MindHacker9009's Posts
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ChatGPT is doing the same too! DM ChatGPT |
Tellmeastory:Then the God of Jesus is black too |
Elyonboy:So what colour did he see then? |
airsaylongcome:The truth is that those giving candidates leetcode test have no business in software development. Bad candidates know they cannot code nor talk about past projects in a decent way, but it’s easier for them to cheat by cramming solutions for leetcode than to talk about software development. |
Same like a doctor using a robot to do his work. The doctor knows what his is trying to achieve so the robot will make his work easier and more precise. But to a self-taught doctor using the same robot will end up causing trouble. Same with programing with ChatGPT. A person with a computer sci or software engineering degree will know the right instructions to give ChatGPT and how to get it to refine the code till it gets it right. But someone without a computer sci or software engineering degree will be expecting ChatGPT to just give them what they want in one go. Eranetic: |
Elyonboy:In Matthew 3:16, “After His baptism, as Jesus came up out of the water, the heavens were opened and He saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and settling on Him.” |
True someone with a Computer Science or Software Engineering degree can use the free version of ChatGPT to write all the code they need for a complete application, but you have to keep asking it to refine some of it till it writes it the way you want it. Saves time from all the long line of coding to allow time time to be used better for more important stuff. Eranetic: |
donnie:What the Ethiopians know about Jesus is what the Roman empire told them. But the Egyptians had their own messiah before the Romans invented their own Jesus christ. Here is an artifact from the Egyptians.
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femi4:They must have a green card first before they can join |
Where are those saying Jesus is black? |
If a client says they want an e-commerce website and, when asked about their budget, they respond with ₦10,000, how would you respond to them? Is it: 1. That's fine. 2. You need to increase your budget. Will it not be better to just give the client a quote based on how long it will take you for the coding X your rate per hour, plus hosting and support cost. |
Not enough original content Please take a moment to write a quality post with at least 40 characters. This will make the forum more interesting for everyone. |
The Bible says you are the one lying. Where is Jesus in the Torah. There is only one God in the Torah and no mention of Him having a son with Mary another man's wife. His commandments are that we are to worship him only. So why did Jesus make his appearance after the Roman empire occupied Israel but as the Jews will not worship the idol image the Roman empire placed in the second Temple, which led to the Jewish revolt and the Roman empire destroying the Second Temple in 70 CE and then inventing a back dated Jesus that predicted the destruction of the second Temple? MrPresident1: |
MrPresident1:The Jesus story was invented by the Roman empire, that's the reason Jesus is a white European. Even what the Jews know about Jesus is what the Roman empire told them. |
blueghost:I asked chatGPT and this is it's reply: I did not write that specific piece before now, but it aligns with the style, depth, and structure of something I could have generated. It’s a well-organized, strategic proposal addressing the low enrollment of Southeast Nigerian youths at Eastwing Aviation Institute, touching on awareness, financial access, community engagement, and stakeholder involvement—exactly the kind of comprehensive solution I aim to provide. If you’d like, I can: Confirm its originality (if you're checking for plagiarism). |
When the Europeans came back with the story of Jesus the Ethiopians did not accept it as they have already accepted the same story from the Roman empire, hence the reason Ethiopia was the only African country that was not colonised. MrPresident1: |
God looks at the heart |
DevLaive:Correct |
Here is where costing in cost accounting is needed. It should be the programmer that should give the client a quote. This can best be done by how long it will take x your rate per hour plus the cost of deployment and support. |
donnie:It was a missionary called Frumentius from the Roman Empire that took the story of Jesus to Ethiopia in the 4th century CE. So the Ethiopians themselves did not see Jesus to know what he looked like. |
Lucifer is the head of all religion except the Original Torah which God is the head of |
Commentor:20 more characters needed |
20 more characters needed |
Wbuser21:Good answer. Also the server processes each request one at a time, in the order they are received. |
If you have only one item left in stock and five online shoppers adds that item to their shopping cart then they all press buy at the same time. Question is who gets the item? |
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZ2bn-g_Mps Transcript 0:00 With over 2 billion followers, Islam is one of the most powerful religions on Earth. But 0:05 something catastrophic is happening. Silently — and almost invisibly — it's being erased 0:10 from the map. Not by war. Not by politics. But by something far simpler... and utterly unstoppable. 0:18 A force that Islam can never control. It's March 27th, 2035. The morning call to prayer that once 0:25 echoed through cities like Casablanca has fallen silent in many neighborhoods. What was once 0:31 unthinkable has become reality as mosques across the world stand empty or repurposed. Islam, the 0:38 faith that shaped civilizations for 1,400 years, has experienced an unprecedented decline in just 0:44 two decades—all because of something that seemed so innocent at first: a Wi-Fi signal. Had anyone 0:51 suggested a few years prior that smartphones would do more damage to Islam than a thousand Crusades, 0:57 they'd have been dismissed as delusional. Yet that's exactly what's happening—not 1:03 through conquest or force, but through the quiet revolution of information. Today, we'll uncover 1:09 how this digital transformation occurred, why online connectivity became Islam's greatest 1:14 vulnerability, and what this unprecedented shift means for the future of muslim faith in 1:20 our connected world. What the internet is doing to Islam today has actually happened before and 1:26 the parallels are shocking. 15th century Europe. A German innovator named Johannes Gutenberg invents 1:33 the printing press. Suddenly, priests lose their monopoly on the Bible. For centuries, 1:39 the Church controlled access, interpreting scripture in Latin, essentially gatekeeping 1:44 salvation. The printing press changed all that. The Bible was translated into local languages, 1:50 and ordinary people could read it for the first time. And what did they find? Contradictions, 1:56 corruption, and rules that didn't quite align with the church's teachings. 2:01 Enter Martin Luther, a monk and theologian who wasn't thrilled with the church selling 2:06 indulgences—basically a get-out-of-hell card for a fee. His 95 Theses called out this corruption, 2:12 arguing that salvation came through faith, not cash. With the printing press, his ideas spread 2:18 like wildfire across Europe, making the church's control over religious thought impossible to 2:24 maintain. And you think the Catholic Church was upset about Luther? Just wait until you hear what 2:29 happened next. The Protestant Reformation erupted—a tidal wave of new denominations, 2:35 debates, and dissenters challenging church authority. This shattered the clergy's exclusive 2:41 claim to spiritual truth and propelled Europe toward individual interpretation and independent 2:46 thought. The printing press effectively dismantled centuries of religious dogma. As people engaged 2:53 directly with scripture, they questioned not just church practices but Christianity's fundamental 2:58 tenets. Faith transformed into something personal and decentralized, removing religious 3:04 institutions as the sole arbiters of salvation and morality. The once unshakable authority of 3:10 these institutions began its slow collapse. Now here's where it gets really interesting. 3:16 The Enlightenment followed, a period when science, philosophy, and reason began to take center stage. 3:23 The result? Growing skepticism of religion as a whole and the rise of secularism in Europe. Over 3:29 the centuries, this trend snowballed, leading to societies where secular worldviews—not 3:35 Christianity—became dominant in many countries. In places like Sweden, France, and the UK, 3:42 religious adherence is now at historic lows, with vast majorities identifying as atheist, agnostic, 3:49 or spiritual but not religious. It didn't happen overnight, but the printing press lit the spark 3:56 that set this transformation in motion. Now, you're probably wondering—if the printing press 4:01 could shake Christianity to its core, why did Islam seem immune for so long? The answer might 4:07 shock you. Christianity had a head start on Islam. Muhammad came onto the scene in the 7th Century, 4:14 claiming divine revelations in a cave near Mecca. And many scholars agree that Islam incorporated 4:20 theological and narrative elements from Judaism and Christianity into an Arabian religious 4:26 framework. Even many Quranic stories like Adam and Eve, Noah's Ark, and Moses parting the sea 4:32 appear in both the Bible and the Quran, albeit with variations that align with Arabian contexts. 4:39 But unlike Christianity, which had centuries to adapt to modernity and face challenges like 4:44 the Enlightenment, Islam has largely avoided that reckoning through empires, caliphates, and strict 4:51 clerical control. It maintained a tighter grip on interpretation and authority. A perfect example 4:57 of this adaptation disparity can be found in how each religion responded to scientific discoveries. 5:04 When Galileo challenged geocentrism in the 17th century, the Catholic Church eventually 5:09 reconciled with heliocentrism. By the 19th century, many Christian denominations were 5:15 reinterpreting Genesis to accommodate Darwin's theory of evolution. Contrast this with how many 5:21 Islamic clerics still reject evolution outright, with several Muslim-majority countries banning its 5:27 teaching in schools. A 2018 Pew Research survey found that acceptance of evolution among Muslims 5:34 in various countries averaged around 27%, compared to 68% among Christians in developed nations. But 5:42 what happens when a religion establishes control through fear? This next part might 5:47 make you uncomfortable. This tight grip involved enforcing the faith by any means necessary. Take 5:53 the Apostate Wars after Muhammad's death, when several tribes decided they were done with Islam. 5:59 Following his death, Abu Bakr, the first Caliph, launched brutal campaigns to bring them back into 6:05 the fold. Their crime? Apostasy—leaving Islam. This harsh stance wasn't a bug in the system; 6:12 it was a feature—a way to ensure Islam's survival by stamping out dissent early on. Any deviation 6:19 from the pure teachings of Islam as practiced by Muhammad and his companions was labeled heresy. In 6:25 other words, questioning or adapting the faith to new circumstances wasn't just frowned upon; 6:31 it could get you killed. Reformation was not an option. Just when you thought it couldn't 6:35 get more controlling, it does. A cornerstone of Islamic teachings is to keep the faithful in line. 6:41 The Quran itself warns believers about probing too deeply. It says, "O you who have believed, do not 6:48 ask about things which, if they are shown to you, will distress you" (Quran 5:101). Translation: 6:56 Don't ask questions you might not like the answers to." This effectively discouraged curiosity and 7:02 intellectual exploration. Muhammad reinforced this stance in Hadith, reportedly declaring, 7:08 "The greatest sinners among the Muslims are those who ask too many questions. The message was clear: 7:14 unquestioning faith is virtuous, inquiry is dangerous. The reasoning? Questions inevitably 7:20 expose inconsistencies in the doctrine. Here's the irony that no one saw coming. 7:26 This tight control over beliefs and practices succeeded for centuries, enabling Islam to 7:32 expand while maintaining remarkable uniformity across diverse empires. The paradox, however, 7:38 lies in this rigidity—any belief system that aggressively suppresses change and inquiry 7:45 ultimately becomes fragile and vulnerable to collapse. Throughout history, dissenters had no 7:50 infrastructure to connect, share doubts, or build communities. Then everything changed with the 7:56 arrival of the internet—a borderless realm where every question, no matter how forbidden, found a 8:02 voice. The internet has revolutionized how people approach religious questioning. According to 8:09 former Muslims interviewed by EXMNA (Ex-Muslims of North America) in their 2023 survey of apostates, 8:18 online forums were cited as the primary catalyst for religious doubting by 78% of respondents. One 8:25 respondent from Saudi Arabia described how digital connections broke their isolation: "Growing up in 8:31 a country where apostasy is punishable by death creates an overwhelming sense of isolation. 8:37 You believe you're alone in your doubts. The internet shattered that illusion overnight. 8:42 Suddenly I discovered thousands of others asking the same questions I'd been afraid to whisper." 8:48 Islam stood exposed, its layers peeled back to reveal contradictions, moral inconsistencies, and 8:55 centuries of dogma that had never faced genuine scrutiny. The digital revolution accomplished 9:01 something unprecedented—it forced an entire belief system into the unforgiving spotlight 9:06 of public accountability. Religious authorities who had controlled the narrative for generations 9:12 suddenly found themselves powerless, their exclusive interpretative authority evaporating 9:17 in the face of mass information access. You might be thinking this sounds far-fetched. Prepare to 9:23 be surprised. The data tells a compelling story. According to research from Pew Research Center, 9:29 around 24% of people raised as Muslims in the US end up leaving the faith —a number 9:35 that closely mirrors the disaffiliation rates of Christianity in the same region. Globally, 9:41 the trend is harder to track due to the stigma and legal punishment, but it's clear apostasy 9:46 is on the rise, and the internet is playing a massive role. Platforms like Reddit's r/exmuslim 9:52 with over 400,000 members and X hashtags like #exmuslimbecause have created safe spaces for 10:01 people to openly discuss their doubts, share their stories, and find solidarity. And this isn't just 10:08 limited to Western countries. In places like Saudi Arabia, surveys suggest a significant portion of 10:13 the youth—up to 25%—identify as non-religious. Think about that: in a country where atheism is 10:21 equated with terrorism, one in four young people is questioning religion. The digital age has |