ago

                  Unless you claim, as OP did, that you can actually disprove it.

                  I agree that the Bible is not sufficient in the sense that it proves anything or sews up their arguments, but to suggest its historical value as evidence is the same as modern day fiction is absurd.

              • JackGreenEarth
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                18 months ago

                For example, omnipotence is a self-contradictory term, as you have a dilemma - if a being is all powerful enough to give itself limits, it is not omnipotent as it wouldn’t be able to do the things it limited itself to do. Whereas if it can’t self-impose limits, it’s also not omnipotent as it isn’t able to self-impose limits. Another example is that suffering exists in the world, which would be a contradiction if an all-powerful being that wanted to end suffering existed, since it should, but it isn’t.

                And these are just contradictions within God’s character. If you want to look at the things he actually claims to have done, you’ll find numerous more in the Bible. Just as one example, Jesus’s last words are different in almost every gospel.

                • daddyjones
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                  8 months ago

                  None of this is new or hasn’t been thought about, written about and deflated for centuries. I doubt you have any theologians shaking in their boots.

                  The meaning of omnipotence as it translates to Good has always been nuanced. There have always been things God can’t do - sin being the obvious example. You could debate whether he can, but just never would because of his character, but it amounts to the same thing and has been orthodoxy for centuries.

                  The apparent contradictions on the Gospels (especially synoptic) have been done to death. Debated and answered more times than you’ve had hot dinners. There is no serious theologian or biblical scholar who would hear that argument and be at all concerned by it.

                  Honestly the same applies to the idea of a good god and suffering.

      • @Squorlple@lemmy.world
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        48 months ago

        Let’s start with clarifying an element of the question:

        Which characteristics define a god? Do these characteristics violate the laws of physics and/or internal logic? If these characteristics do not violate the laws of physics, then what aspects distinguish a god from a mundane or natural entity?

      • @A_Very_Big_Fan@lemmy.world
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        28 months ago

        Not one person has provided proof that there is no Higher Power. Grow up…

        Because that’s not the atheist position. You’re wrestling with a claim nobody is making.

        Atheism doesn’t claim there is no “Higher Power”, it’s just a disbelief in theistic claims.

      • @Isoprenoid@programming.dev
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        8 months ago

        Careful, many online atheists don’t understand that they have to prove a negative. That they have to prove the assertion: “There is no god.”

        The default position is that there is yet insufficient evidence to draw a conclusion.

        Edit: Thank you for the downvotes, you have provided me with further evidence that online atheists don’t understand that they have to prove a negative. Your butthurt fuels me.

  • Nusm
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    1288 months ago

    When I was a little kid, I asked my grandfather what the bumps in the middle of the road (the reflectors) were for. He told me that it was so blind people could drive. It made perfect sense to me, and I believed that for longer than I should have!

      • @lars@lemmy.sdf.org
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        28 months ago

        They’re called Bott’s dots! Most places where it snows don’t have them because they don’t survive ploughing.

        • @LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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          28 months ago
          1. interesting, never thought of that before. Las Vegas Nevada (never snows there!) has excellent road infrastructure and these dots are everywhere. You can tell casino dollars and tax dollars are well used in Las Vegas. The roads are very nice.

          2. Bott’s dots – first thing that came to mind was like Dippin’ Dots

    • @Ransack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      288 months ago

      The thing is I believe that statement is a bit misunderstood.

      Calculators were already becoming pocket sized back in the day, but using it to calculate things if you don’t know how to use it is where the actual problem is.

      Hence the reasoning to learn how to math vs only having the device.

      • @AtariDump@lemmy.world
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        Calculators were already becoming pocket sized back in the day…

        True, but I can count on 0 hands how many people I knew carried one in their pocket.

        Now if the calculator were built into a beeper, everyone would have had one.

      • kreekybonez
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        68 months ago

        it’s very easy to enter wrong numbers on a calculator, but you need some basic reasoning and familiarity to know when an answer is off, and you need to start over

      • Captain Aggravated
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        18 months ago

        Yeah, in my experience “You won’t carry a calculator with you everywhere you go” was what they said to justify pointless busywork.

    • @Taleya@aussie.zone
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      78 months ago

      You may carry one now, but can you calculate percentages on it without your maths lessons? Can you convert fractions? I blame the technology, if it’s going to math it needs to math all maths

      • @skulblaka@startrek.website
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        38 months ago

        Frankly, these days? Yeah you totally can. “Hey Siri, what’s 3% of 235,889?” or “Hey Siri, what’s 8/37ths converted to 300ths?” will most likely just feed you a correct answer.

    • morriscox
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      38 months ago

      And you might not have a smartphone or smartwatch with you. I’ve seen people who needed a calculator to do basic math.

  • SharkEatingBreakfast
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    8 months ago

    “Girls desire a knight in shining armor to come sweep them off their feet!” — my pastor

    For the longest time, I struggled because I was told all my life what a “woman’s purpose” was, and my desires never lined up with that. Felt like a freak because I never desired romance, sex, or partnership with a man (or anyone else, for that matter). If that was my purpose, was I supposed to will myself to want that for myself? Was I doomed to be alone forever? Was I wrong to want to pursue adventure and things that I wanted?

    If my desire ≠ God’s desire (which was apparently union with a man at some point in the future), then my desires were… wrong. Maybe/probably even evil.

    So I fucked up my life trying to follow that and fit into that mold. I did things I never wanted to do because it was the “right thing” to do in the eyes of God.

    After I escaped, I never really recovered. But… I discovered a lot about myself.

    I did bearded dragon rescues & fostering, I got into cosplay, learned how to sew stuffed animals, got some mental health care, rekindled my love for nature… all by myself. I learned to love me and not base my worth on what other folks believe I should do or how I should behave. I don’t have a partner who gets to dictate my personality. I got to grow on my own.

    I’m still coming to terms with… a lot of things about myself, but now I’m able to grow freely instead of being confined to such a small pot.

    Don’t let people define who or what you are, or what your purpose is in life. Only you get to do that. It’s both terrifying and freeing, but you can do this.

    • @OmanMkII@aussie.zone
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      428 months ago

      Even for those us who fit into the straight/white/cis mould, learning how to create purpose and meaning for yourself is a really hard battle against expectations imposed growing up. Thanks for sharing a really wholesome story :)

    • ddh
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      78 months ago

      The first one seems OK as it’s the basis of CMYK colour printing? Obviously missing black of course though.

      • @jqubed@lemmy.world
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        408 months ago

        The color people will tell you that cyan and magenta do not equal red and blue. My university advisor tricked me into taking a 400 level class from the college of art and design on color theory. Really interesting class but an insane amount of work. Very early on the professor told us to throw out any book that identified red, yellow, and blue as the primary colors. It’s red, green, blue for light or cyan, magenta, yellow for pigment.

        • Sternhammer
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          218 months ago

          Yes, additive colour theory is based on red, green and blue (RGB). These are the colours you see if you look at your TV screen very closely.

          Subtractive colour theory uses cyan, magenta and yellow. In printing black, abbreviated ‘K’, is added for contrast—CMYK. These are the inks used to print the dots you see if you look closely at a magazine photo.

          I think people are confused by this because they’re taught a bastardised version of subtractive colour theory, using red, blue and yellow, at a very early age.

        • @rebelsimile@sh.itjust.works
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          38 months ago

          Red/yellow/blue are the primary colors for paints (as distinct from dyes/pigments, that’s CMY(k) and as distinct from light, that’s RGB).

          • @owenfromcanada@lemmy.world
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            48 months ago

            Why would paints have a different primary palette than dyes or pigments? They’re all subtractive, so the primary colors are CMY.

            The red/yellow/blue is a lie!

              • @owenfromcanada@lemmy.world
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                48 months ago

                I’m saying that, with respect to color reproduction, paints work exactly the same as dyes and pigments. You can’t make magenta paint from red, blue, and yellow. So the “primary colors” of paint are actually CMY.

      • @owenfromcanada@lemmy.world
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        98 months ago

        I see you’ve been tricked by their lies. Blue is sorta close to cyan, and red is kinda close to magenta, but they’re not the same.

        If someone tells you that you can make any other color from RYB, ask them to make magenta. Doesn’t work.

      • @meeshen@vegantheoryclub.org
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        68 months ago

        Black in CMYK is not strictly necessary, you can absolutely make black out of CMY, but the separate ink gets added since black is such a regular occurence it’s simply cheaper to not mix it out of the other colors.

      • ReallyZen
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        38 months ago

        In CMY (printing) you get black by adding them all. In RGB (lighting) you get white

  • LinkOpensChest.wav
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    648 months ago

    That I’d never have a calculator in my pocket

    That I’d get more conservative as I grew older

    • @overload@sopuli.xyz
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      118 months ago

      People who gain/have a lot of wealth over their life do tend to want to lock that wealth in by being Conservative I think. Wouldn’t want to shake things up!

    • @schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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      58 months ago

      I didn’t get more conservative as I grew older. At least I don’t think I did. What happened is that the definition of conservative changed.

      Criticizing censorship and restrictions on free speech didn’t use to be a conservative cause, it is now, so I grew “more conservative” without any of my beliefs changing.

      • @Laurentide@pawb.social
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        18 months ago

        Conservatives are still quick to suppress speech they don’t agree with, though. Their criticism of censorship isn’t a cause, it’s a smokescreen.

    • @oatscoop@midwest.social
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      That saying holds more truth if you’re using the “non-political” definitions of conservative – i.e. moderate, cautious, or resistant to change.

      Moreso “set in your ways” as the world changes around you.

      • LinkOpensChest.wav
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        48 months ago

        I suppose this is true, but remaining set in your ways while the world changes, taken to it’s logical conclusion is political conservatism/fascism

    • @gjoel@programming.dev
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      18 months ago

      People who aren’t liberal when they’re young have no heart.

      People who aren’t conservative when they’re old have no money.

      • LinkOpensChest.wav
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        108 months ago

        There are multiple things wrong with this, the most glaring of which is that a conservative with money would lack a heart as well. Conservatism is incompatible with having a heart.

          • @trolololol@lemmy.world
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            28 months ago

            I remember food pyramids but in my country nobody cares and I don’t think people would accept it unless it has beans and rice clearly at the bottom.

        • The food pyramid is commonly taught in American schools as the “ideal” diet.

          It was started as a sales tactic to boost grain sales, but was marketed as scientific research. And since this was started decades ago, you couldn’t simply google their sources to verify whether or not the studies were legit.

          Turns out it’s a crock of shit, and teaching it to kids does make childhood obesity rates worse. Because of course it does, an excess of carbs is horrible for you.

        • @CommissarVulpin@lemmy.world
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          Because it was sponsored by grain industries. Similar to the “breakfast is the most important meal of the day!” and “milk is good for your bones!” myths.

      • @MonkderDritte@feddit.de
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        28 months ago

        Had to learn this pyramid but never applied it. I mean, what did people eat for millions of years? Grains, roots, vegetables and fruits from foraging and now and then a ton of flesh (you can count dairy as extra-fatty flesh). So a lot of full-grain, vegetables and inbetween fruits and once or twice the week flesh and dairy it is for me.

        • @AtariDump@lemmy.world
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          28 months ago

          Yes, agreed. But not refined grains. And vegetables/fruits picked when they were ripe; it weeks before and shipped across the globe.

  • nocturne
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    648 months ago

    Basically everything my mother ever said. I repeat a lot of it back to her now, and she always asks, “where did you hear such absurdities?”

  • @Yaztromo@lemmy.world
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    588 months ago

    That if a racoon saw you swimming, it would swim out to you and sit on your head and drown you.

    My fully adult mother actually feared this was something that could happen to her children, and she warned us of this “danger” every summer when we were young.

    • @Mammothmothman@lemmy.ca
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      38 months ago

      Same here friend. But they were lies Their parents told them and so on and so on so it’s understandable how they thought they were doing the right thing.

    • Hanrahan
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      17 months ago

      True dat but its fairly easy to see through that nonsense and realise your parents are idiots (at best), one of the trials of growing up. Assuming there are no repercussions for it, like death, banishmanet etc

    • Flax
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      -538 months ago

      Spoiler alert: it probably wasn’t

        • Flax
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          -278 months ago

          What did they tell you that is factually false?

          • @Laurentide@pawb.social
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            108 months ago

            That gay and trans people are all disgusting perverts who hate me and want to destroy everything good. My queer friends provide more emotional support in a day than I ever got from my family, the church, or anyone else inside the Evangelical bubble I was raised in.

            That people in “The World” (those outside the church) are all evil or unknowingly controlled by Satan and will always try to hurt me. Textbook cult programming from the people who were emotionally abusing me.

            That God is speaking directly to me through a voice in my head, except when that voice says I’m a girl, then it’s actually a demon or something. (It was likely undiagnosed DID as a result of childhood emotional neglect and repressed gender dysphoria.)

            That scientists are all part of a massive satanic conspiracy to trick people into leaving the church.

            Dungeons & Dragons being a satanic conspiracy. Satanic Panic stuff in general.

            Lots of anti-evolution propaganda that turned out to be misrepresentations of science or complete fabrications.

            That they actually believed in all that stuff Jesus said about loving thy neighbor, helping the poor and the sick, and being kind to immigrants, instead of spending their whole lives voting to hurt all of those people as much as possible.

          • @NeptuneOrbit@lemmy.world
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            78 months ago

            Cancer didn’t exist until the very modern age. Evolution is fake, a conspiracy. Jews are basically Christians who don’t know if Jesus is the savior or not. I could keep going.

  • @Zenjal@lemmy.world
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    558 months ago

    Me parent convinced a few of friends that the ice cream truck only played music when it was OUT of ice cream

  • GrappleHat
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    548 months ago

    When you grow up everything you write will need to be in cursive.

    • @pingveno@lemmy.ml
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      On the plus side, I have a pretty bangin’ signature. On the minus side, they wasted a good chunk of lesson time teaching a useless script. Fortunately it was on the way out already, so I was never really required to use it even in school.

      • @lars@lemmy.sdf.org
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        18 months ago

        Millennial here and I haven’t yet seen a non-cursive self-identifying signature. Are they just like bubbly high-school antics and hearts dotting the letter i?