Property:Accusation
From cm2.liecourt.com
This is the "Accusation" property of type Text.
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S
https://twitter.com/jeffschlueter1/status/1545502223031042050?s=20&t=KX2JfJZjJRnzj6a4QaMdBw
@sumatraSue
Calling everybody else haters
Showing she is a hater
Someone calling her out on her inconsistency
Who is the hater?
Who is lying?
SumatraSue:
"this is the problem with pathlogical haters like eric - they thini everyone else is a hater too."
"these people are just rank blustering haters. They don't know their azz from a hole in the ground"
"We need to get rid of her and every other POS demonrat that was installed and NOT elected .. and before
anyone says "Republicans too", of course, RINOS are NOT Republicans! You're either a REAL American
patriot..or you're a Demonrat or a RINO POS and you're anti-American!
from @jeffslueter1
"Oh Sue..the Sue who complains "the other side are haters". +
The book How We Sleep by Matthew Walker
is filled with lies that imply causation for what
is only established correlation. As such a loss
of sleep is blamed on many things which can cause
a loss of sleep. As if the loss of sleep is always under
your control. Walker seems to believe that you can just
go to sleep whenever you are told to do it.
The intro shows the fallacy in his reasoning.
Ultimately, asking “Why do we sleep?” was the wrong question.
It implied there was a single function, one holy grail of a reason that
we slept, and we went in search of it. Theories ranged from
the logical (a time for conserving energy),
to the peculiar (an opportunity for eyeball oxygenation),
to the psychoanalytic (a non-conscious state in which we fulfill repressed wishes).
This book will reveal a very different truth: sleep is
infinitely more complex, profoundly more interesting,
and strikingly health-relevant. We sleep for a rich litany of functions,
plural—an abundant constellation of nighttime benefits that service both our brains and our bodies.
There does not seem to be one major organ within the body, or process within the brain,
that isn’t optimally enhanced by sleep (and detrimentally impaired when we don’t get enough).
That we receive such a bounty of health benefits each night should not
Walker, Matthew. Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams (p. 6). Scribner. Kindle Edition.
be surprising. After all, we are awake for two-thirds of our lives,
and we don’t just achieve one useful thing during that stretch of time.
We accomplish myriad undertakings that promote our own well-being and survival.
Why, then, would we expect sleep—and the twenty-five to thirty years,
on average, it takes from our lives—to offer one function only?
Through an explosion of discoveries over the past twenty years,
we have come to realize that evolution did not make a spectacular
blunder in conceiving of sleep. Sleep dispenses a multitude of
health-ensuring benefits, yours to pick up in repeat prescription
every twenty-four hours, should you choose. Within the brain,
sleep enriches a diversity of functions, including our ability
to learn, memorize, and make logical decisions and choices.
Benevolently servicing our psychological health, sleep recalibrates
our emotional brain circuits, allowing us to navigate next-day social and psychological
Walker, Matthew. Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams (pp. 6-7). Scribner. Kindle Edition.
Other questions that can draw out signs of insufficient sleep are:
If you didn’t set an alarm clock, would you sleep past that time?
(If so, you need more sleep than you are giving yourself.)
Do you find yourself at your computer screen reading and then rereading
(and perhaps rereading again) the same sentence?
(This is often a sign of a fatigued, under-slept brain.)
Do you sometimes forget what color the last few traffic lights were while driving?
(Simple distraction is often the cause, but a lack of sleep is another culprit.)
Correlation is Not Causation Lie
The work that is done is not working
Or does it? +
This is a test
test ing +
T
test +
Test +
Test +
someText <script>alert('hi');</script> some more text +
Test +
Liars never lie... +
This guy told a lie. +
Merel can repair the wiki, the wiki was broken +
animation on the clicks
mark case settled all the way down and clickable after Create verdict
Judge sees that jurors saved the verdict +
testing
more tekst below here
Do we see it? +
The girl said it was cold. But i looked at the temperature and it was like 26 degrees celsius. SO it was not cold +
Testing in Safari +
text with the evidence +
text with the evidencedfdf +
Accusation with Evidence and more text because i need a very long sentence to see what happens if i save this one and not using an enter in this sentence. +
... more about "Accusation"
1.0 - First managed version +
- 1.0 - First managed version
Has type"Has type" is a predefined property that describes the datatype of a property and is provided by Semantic MediaWiki.