built for reverence, not belief | anti-authority, pro-love | writer | bay area | en|es|fr|pt |

Joined June 2023
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For my part, I’ll echo what others have said: I want people to stop lying, minimizing, and gaslighting. My goal is not to “weaken the church.” My goal is for the church, and the culture around it, to stop inflicting the kind of psychological and spiritual harm that so many former members describe. When former members consistently report feeling inadequate, ashamed, hyper-perfectionistic, or spiritually broken while they were inside the system, that should be treated as evidence of a problem, not as evidence that they simply “wanted to sin” or “never understood the gospel.” I want the church to stop hoarding money and start meaningfully giving back to the communities it claims to serve. That is something I want from other wealthy churches too. I want the church to stop using the language of “repentance” as a shield for predators, especially in situations where there may not be a legal obligation to report but there is very obviously a moral obligation to protect the vulnerable. That is what I want as an ex-Mormon. I want less suffering. I want fewer people leaving the church feeling like they are broken beyond repair. I want fewer kids growing up believing God is disappointed in them. I want fewer abuse victims being asked to preserve the reputation of the institution that failed them. I want fewer people mistaking shame for holiness and The Still Small Voice™ . I do not need the church to collapse in order for my pain or other people’s pain to matter. I need the church and its defenders to stop pretending that the pain was imaginary, deserved, or spiritually useful. If those changes made the church healthier, safer, and more honest, I would consider that a good thing. If the church becomes weaker because it stops gaslighting people, hiding money, protecting predators, and manufacturing shame, then the problem was what the church required in order to remain strong.
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>renames it to the Department of War >names himself the Secretary of War >fights one war >loses
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Travis retweeted
> save $15M a year by cutting a screwworm monitoring program > screwworm outbreak almost immediately > $1B to combat it Government efficiency
The Trump administration has announced they'll need to spend an estimated $1 billion to combat the New World Screwworm.
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Travis retweeted
It's always the people you most expect
Police busted an ICE agent for sexting minors 💀
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Travis retweeted
HE STARTED THE WAR, you stupid, stupid, stupid, stupid motherfucker.
Donald J Trump is the Peace President and that is an irrefutable fact.
Community note
The United States and Israel have actually started the war with coordinated strikes on Iran on Feb 26, after which Iran retaliated with missile and drone attacks. britannica.com/event/2026-Ira…
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I know comparing modern society to Idiocracy is really played out but man
This morning at the White House...
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RT @lunwi75: Remember when Musk challenged the World Food Program to explain how he could solve world hunger with just $6 billion, they did…
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FINNEAS COOKED HIM LMAOOO
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1/ I read @MJulietIngram’s opinion piece on Charlie Bird and surrogacy. For the sake of argument, let’s set aside the debates over same-sex marriage, surrogacy, and reproductive ethics. The article itself is a case study in a tendency LDS scripture repeatedly warns against: confusing personal conviction with prophetic certainty, and moral concern with righteous judgment.
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19/ Whether one agrees with Charlie Bird’s choices is almost beside the point. The larger question is whether this article reflects the kind of humility, charity, restraint, and recognition of human fallibility that LDS scripture demands. I do not believe it does.
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20/ If there is one lesson Mormonism ought to have taught anybody, it is this: God knows infinitely more about another person’s circumstances than we do. The closer we come to understanding that, the slower we become to have a desire to condemn.
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