Paul Never Converted
January 25, 2021
Fellow Dying Inmate
That Paul never converted (he never switched religions) makes for a fascinating discussion on the Feast of his Conversion.
Today is the Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul, Apostle, and challenging person to be around. The only problem is a little fact that Paul never converted. Paul was born Israelite and encountered Jesus, messiah, as an Israelite. Then, he labored as an Israelite slave for Jesus. Also, Paul expected Israelite theocracy all his days. And finally, Paul died an Israelite. So no conversion! See?
Here’s a great resource 600 video presentations and Scripture aides! for helping you see things better about Jesus, the Bible, and Paul.
Source: Massey University
The history, community dynamics and impact of online abuse is explored in new book (photo/Erik Mclean:Unsplash)
Dr Kevin Veale is based in Massey Universityâs School of Humanities, Media and Creative Communication and specialises in researching storytelling and popular culture in the digital space. His new book,Â
Gaming the Dynamics of Online Harassment (Palgrave Macmillan) explores how online abuse works to reveal the deadly impact it can have, while increasing profits for social media companies that enable it.Â
His research uncovers a deeply disturbing culture of online abuse and harassment that can result in people losing jobs and even being driven to suicide. Among more sinister insights is the notion that; âThereâs no real distinction between online and offline spaces anymore, or online and offline harm.â
Backstory: If the Media Fails to Read the Farm Struggle Right, Irrelevance Awaits
A fortnightly column from The Wire s public editor.
Avtar Singh Niamian and his friend Gurpreet Singh read the newspaper. Photo: Pawanjot Kaur
Rights16/Jan/2021
The year is barely two weeks old and it has already seen events that have made visible the dangers of the cling film of alternative reality that has come to wrap itself tightly around societies across the world.
The Capitol Hill violence in Washington D.C., US served to highlight the hubris of a president convinced that he could upend history with his tweets. In the end, Donald Trump lost not just his âkingdomâ and the key to that kingdom â his Twitter handle â but the prospect of a possible return to power given a second impeachment. The take-down of Trump, as a creature created by mainstream media and social media â letâs not forget his first delusions of grandeur were incubated on the sets of
Save this story for later.
Luke Mogelson and Susan B. Glasser report on the convulsions of Donald Trumpâs final days in office: an unprecedented second impeachment of a President and the threat of insurrectionary violence hovering over the entire nation. Plus, a game designer offers insights on how the conspiracy movement QAnon has captivated so many people so dangerously. And a conversation with the director of âMLK/FBI,â a documentary that examines the governmentâs campaign against the civil-rights leader.
President Trumpâs Last Stand
The violence that has marked Donald Trumpâs final days in office is the culmination of four years of willful distortions of reality and disregard of the rule of law.
The Sad Sorry Tale of Mr. Card Game
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Mr. Card Game is a loving homage, a novel deck-building game, a Kickstarter debacle, and a cautionary tale about crowdfunding. It’s also a story about me winning and losing a t-shirt (not the one I was wearing), and paying too much for the privilege.
Let me tell you the story.