So are we just conceding that tackling is not a skill we require in kickers?
So are we just conceding that tackling is not a skill we require in kickers?
Great, another opportunity for Boomers to tell young Gen Z kids they just need to work harder and pull themselves up by their bootstraps.
SHUT THE FUCK UP, BOOMER.
Let’s remember some other centers AD forced a trade to play with:
This is the same problem that Spoelstra ran into in trying to get LeBron to play the 4. But when Bosh went down in the ECF LeBron had no choice, and seeing how fluid the team could be offensively and defensively, LeBron relented and allowed Spoelstra to install his desired system which resulted in (what I believe is) t…
I have no take on the trials, their outcome, or the payouts.
Fuckin hell, I’m a mediocre middle-aged white man, where do I get in on this shit?
Human response: Yes.
As I said, there are things to criticise and there are things to like. As noted in the linked article, Mormons donate more, both in time and money, than non-Mormons.
It’s actually more about the church’s control over its members, it’s part of a pattern. They’re shamed for owning a kettle, or can’t call a coffee table a coffee table, or tape over the word “coffee” on a coffee cake package. It’s weird and insidious, and I guarantee it’s got nothing to do with health.
I think their point was that LDS aren’t the only ones with piety as an ideal, just that they are one of the few who actually do follow up on it (which, to be fair to what you said, does also come with them spending a whole lot on themselves too).
Oh yeah! Addendum:
Gladly.
Taking Cafeteria Christianity to its logical conclusion: Actual cafeterias.
She may know worse about them.
There are very reasonable things to criticize Mormons for.
I live in Utah and honestly, this sort of moralistic thinking about coffee is just one of the many things that screws up LDS kids—it’s not “think wisely about what you put in your body, caffeine has X side effects,” it’s “if you’re a good and holy person you won’t even want to try coffee. Or have sex. Or wear a…
The Prophet Joseph Smith received the Word of Wisdom as a revelation from God in 1833. Today, the Word of Wisdom is recorded in a book of scripture called the Doctrine and Covenants (see D&C 89, section heading).