This article is very badly written.
This is so fucked up.
In a weird way, I kind of appreciate that these people are being honest and transparent. Israel has already annexed the land for decades, but now they're dropping the pretense.
I'm so upset about the murder of Adwah Hathaleen last week. He was supposed to soak at my synagogue in July, but when his plane landed in San Francisco he and his cousin had their visas striped. Over a hundred people showed up at the airport in protest. But after flying 10 hours and spending thousands of dollars of sponsorship, they were sent home. And now he's dead. It's really got me shook.
I stopped reading the NYTimes after I cancelled my subscription around 2019, but occasionally check it to see how close they're willing to walk to saying difficult truths. This article is a reminder why I left. It's pathetic watching them sheepishly murmur ugly facts and whisper when they should shout.
Within Israel, aid restriction is a loudly debated topic: on one hand are organizations, politicians, and pundits who argue that Israel should cut off all aid in order to exterminate every person in Gaza. And on the other are the "moderates" who argue that it is important to allow in a miniscule-but-non-zero amount of aid intended to achieve the same purpose while maintaining the farcical pretense that they aren't doing what they frequently admit they're doing. This is the range of mainstream discourse, and it is all out in the open.
They say the quiet part out loud on the floor of the kenesset every day. Does the NYTimes have some rule against reporting Netanyahu's own words if they're not spoken to an American audience? He and Smotrich and Ben-Gvir admit to committing starvation in Hebrew the same day Bibi will deny it in a speech in English.
Fuck the NYTimes.
I was just wondering when this was coming out!
Are you doing anything around the launch around Oakland or SF? The cover looks great, btw.
First, I just want to highlight that when considering what is best for a kid, it's better to consider tradeoffs rather than whether something is "healthy or unhealthy". It's possible that it's unhealthy for your 12 year old to co-sleep with you, but it's also possible that it's unhealthy for them to suffer from a feeling of isolation. If so, it may be an appropriate trade-off.
Second, I agree with @Fletcher@lemmy.today. The important thing is to try and address underlying causes, and also make this kind of comfort a short-term practice if possible.
Does your kid have any regular contact with a school counselor that they trust? I think the key question is why they're doing this now. Is there anything recently that has caused additional stress that is hindering sleep? Could it be natural developmental processes impacting their sleep cycle? Would more physical activity in the afternoon help tire them out so they have an easier time falling asleep? Would a change in eating times or diet help? Would melatonin gummies help?
Also, I think this should be self-evident, but I find it worth saying: I think it's healthy to have these conversations with the kid. Tell them you're concerned that co-sleeping is not healthy, but want to make sure they're comfortable. Ask them if they know why they've been having more trouble sleeping lately. Involve them in the process of trying to figure out how to approach this so they learn approaches to mindfully examine and manage their own health.
I think you're over-parsing their language. A lot of people just naturally use gender neutral language on social media by habit.
Also, advice is often given generally. Although we're talking about a specific kid, the advice is directed towards any other parent reading the advice as well.
This article assumes a lot of contextual familiarity on the part of the reader.
I pay attention to Israeli-Palestinian news pretty closely, and even I don't know what is going on between the Druze and the Bedoins. Really, the extent of my understanding is that these are both minority ethnic groups in Israel. Neither is treated well by the government or society, but they're also not generally targeted as harshly as Palestinians.
I don't know what beef there is between these groups, although I'm displeased to hear that people are abducting people.
OP, if you could provide greater context I'd be appreciative.
Does uploading slow down downloading? I thought the two processes were totally decoupled. How does this work?
I feel like the important distinction between this and all those Spider-Man examples is that all those Spider-Man examples take place in the context of Spider-Man being a superhero. He's a guy who shows up to save people.
I'm fine with a story of a hero failing it succumbing to temptation. But a better analogy would be if in Raimi's Spider-Man, Uncle Ben never died and Peter just direct the rest of the movie using his new powers trying to buy a car to impress MJ.
That seems far fetched, but who knows. I think that would be very misguided.
This is only a proven if you park your bike drained.
If you use this for topping off, it's a great system.
What marketing strategy would you recommend?