Best wel ziek van Meloni om zich te profileren ten koste van de baby en ouders...
Meloni wil ten dode opgeschreven Engelse baby naar Italië halen - https://nos.nl/l/2496900
"It's hard to find the right words. It's beyond what anyone would ever want to imagine, much less, God forbid, experience; A #baby, an #infant, riddled with #bullets. #Soldiers#beheaded. Young people #burned alive. I could go on, but it's simply #depravity in the worst imaginable way."
#Hamas is #slaughtering#children—babies—not as the unfortunate consequence of #war, or as unintended #casualties, but because that's who they're targeting. They're going after children.
✅More efficient #solar panels ☀️
✅The link between maternal diet and #baby’s immunity🚼
✅The inside of a blast #furnace🌡️
✅A new surgical approach for #meniscus repair🦵
✅Researchers using #Reddit to better understand #LongCovid😷
[...]
My #godson (my twin #sister's #son) is studying to become a parademic. He is on training now. He has saved one person's #life already. He was already lifeless. And yesterday he helped with the birth when a woman gave #birth in an ambulance. I'm so proud of him. #suomimastodon#finland#family#baby
My son grew up bilingually in the UK. We spoke German at home and English outside (at least in the first years, then it got increasingly mixed). I never noticed him changing his baby babbling sounds around English speakers (as per the linked article) but I wasn’t really paying attention to that. What I did notice was how similar all babies sounded, all of them producing more or less the same sounds at first, and how these were actively supported by the grown-ups with different interpretations, the main one I remember being “da-da”. As a German I took that to mean something like “there, there” whereas all English speakers took this to be “daddy”. It annoyed me at the time but looking back it’s actually quite funny. And yes, this is how babies are learning the meaning of sounds through reinforcement.