Michael Davison
michael481.bsky.social
Michael Davison
@michael481.bsky.social
Pro-democracy, LDS Christian, parent, educator, gamer, reader, writer, Q. Bluesky is nice.
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A few tools to help you get started with moderating your feed...

Two of my favorite block list creators:
@skywatch.blue
@skysentry.bsky.social

My politically neutral list of conspiracy theorists:
bsky.app/profile/did:...

A feed for finding more lists:
bsky.app/profile/did:...
311 words today! Progress!

#WritingMonth
November 9, 2025 at 4:32 AM
November Novel: 683 words
Today's word count: 589 words
(but they were for a scene in what would be a sequel to my actual November book, so... not adding to the total lol.)

#Writevember
#FirstDraftFall
#Novelember
#NaNoWriMo
November 8, 2025 at 4:04 AM
Food for thought: how extreme would the ratio (of people in genuine need to fraudsters) have to be, to change your position on SNAP?

(Note that most Republicans don't actually support ending SNAP, and there are 15 Republican Senators supporting Hawley's proposal to fund it during this shutdown.)
November 7, 2025 at 7:53 PM
#AltNaNo Day 4: +393 words
625 words total
November 5, 2025 at 2:47 AM
Um, Day 3 #AltNaNo update: 8 words before I fell asleep at the computer.

I mean technically within my commitment to write every day and see if I naturally write more over time

But maybe writing at 10pm is a bit much for my old brain 🤣

#Writevember
#WritingCommunity
#NovelNovember
November 4, 2025 at 7:31 PM
NaNoWriMo Day 2 word count: +156
Total: 224 words

My goal is to keep writing something each day and hope that my word count naturally improves with tracked practice! So far, so good!

#Wrritevember
#NovelNovember
#NovNov
#AmWriting
November 2, 2025 at 11:32 PM
#AltNaNo writing session #1: 68 words

(My goal for this NaNoWriMo is to steadily increase my words per day, or per writing session, as I increase my mental stamina. Like independent reading stamina in upper elementary school.)

#Draftvember #NanoFree #WritingCommunity #WritingMonth #Novelember
✏️📖
November 1, 2025 at 3:00 PM
“It is true intelligence for a man to take a subject that is mysterious and great in itself and to unfold and simplify it so that a child can understand it.”
~John Taylor (Discourse, Deseret News, Sept. 30, 1857, 238)
i once had a professor comment that if you really knew your material, you could present it to anyone from any education background in a way they'd understand, from 1st graders to your phd peers
October 30, 2025 at 11:57 AM
October 29, 2025 at 7:11 PM
Sometimes I suspect that implicit-bias racism and explicit-deliberate racism sometimes require opposite solutions, and that racists-by-choice subconsciously know this and so hide behind racists-by-default for protection.

But then I think that human connection is an excellent remedy for either.
October 20, 2025 at 1:51 PM
Today in my little conservative town

Somebody found a vaguely Hispanic-looking person's REAL ID at a Taco Bell, posted about it on social media, and returned it to its owner.

I didn't even see any racist jokes.

It gives me hope.
October 17, 2025 at 8:51 AM
October 5, 2025 at 3:52 PM
I love how libraries can have books with exactly opposite perspectives side by side, without any contention, in perfect silence.
September 30, 2025 at 4:03 PM
"It is quite normal to feel many contradictory things at once. Emotions need not make sense, Albert. They are there so that we might make sense of them. It is your job to choose the shape that you prefer, though the ghost of the other one might remain."

#BookQuotes #FaerieRegency #OliviaAtwater
September 29, 2025 at 2:11 PM
Tragic shooting at an LDS chapel this morning. #lds #mormon #gunviolence

My prayers go out to the victims' families, and may we actually solve this national epidemic of gun violence.

www.mlive.com/news/flint/2...
Live updates: Multiple shot at Michigan Mormon church, suspect ‘down’
An active shooter was reported at a church Sunday morning, Sept. 28, in Grand Blanc Township, according to police.
www.mlive.com
September 28, 2025 at 4:37 PM
"All life is sacred, even the life of the tiniest spiderfly caught in its own web."
#ATLA #Yangchen #Nonviolence #PoliticalViolence #GunViolence
September 12, 2025 at 3:10 AM
Gentle parenting grown magicians is a big job, but somebody's got to do it. #BookReactions #HalfaSoul
September 9, 2025 at 3:12 PM
#BookReactions I'm enjoying Half a Soul by Olivia Atwater. I'm pretty sure Vanessa is in league with the narrator.

I love the humor. The social commentary here is deep. Probably good to read this one after some exposure to other Regency stories, or at least other Regency-satire stories.
September 9, 2025 at 3:58 AM
Great thoughts on the challenge of democracy.
wapo.st/4oIitk9
Opinion | My gut instinct on Trump’s D.C. power grab was wrong
The allure of the president’s crackdown on crime in the District tests our democratic society.
wapo.st
August 22, 2025 at 9:36 PM
As someone with chronic disease, this truth hurts.

I have lost so many habits because they weren't sustainable.

But my very most important habits help me remember who I am. And breaking bad mental habits—of shame, of disconnection, of giving up—frees up a little energy for something new.
Habits are the foundation for our wellbeing. To make a big life changes, start with small changes to daily habits
July 23, 2025 at 2:47 PM
Today, a leader at church announced that two men's responsibities were being traded (the ward clerk and assistant ward clerk).

Some of us giggled, so the leader explained it was so the former ward clerk could have more time at home to support his wife's calling as Young Women's President. #lds
July 20, 2025 at 8:30 PM
Reposted by Michael Davison
Published in the LDS church owned paper “I am a lawyer and served as a mission president for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Latin America…
…What I simply cannot grasp, even among practicing Christians, is the abject cruelty we see too often in the public discourse.”
Opinion: The human cost of anti-immigrant rhetoric
After reading Emma Pitts’ excellent article on due process and deportation and reading some of the 450+ comments, I feel compelled to share some of my experiences. I am a lawyer and served as a mission president for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Latin America. I share just a few of the many real situations that several former missionaries and others have encountered. A 31-year-old man who works in sales**** followed all of the requirements of the law and entered the country legally. He is one of the finest young men I have ever known. He lives in the U.S. and attends an English-speaking church congregation. He is working several jobs that are well below his capacity and aptitude in order to support his family. He does door-to-door sales. Some people have called him pejorative names and threatened to or have actually reported him to ICE while he was knocking doors. He has described the fear that all Latinos in his area are experiencing, including negative comments from fellow Latter-day Saints. A 34-year-old man**** owns a landscaping company. Overnight, over half of his employees were either apprehended by ICE or have gone into hiding. He, too, has experienced negative and racist comments in his community and even at church. A 29-year-old security analyst is a**** U.S. citizen who is married to a DACA recipient. They married and started a family shortly after he served a mission. His wife has since become a naturalized citizen. They attend a Spanish-speaking congregation in Salt Lake. Church attendance has fallen off the cliff with members caught up in ICE raids and others in hiding. His in-laws are undocumented. They have lived in the U.S. for over 20 years, work hard in minimum wage jobs, contribute to their community and are law-abiding. ICE arrests have tripled across the West. Inside the reasons and the costs A 28-year-old factory worker is from Honduras, married with two children. He joined a caravan four years ago walking the length of Central America with his wife and child. He requested political asylum at the border and was refused and turned around. Gangs in his country have held him and his family hostage with financial demands, beatings and ongoing threats, including stealing their property and important documents. When he went to the police for help, someone in the police force notified the gangs. He was repeatedly beaten. In desperation, he made the trek a second time. At the border, he again requested asylum. He now has Temporary Protected Status (TPS). I am representing him, pro bono, in his request for asylum. Now that we know of incidents where ICE has taken people into custody as they enter the courthouse for their hearing, I am deeply concerned that he could be apprehended and deported before the hearing, or literally on the courthouse steps. A 42-year-old laborer was an interpreter for the U.S. Army in Afghanistan. Through the help of a Utah service member, he immigrated to the U.S. with his family. His wife and children did not speak English. Several members of our congregation helped them resettle by buying clothes and home goods. They are thriving. They are legal immigrants under TPS, which the Trump administration has now terminated, leaving hundreds of Afghans behind to face imprisonment or death from the Taliban. A 22-year-old student is a returned missionary and U.S. citizen in our congregation. She was in a local grocery store recently. She was speaking Spanish on a phone call to a mission friend and was approached by ICE agents demanding to know why she was speaking Spanish and who she was talking to. I could share more of these real-life stories. This is not the America I know. I fear by reading the comments on Emma Pitts’ article that some Christians may need to go back to Sunday School and relearn some of those powerful lessons from the songs we were taught to sing as children. What I simply cannot grasp, even among practicing Christians, is the abject cruelty we see too often in the public discourse. I’m reminded of a song I learned in church as a child: “I want to be kind to everyone, for that is right, you see. So I say to myself, ‘Remember this: Kindness begins with me.’” I suspect that many of those who leave hateful comments would not do so if the curtain of anonymity was not there. We must be better! Opinion: Undocumented immigrants deserve due process
www.deseret.com
July 15, 2025 at 8:47 PM