Father. Husband. Entrepreneur. Student

Joined November 2008
36 Photos and videos
We all fall short. Terribly! John 3:16
What if everyone is actually destined for hell? When Christian Apologist Wesley Huff joined me on The Diary Of A CEO, he explained a central idea in Christianity that many people misunderstand. According to scripture, the standard for being “good” isn’t simply being better than other people. The standard is God himself. Which means, by definition, no human being meets it. That’s what Christianity calls the bad news. Humanity can’t save itself through good actions or intentions. Here's him breaking it down
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GuiLaurentVerrier retweeted
Bible sales in the United States just hit a 21 year high... So why are more people turning back to religion? To help answer that question, today I’m joined by Christian apologist Wesley Huff. Wesley is a historian who studies the historical reliability of the Bible and the evidence surrounding the life of Jesus. Much of his work focuses on ancient manuscripts and the historical case for Christianity. He spends his time debating sceptics and asking a simple question - what does the historical record actually say? I wanted to speak to Wesley because these are questions I’ve personally wrestled with for years. I grew up in a Christian household. When I was about eighteen, I was pulled into the new atheist movement after reading people like Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris. Since then, I’ve found myself in a different place. Curious and still asking a lot of questions.
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I’ve been blessed to live it. Other Bonuses: - Making The Observance of The Weekly Sabbath A Practice. - Make History, Philosophy & Bible Study Part of Their Homeschool Curriculum. - For Pre-Teens & Youths: Encourage the Deliberate Learning of a Topic of their Choosing.
Ultimate privilege for kids: -Born to Married Parents -Take kids to Church -Mom stays home with Kids -Mom and Dad are fit -Charter, Private, or Homeschooled - Dad works from home or runs own biz Bonus - Extended Family is close and visit regularly
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Sam Altman literally explained why most startups fail in just 16 minutes. He broke down: • Product-market fit • Team building • Market selection • Competitive moats Here are 14 lessons worth more than a $200K MBA: 1. 80% of startup success comes from one thing
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That’s actually one of the best piece of advice I’ve ever read. — You want a godly life, say no to anything that is ungodly. — a healthy life? Say no to anything unhealthy. — a rich life? Say no to anything that can rob you of that; whatever “rich” means to you.
A piece of advice a mentor told me that's stuck with me: “Decide what kind of life you actually want. And then say no to everything that isn't that.”
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This should be said more often; bluntly and unapologetically.
Best way to spot an idiot ‼️‼️
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They work!
26 weapons grade parenting tips: 1/ Give them a "heads up," 5 minutes until bedtime, 10 minutes before leaving the playground 2/ Look at the world more through their eyes 3/ Don’t discipline like an angry madman. Stay calm and firm, model how you want THEM to resolve conflict 4/ Let them argue their case respectfully. Teaches negotiation and critical thinking 5/ Skip the long lectures 6/ Use natural consequences: forgot homework? Let them explain it to the teacher. Forgot their lunch? They'll figure it out 7/ Be consistent and follow through. "We are leaving the playground if you don't stop..." 8/ Make "How can I help?" part of YOUR vocabulary. It builds reliability 9/ Share your unseen efforts: hustling for work, hitting the gym. Actions speak louder than words but when they can’t see it, TELL THEM 10/ Teach accountability by modeling it yourself: “I was wrong. sorry” 11/ Create family traditions like weekly movie nights, Sunday pancakes, whatever works 12/ More game nights 13/ Take an interest in their interests: video games, books, sports... do it with them. 14/ Hike together. Nature slows time and generates gratitude 15/ Build something. LEGO, puzzles, a fort, the Amazon delivery box 16/ Teach them skills: tie knots, start a fire, read a map 17/ Introduce chess or checkers. Start early 18/ Let them plan a family outing or navigate you there (they can get you through the airport) 19/ Always greet your wife with love. That moment sets the tone for the family 20/ Share some challenges (age appropriate) 21/ Respect their privacy. Knock before entering their room 22/ Teach the value of money early: "wants vs. needs," compounding, saving, etc 23/ Let them see you sweat 24/ Teach them to cook. Start small: eggs, pancakes, cookies. Embrace the mess 25/ No screens at meals ever 26/ Prioritize movement as a UNIT: family walks, workouts, hikes, dance-offs- whatever gets the everyone in synch
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GuiLaurentVerrier retweeted
26 weapons grade parenting tips: 1/ Give them a "heads up," 5 minutes until bedtime, 10 minutes before leaving the playground 2/ Look at the world more through their eyes 3/ Don’t discipline like an angry madman. Stay calm and firm, model how you want THEM to resolve conflict 4/ Let them argue their case respectfully. Teaches negotiation and critical thinking 5/ Skip the long lectures 6/ Use natural consequences: forgot homework? Let them explain it to the teacher. Forgot their lunch? They'll figure it out 7/ Be consistent and follow through. "We are leaving the playground if you don't stop..." 8/ Make "How can I help?" part of YOUR vocabulary. It builds reliability 9/ Share your unseen efforts: hustling for work, hitting the gym. Actions speak louder than words but when they can’t see it, TELL THEM 10/ Teach accountability by modeling it yourself: “I was wrong. sorry” 11/ Create family traditions like weekly movie nights, Sunday pancakes, whatever works 12/ More game nights 13/ Take an interest in their interests: video games, books, sports... do it with them. 14/ Hike together. Nature slows time and generates gratitude 15/ Build something. LEGO, puzzles, a fort, the Amazon delivery box 16/ Teach them skills: tie knots, start a fire, read a map 17/ Introduce chess or checkers. Start early 18/ Let them plan a family outing or navigate you there (they can get you through the airport) 19/ Always greet your wife with love. That moment sets the tone for the family 20/ Share some challenges (age appropriate) 21/ Respect their privacy. Knock before entering their room 22/ Teach the value of money early: "wants vs. needs," compounding, saving, etc 23/ Let them see you sweat 24/ Teach them to cook. Start small: eggs, pancakes, cookies. Embrace the mess 25/ No screens at meals ever 26/ Prioritize movement as a UNIT: family walks, workouts, hikes, dance-offs- whatever gets the everyone in synch
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GuiLaurentVerrier retweeted
This will always be the most powerful clip I’ve seen from Voddie Baucham. Thank you God for how you worked through him and his contribution and fervor to spreading the Gospel. 🙏🏼
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RT @biblicalman: A Harvard philosopher once told me Christianity was "intellectually bankrupt" because God becoming human was illogical.…
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Jensen Huang: It's easier to fall in love with what you do than to find what you love “A lot of people say, ‘Find something you love.’ I don’t know about that. I guess I’ve fallen in love with many things that I do. I loved it when I was a dishwasher. I loved it when I was a busboy. I loved it when I was delivering papers. I loved it when I was waiting tables.” Jensen continues: “I’ve loved every single job that I’ve ever had, and I’ve loved every single day at Nvidia that I’ve ever had. I just learned to love what I’m doing. It’s hard to find something that you love, but it’s easier to fall in love with what you’re doing. And once you fall in love with what you’re doing because you desperately want to do a good job at it, it’s easier to do it well and work hard.” Video source: @NorgesBank (2023)
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Couldn’t agree more!
17 Jul 2025
AI is the best teacher for the self-taught.
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GuiLaurentVerrier retweeted
20 Jun 2025
Just appeared once again on @PiersUncensored. This time around I commented on the messiness we see in our world via the lens of the Christian worldview, and particularly, through the thinking of Augustine and Just War theory.
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I’m in LA. I support deporting people who are here illegally. And I think some of the ways Trump and ICE are doing so are counterproductive. Here’s why.
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GuiLaurentVerrier retweeted
Herd theory, No need to convince everyone, just a few.

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Insightful !
How I'd promote my startup, if I had $100 for marketing: 👇
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GuiLaurentVerrier retweeted
The only true test of intelligence, is if you get what you want out of life. - @naval
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This 👇🏽
2 Mar 2025
The people who start the wars don’t fight them, the people who spend the taxes don’t pay them, and the people who forgive the criminals don’t live next to them. Of course we’re going to have too many wars, too much spending, and too much crime.
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GuiLaurentVerrier retweeted
25 Feb 2025
3 insanely profitable (and overlooked) categories to sell on Amazon: 1) Tools & Home Improvement 2) Industrial & Scientific 3) Garden & Outdoor
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