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Posts by Rachel E. Davis

Parseword #82
⏱️ 1m2s
💎 Perfect
🥝 Secret Found

22 hours ago 0 0 0 0

Parseword #81
⏱️ 2m9s
💎 Perfect
🐻 Secret Found

1 day ago 0 0 1 0

God be with you 🫡

1 day ago 0 0 0 0
Screenshot of the reader’s question and the first paragraph of the columnist’s response: 

Ever since my 40-year-old boss discovered ChatGPT, he's running everything through it, even asking it to write drajts and analyze documents. I'm going on 60 and have spent my entire work life relying on my brain and bona fide resources to do my work.
Now, I'll write up a draft of something, and I'll hear, "OK, just run that through ChatGPT." Or "Can you ask ChatGPT if XYZ?" I've explained that ChatGPT is NOT always correct, and have literally pointed to specific examples. Also, I'll give him a draft of something that I wrote, and he'll revise it, via ChatGPT, and ask me to review an often completely inappropriate, lengthy off-point rendition.
Help!
Anonymous

A tragic fact about bosses is that many of them have never built up a natural immune defense to "stupid ideas." Because of this, a boss opening LinkedIn can be like a young child attending day care for the first time. An insufficiently immunized supervisor can send an entire business into a tailspin by merely glancing at a post consisting of single-sentence paragraphs.

Screenshot of the reader’s question and the first paragraph of the columnist’s response: Ever since my 40-year-old boss discovered ChatGPT, he's running everything through it, even asking it to write drajts and analyze documents. I'm going on 60 and have spent my entire work life relying on my brain and bona fide resources to do my work. Now, I'll write up a draft of something, and I'll hear, "OK, just run that through ChatGPT." Or "Can you ask ChatGPT if XYZ?" I've explained that ChatGPT is NOT always correct, and have literally pointed to specific examples. Also, I'll give him a draft of something that I wrote, and he'll revise it, via ChatGPT, and ask me to review an often completely inappropriate, lengthy off-point rendition. Help! Anonymous A tragic fact about bosses is that many of them have never built up a natural immune defense to "stupid ideas." Because of this, a boss opening LinkedIn can be like a young child attending day care for the first time. An insufficiently immunized supervisor can send an entire business into a tailspin by merely glancing at a post consisting of single-sentence paragraphs.

😙🤌 www.nytimes.com/2026/04/19/b...

1 day ago 6 0 3 0

was playing ARC Raiders and i thought someone was talking to me in game but it was actually my neighbor talking to me through the window so i for sure seemed like a total fucking lunatic. asked where they are like a half dozen times and then said i was "out looking for mushrooms"

2 days ago 96 8 3 0

Parseword #80
⏱️ 1m12s
💎 Perfect

3 days ago 0 0 1 0

Parseword #79
⏱️ 2m54s
💎 Perfect
🚶‍♂️ Secret Found

3 days ago 0 0 1 0

Parseword #78
⏱️ 10m22s
💎 Perfect
🛌 Secret Found

3 days ago 0 0 1 0

ChatGPT: you’re right you’re so much smarter than him. He’s so schlubby and you’re so suave. Columbo will never catch you.

6 days ago 8369 2119 33 19
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Parseword #77
⏱️ 3m43s
💎 Perfect
🪵 Secret Found

6 days ago 0 0 1 0

Parseword #76
⏱️ 2m10s
💎 Perfect
🥤 Secret Found

6 days ago 0 0 1 0

Thank you for sharing this. 💕

1 week ago 1 0 0 0
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Peter Wehner & David Bentley Hart have a remarkable discussion about Christ’s teachings & God’s existence in the NYT. Last couple Q/A’s are heavy duty: www.nytimes.com/2026/04/12/o...

1 week ago 148 25 5 5
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He Warned About the Dangers of A.I. If Only His Father Had Listened.

“Joe was making decisions based on bad information packaged with the veneer of scientific expertise. It was the kind of misinformation that was virtually impossible for a lay person to spot, even for someone like Joe, who by all accounts was an ideal user.” www.nytimes.com/2026/04/13/w...

1 week ago 0 0 0 0

Parseword #75
⚡️ 34s
💎 Perfect

1 week ago 0 0 1 0
Video

In Turkey, an elderly man who earns his living by shining shoes is visited every morning at the same time by a cat that asks to have its fur brushed. The man never turns down this little friend.😍👍💙

1 week ago 28513 4856 558 479

Parseword #73
⏱️ 3m50s
⭐️ No Hints
🛬 Secret Found

1 week ago 0 0 1 0

Parseword #72
⏱️ 2m50s
💎 Perfect
☎️ Secret Found

1 week ago 0 0 1 0
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Parseword #71
⏱️ 22m40s
✅ 1 Hint
🏕️ Secret Found
This one was humiliating lol

1 week ago 0 0 1 0

Parseword #70
⏱️ 5m10s
💎 Perfect

1 week ago 0 0 1 0

Parseword #69
⏱️ 2m40s
💎 Perfect
🛼 👧 Secrets Found

1 week ago 0 0 1 0
Preview
Opinion | Teaching in an American University Is Very Strange Right Now

"Some of us go out of our way to make our receptiveness to a broad spectrum of ideologies clear and not to play into progressive caricatures. But which adjustments are reasonable corrections of past mistakes, which are defensible self-preservation, and which are cop-outs?"

2 weeks ago 0 0 0 0

Parseword #68
⏱️ 1m2s
💎 Perfect
🏹 Secret Found

2 weeks ago 0 0 1 0

Parseword #67
⏱️ 36m33s
⭐️ No Hints
🎙️ Secret Found

2 weeks ago 0 0 1 0
Indeed, among roughly two dozen workers and regulars interviewed this week at Rome's three Waffle House locations, none said they were aware of anyone traveling to the 24-hour restaurants by paranormal means, despite their reputation as powerful magnets for the sort of idiosyncratic characters who tend to surf the psychic fringes of the American South.

Indeed, among roughly two dozen workers and regulars interviewed this week at Rome's three Waffle House locations, none said they were aware of anyone traveling to the 24-hour restaurants by paranormal means, despite their reputation as powerful magnets for the sort of idiosyncratic characters who tend to surf the psychic fringes of the American South.

Grant Sikes, 20, a student at nearby Berry College who hopes to attend an Episcopal seminary one day, said that divine power, from his experience, expressed itself in more subtle ways. He said he felt the presence of God at that moment, as he wrapped up a late, mellow breakfast with his grandfather, Larry Kellogg, 83.
Austin Spears, 29, a land surveyor, also found Mr. Phillips's story to be dubious. But he also acknowledged that all human lives are studded with little mysteries.
"I can say I've been drunk and ended up in a Waffle House," Mr. Spears said. "Don't know how I got there. But I was there."

Grant Sikes, 20, a student at nearby Berry College who hopes to attend an Episcopal seminary one day, said that divine power, from his experience, expressed itself in more subtle ways. He said he felt the presence of God at that moment, as he wrapped up a late, mellow breakfast with his grandfather, Larry Kellogg, 83. Austin Spears, 29, a land surveyor, also found Mr. Phillips's story to be dubious. But he also acknowledged that all human lives are studded with little mysteries. "I can say I've been drunk and ended up in a Waffle House," Mr. Spears said. "Don't know how I got there. But I was there."

Finally, some serious journalism (non-sarcastic). www.nytimes.com/2026/04/03/u...

2 weeks ago 0 0 0 0

jerry no

2 weeks ago 1 0 0 0
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Parseword #66
⏱️ 7m36s*
💎 Perfect
🐳 Secret Found

This one really took 15 minutes, but it reset the timer after I took a break from it.

2 weeks ago 0 0 1 0

Parseword #65
⏱️ 36m4s
⭐️ No Hints
🌍 Secret Found

2 weeks ago 0 0 1 0

Parseword #64
⏱️ 2m32s
💎 Perfect

2 weeks ago 0 0 1 0