#how to use quora for marketing
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How To Use Quora For Free Traffic
https://earnmoneyseo.com/how-to-use-quora-for-free-traffic-in-2020/
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Are you struggling to increase traffic to your websites? It’s always frustrating to see no website traffic even though you’re working hard to create great content.
“Build it, they will come” is NOT true for most online businesses. You have to go out and work hard to promote your content so other people can read it (and hopefully buy something from you).
That being said, not all traffic sources are equal. You need to find a platform that helps you get “highly targeted visitors” to your site so that you get more conversions along with traffic.
Here’s where Quora comes into play. Quora is the #1 Q & A (question and answer) platform where you can find a ton of useful information on a wide range of topics starting from rockets to nanotechnology to real estate and what not?
The best part about Quora is that you can use it to share your knowledge with others and add links to your own website. All in all, Quora can be a great platform for bloggers and marketers to drive a ton of traffic to their websites.
Looking for a video tutorial? I also created a video tutorial on Quora hacks to improve your traffic. Must check if you want to do better on Quora platform:
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What are the advantages of using Quora for business marketing? #shorts.
#youtube#how to use quora for business#how to use quora for affiliate marketing#how to get free traffic from quora.
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Google Search Has Actually Gotten Better, Thanks to AI
In recent months (yes, months!; this is very recent; and it has especially kicked up just in the past one or two months), Google Search has become significantly more useful! This is entirely due to the integration of AI into their search results.
For years now, the usefulness graph of Google Search as a function of time has looked like the stock price of a dying company. Ruthlessly self-interested, low-quality SEO efforts by the marketing industry, together with Google's own strategic decision to turn its once-legendary search engine from the online equivalent of the Great Library of Alexandria into a portal for buying things and asking Jeeves simple questions, had diminished Google's usefulness for most search applications to almost nil. I had been reduced to using it to find links to Reddit and Quora posts, or doing much more in-depth searches to find good information sources directly with only a broken search engine to aid me.
Now, with the advent of AI integration into a new "AI Google Search" (I don't know what it's formally called, though the search results page labels it as "AI Overview"), one of the most important lost functions has been substantially restored: namely, the ability to ask more complicated questions—"complicated" either by way of complexity or obscurity—and get good answers!
This is huge.
For me, this has been coming up frequently in my Galaxy Federal research. I first noticed it earlier this year when I needed to find out how Cherry's voice pitch would be affected if she were in an atmosphere with a different composition from that of our own air. I hadn't been aware of the AI search functionality at the time, so had figured the answer out by myself the hard way—for good measure being hobbled in my efforts by the contemporary uselessness of conventional Google Search to return search results from the kinds of websites / sources I was looking for. And then I phrased one of my search queries as a question (I guess to see if Reddit had been over this at some point), and lo and behold Google AI answered me and confirmed my findings.
You can now ask Google Search some pretty complicated questions. Just a couple days ago I was curious about a sunscreen that could absorb X-rays, and wanted to learn more about the absorption of other wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation (the way sunscreen absorbs some ultraviolet light), and AI Google Search gave me a refreshingly serviceable set of answers. Nor are these cherry-picked examples; I've been benefitting from AI search results to my queries for some time now, on dozens of queries if not hundreds, and only just today I noticed that I should mention it. I wish I had written down the specifics of some of the best examples, because memory is a fickle thing. Needless to say, though, I have been both impressed and, more so, relieved. I have become used to enshittification as the default paradigm these days, so it is a genuine breath of fresh air whenever an application changes to actually be more useful.
These AI results are not magical. They are...let's put them in the slightly-better-than-Wikipedia league of "verify it for yourself." But usually that's all I need! For one thing, these AI results often include useful links where I can verify the information immediately. For another, just having a starter answer is usually enough to give me what I need to figure out how to arrive at the final answer. The other day I needed to know what the term is (presuming there is one) for transforming a signal from a higher frequency to a lower one. This kind of question has become needlessly and exceedingly difficult to answer through conventional Google Search, but the AI figured it out instantly, and gave me an answer that is correct for its domain. (It though I was talking about electronics. I wasn't, but having the answer ("downconversion") was all I needed to resolve my query.
The AI is very good. It genuinely parses my queries correctly—"understands my meaning," to use the anthropomorphic framing. I am genuinely impressed.
Conventional Google Search is only good for a few things nowadays. I still use it daily for some of those purposes. But to be able to ask these more complex questions again and get good answers is lovely! It's a sorely-needed victory for Information Retrieval in a very dark time for that domain. And, indeed, being able to phrase my queries as queries is basically new. In that narrower respect, this new search capability is even better than what we used to have in years past.
The Caveat
There is, of course, a caveat, and it's the same caveat that always arises with using the current crop of AI systems for information:
The answers it gives are not indexed / saved / learned. If you leave the tab open and come back to it a few days later, Google will generate a new AI answer to the same query. That is incredibly wasteful, not to mention frustrating for the end user, because it means you have to copy-paste those answers if you want to save them. You'll never see them again, otherwise.
The answers it gives are not consistent. In the above scenario, the new answer the AI generates will be different from the original one. For instance, with the X-ray query I mentioned earlier, I generated a new answer just now with the exact same query, and the new answer was missing a key piece of information that made the original one particularly useful. This means you might end up having to run the same query a few different times / different ways (i.e. phrasings), just in case the first answer that comes up isn't the one with the good info—and, many times, how would you know?
The answers it gives are not guaranteed to be accurate or complete. It has not been uncommon for me to encounter situations where I have independently known that the answers that AI Google Search was giving me were some combination of outright wrong and fatally incomplete. So you have to be careful. I want to say that AI Google Search has given higher-integrity answers than, say, ChatGPT. But it also might be that I'm biased because I've mainly been asking technical questions that perhaps aren't representative of questions in general with regard to the accuracy of answers. (And I only played around with ChatGPT very briefly, earlier this year.)
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Occult Book Reviews: The Black Arts
[I'm sharing some of my old reviews from Quora because I will refer back to them in the new ones. This one is from Dec 2020]
The Black Arts: An Absorbing Account of Witchcraft, Demonology, Astrology, and Other Mystical Practices Throughout the Ages by Richard Cavendish is a book about the history of occultism and the way it has been historically practiced. I already had a copy of this book in my possession when I heard a host on one of my favorite occult podcasts say that this was the book that got them into the occult in the first place. That kicked it up my priority list! What I didn’t realize is that this book is not new; it was published in 1967. I had the 50th anniversary edition. So, I went in wondering just how out-of-date it was going to be, or whether it holds up.
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I wasn’t really sure what to expect from it, but I could see that it was spoooooky — spooky title, spooky cover, first thing in it is a picture of Levi’s Baphomet… Honestly, I like that. A spooky vibe certainly makes it intriguing, and helps it appeal to those who view the occult as an exciting taboo. And indeed, it takes a mainly “lefty” approach to magic, with its first sentence being “The driving force behind black magic is hunger for power,” and the last sentence of that paragraph being “Carried to its furthest extreme, the black magician’s ambition is to wield extreme power over the entire universe, to make himself a god.” Well, duh, if it’s got a title as edgy as The Black Arts, it’s bound to be a left-hand-path kind of book! And it is. Mostly. Cavendish points out that very few occultists self-identify as black magicians, preferring to distance themselves from any accusations of “black magic.”
However, this book is not actually edgy in any way, which is nice. A lot of books of self-proclaimed “black magic” (which may or may not have existed in the 60s, but certainly exist now) come across as “edgy.” They’re specifically geared towards people who like the idea of “black magic” for the sake of shock value or just because it feels taboo and therefore cool. Necromancy! Demonolatry! Satanism! Muahahaha! This book contains information on all those subjects, alongside Kabbalah, alchemy, astrology, and things of that nature. Although the book’s title is almost certainly designed to be provocative (excellent marketing strategy), the book itself is not. It may state that certain practices or correspondences (such as left or the number 2) were considered evil, but passes no judgement. This book is a history of the Black Arts, and that includes using poppets and the like to kill people and old-school PGM-type curses, which this author terms “witchcraft.” I don’t find this offensive, because this book is not attempting to instruct the reader in magic or morality. It’s describing the way magic was used and understood historically, without condoning or condemning unethical practices (like animal sacrifices, psychic attacks, targeted love spells). It has a neutral tone throughout. Cavendish is a historian, not an occultist.
A disclaimer: This book uses the word “witchcraft” in the historical sense, referring to devil worship (for example, citing Vance Randolph and the Ozark witches), or malevolent forms of folk magic. It’s a bit uncomfortable to read, especially since the book was written post-Wicca, but it’s important to emphasize that Cavendish is not using the word “witchcraft” to refer to its modern practice. I think his choice of terminology here just shows the book’s age. (He also uses the word “primitive” to mean “indigenous,” which would be offensive today, and uses “bisexual” to mean “hermaphroditic,” which is hilarious. Also, a lot of the science and psychology he cites is outdated.) So, don’t let that ruffle your feathers.
Despite not being a practical manual, it is written with occultists in mind. I can see why occultists like this book. The first few pages manage to clearly and concisely lay out many important occult principles — that mankind is like God but on a much smaller scale, that the universe at large reflects the workings of the human mind and body, that spellwork is based upon using one’s imagination to mentally conjure emotions and sensations that are then concentrated and directed towards the intended result, that humans can become like gods through reconciliation of opposites, “like attracts like,” etc. I’m very impressed by that. Its first chapter also includes a brief history of nineteenth century occultists like Levi, Mathers, and Crowley, and all of the petty metaphysical shit-slinging they engaged in, which was informative to say the least.
According to this book, occultists believe that everything in the universe is made up of rational patterns, that the universe is fundamentally orderly: “The theory that all the phenomena of the universe are connected together in a great design or pattern is one of the fundamental assumptions of magic” (62). This idea is what gives divination systems like numerology and astrology their credence, what justifies “as above, so below,” and what defines correspondences. I looked at that sentence and thought, huh, I’m not sure I believe that. I don’t believe that there is no chance and no chaos in the universe. There are patterns in the universe — it obviously has its own logic in the form of mathematics — but it’s us who assign any real significance to that. We find the patterns, and they become significant because we noticed them. And then I realized, that is the “chaos” part of Chaos Magic.
I always knew that “Chaos” referred to something more like chaos theory than literal discord, but I didn’t understand what that meant until now. Chaos Magic takes a more existentialist view of the universe, believing it to be fundamentally chaotic and with no inherent meaning, but also believing that the meanings we assign to it are still significant to us. As magicians, we can use our sheer willpower to tame the chaos of the universe. Hence sigils that you scribble on slips of paper that work on the unconscious level. Hence, “you do the magic, not the correspondences.” A random pattern of tarot cards or rune stones is significant because of the way they resonate for you, not because they are placed by divine hands. “As above, so below” becomes more metaphorical, referring to the mundane and spiritual worlds instead of earthly life and the literal heavens. I don’t think that this is incompatible with the Principle of Mentalism, either. The universe can be an emanation of the mind of God without necessarily being “intelligent design.” I don’t necessarily believe that the universe is devoid of meaning, but I do think that it is what we make of it.
Following the introductory chapter, each chapter focuses on a different occult field.
The second chapter focuses on numerology. To be honest, I don’t really get numerology. The number that corresponds to my name changes depending on how much of my name I’m using, and whether it uses the Latin or Hebrew system. I also didn’t think the interpretations provided by this book suited me. Cavendish himself admits that numerology is a bit vague and wooly, although “the same is true of astrology and other forms of fortune telling.” Astrology won me over, because all of the elements of my chart taken together result in an interpretation that is cohesive, accurate, and specific. Cartomancy also won me over because to me it works the same way as literary or art analysis — interpreting symbols, tropes, motifs, etc. in context with each other to find trends and make a point. That kind of stuff makes sense to me. Numbers do not. I really don’t like numbers. I’m sure that numerology can be as complicated and specific as astrology if one studies it properly, but I know it’s not my preferred divination system. However, from reading this, I can definitely see how someone who thinks in terms of numbers would appreciate it, since numerical patterns do appear all over the place and define the universe.
The next chapter is on the Kabbalah. It doesn’t provide any details about how to practice Kabbalah, but it provides an overview of what the Kabbalah is, where it comes from, and what each of the sephiroth represents. There’s also a section on each of the “paths” and how they relate to tarot cards, which I really appreciated, since I didn’t understand that. I still don’t think Kabbalah will ever be my preferred method of ascension, but I want to learn more about it. I’m surprised that this book doesn’t mention the Shekinah, so I still want to know more about what she is. Also included in this chapter was a section on gematria, which made my brain hurt, but it did (directly) explain the reasoning behind some of the conjecture in The White Goddess.
The chapter ends with a section on incantations and names of power — how they’re made, the theory behind them, etc. This was interesting, because I’m familiar with many of the long and unpronounceable incantations of old-school grimoires, but I almost always choose not to use them because I view them as overcomplicated and pointless. I appreciated learning where some of them come from and what the reasoning behind using them is. Some of them are based on Hebrew letters or Bible verses, but many are just meaningless gibberish (voces magicae). The point of many of them is literally just to sound impressive, without necessarily meaning anything. Although that might be pretentious, it also works — it helps to put the magician in the right mindset. It acts like a kind of pre-written glossolalia, ecstatically speaking or singing incomprehensible names that sound divine or supernatural and therefore powerful. The power actually comes from the rhythmic chanting, the magician’s conviction that the spell will work, and the force of the magician’s ecstasy. I hate memorizing long incantations and I also don’t like making noise, but I get it. Words do indeed have inherent power. God spoke the world into existence, and I write worlds of my own into existence. I also definitely agree that poetry makes for great incantations.
A tangent — I was talking to my mother about this, and she intuited that the reason the Tetragrammaton is unpronounceable is because it requires harmonics. One person cannot pronounce it correctly. For example, one person chanting “om” is very different from a whole room of people chanting “om,” to the point where they all start harmonizing with each other into a chord — that is the music of the spheres. The Tetragrammaton must be chanted, but it would be nigh-impossible to get all the people on earth to chant it with the same intention and hit upon the right harmony. Still, it’s probably no accident that “om,” “awen,” and “Yahweh,” all sound very similar when chanted. It’s also no accident that the word “incantation” comes from a word meaning “to chant or sing,” as does “enchantment” and “goetia” and a bunch of other words related to magic.
The section on alchemy explains what alchemy was, what the theory behind it was, and how the spiritual and the chemical aspects of alchemy relate to each other. I really appreciated the outline of the alchemical process as it relates to spiritual development, and the more explicit comparison between the spiritual process of alchemy and the chemical side. It wasn’t exactly detailed or comprehensive, certainly not designed to be a practical guide, but the summary was helpful. I admit, I had a hard time understanding the practical side of alchemy; beyond giving birth to modern chemistry, which is obviously an invaluable thing, what is practical alchemy supposed to do? Turning lead into gold is not something that’s literally possible, so what’s the point of practical alchemy? I tried asking Thoth himself that, and he said, “It is a physical representation of the spiritual side, like using altar tools or symbols, like casting a spell, like worshipping gods through statues. You could replicated it with dyed water, if you wanted the fun.” That’s my UPG, so, take it with a grain of salt.
This book further validated that the raw material of alchemy is you. The salt is your body, the mercury is the divine spark within you. The book also validated something I’ve noticed, that every profound occult secret ends up being painfully obvious: “And when at last the final illumination came and the secret dawned in all its splendour on his mind, he would find that the work was not difficult at all and would scarcely be able to understand how he had been so blind before.” Yep, that’s how it works. I still don’t feel like I’m capable of transmutation, but I know that to the gods it comes so easily, they don’t have to spend any energy on it. If I want them to tell me how to do it, I have to ask more specific questions or else they’ll just assume it’s obvious, like an intermediate ballet student asking how to do first position.
The section on astrology was mostly stuff I knew. It covers the basics of natal astrology, mundane astrology, and practical day-to-day astrology, as well as addressing some of the controversies that have surrounded astrology. I did learn a few interesting tidbits. For example, a conjunction between Mars and Saturn is a very bad omen that indicates plague, and there was one on March 31st 2020. Of course there was. Also, the precise date for when the Age of Aquarius is supposed to begin varies dramatically, but this book puts it around the year 2000. If it began in 2000, then with the Jupiter/Saturn conjunction in Aquarius on the Winter Solstice, we must have entered phase 2. Also, according to some astrologers, the Star of Bethlehem might have been a Jupiter/Saturn conjunction. (I saw it through a thin haze, and it looked like Venus.) The section ends with a description of the way planetary influences are traditionally used in magic, i.e. planetary talismans and planetary days/hours and the like.
The next chapter is on ceremonial magic. This is the grimoires and all the old-school stuff that’s designed to summon spirits. So, that means needing “virgin” material, long and complicated purification procedures, burning animal brains apparently… Maybe it shows a lack of dedication on my part that I don’t fast for days or make brand new materials by hand or gather all the planetary ingredients or memorize those long incantations or even so much as draw a physical circle on the floor. But hey, my Goetic evocations went pretty well so whatever I’m doing must work. Honestly, if I hadn’t already succeeded at that, I may have been scared out of it by some of the horror stories in this book. Then again, does anyone really follow the grimoires’ instructions to the letter? Is it even possible to do that? These procedures are probably meant to be impractical. I’m not sure if anyone has actually burned a cat’s brain as incense just because it corresponds to Saturn. Or drawn the circle on strips of animal skin nailed down by nails from a child’s or murderer’s coffin. The whole second section of this chapter is about animal sacrifices in the grimoires, the frenzy of the sacrifice contributing to the energetic load that causes the spirit to manifest. As a general rule, don’t harm animals for magic! Even if an old Renaissance-era book or Eliphas Levi says so! Cavendish seems to agree with me that all the details aren’t really necessary, saying that “success seemed to be obtained more in spite of the ceremony than because of it.”
This chapter provides a summary of a summoning ritual with full incantations from the Lemegeton. My own Goetic work wasn’t exactly a summoning ritual as described in the Lemegeton. I didn’t work myself into a frenzy, I just sat there with a book. It probably was pretty uninteresting to look at. I didn’t see any spirits or any other manifestations, apart from a few images inside my mind. Maybe I did it wrong, but even if I did, I got exactly what I wanted out of it. I heard the spirits’ “voices” inside my mind and interviewed each one of them. That’s what I came for, so I say I was successful. I still don’t know whether I should have treated them differently, but it was a good first attempt. The section on the Goetia in this book is evocatively called “The Lords of Darkness,” beginning with a Tolkien quote about the Nazgul. It describes how most of the demons described in the Lemegeton and Pseudomonarchia Daemonum are just other people’s gods.
This section closes off by discussing necromancy and low magic. Apparently necromancy is “the ugliest and most dangerous of magical operations,” which I would not agree with, but of course by “necromancy” he’s referring to grisly old-school rituals meant to raise a spirit by means of an actual corpse, and not to just any act of communication with the dead. These rituals involved dressing in grave-clothes and eating dog’s flesh and unfermented grape juice (oh no, not grape juice!), and evoking Hecate. (Apparently no one can look at Hecate and remain sane, so Hecate is officially a Lovecraftian eldritch abomination now, which I honestly have no problem with.) Hecate’s historical rituals definitely weren’t pretty, whatever some modern witches might have you think. Some PGM spells require that you burn feces as a sacrifice to her, so yeah, none of this really surprises me. No sense in going to all the trouble of these gruesome rituals to get a few questions answered. Automatic Writing works well enough for me.
The section on low magic does not concern modern herbalism or any more practical folk magic, but ancient love spells, mandrake lore, the Hand of Glory, and other stuff like that. That’s because this is a book of black magic, not white magic (as it were).
The first section of the chapter on devil-worship concerns how the idea of Satan originated, and changed from a prosecuting angel to a fallen angel to the de facto god of evil and opposing force to the Almighty. I knew most of it, but I’m surprised Ahriman and Ahura-Mazda weren’t mentioned. Satanism, as described in this chapter, is more of a “bad is good and good is bad” anti-Christianity than actual modern Satanism. In 1967, LaVeyan Satanism had only just become a thing, and the modern Satanic movement hadn’t really taken off yet. Cavendish says that people who practice this supposed anti-Christianity are probably rare. Instead, he discusses existing religions that are subversions of traditional Christian thought, like Gnosticism (which teaches that God is evil and that the whole world is ruled by evil beings called “archons,” which must be defied by any means possible ), and alleged or accused Satanists like (medieval) German “Luciferians” and the Templars. A lot of the accusations made against these groups were also made later against “witches.”
The difference between “witchcraft” and the ceremonial magic described in the previous chapter is that, while ceremonial magicians command and control demons in the name of God, (historical) witches are subservient to and worship the demons. Right out of the gate, Cavendish dismisses the Murray theory (and this was written back when it was popular), but he also suspects that the trials must have been based on some existing thing: “Witches and Satanists exist today and it is likely that they existed in the past, if only in small numbers.” I disagree with Cavendish on this matter. I don’t think there was ever a real witch-cult, be they pagans or Satanists or anything in between.
It is definitely uncomfortable that he uses the word “witch” to refer to these devil-worshippers, but it’s clear he’s referring to the conception of witches in the Early Modern Period, regardless of whether they were real or not. He provides numerous accounts and confessions about the Witches’ Sabbath and what it consists of. Cavendish suggests that witches show contempt for the Eucharist in particular, because those who do magic already have the powers of God. I really appreciate his attempts to trace all of these common characteristics of the Witches’ Sabbath to their origins. I like his theory that the similarities between the Witches’ Sabbath and Dionysian worship or other pagan practices indicate the survival of similar ideas, rather than real practices.
The closest Cavendish gets to actually mentioning Wicca is this:
“Modern witches are extremely secretive and very little about their beliefs and practices is known to outsiders. There are said to be as many as six thousand of them in England, with the number steadily increasing. Like other magicians, they insist that they are devoted to good works. Their wax images are intended to heal the sick and far from blasting crops or eating babies, they try to assist the fertility of Nature. […] The witches worship a moon-goddess, whose name is secret, but who is probably Diana, and a sun-god who may be Lucifer. They believe in reincarnation and a Lord of the Underworld who determines when and where the witches will be reborn. This Lord is perhaps Lucifer as black sun and also perhaps Cernunnos the horned god. The witches say that their goddess, the Queen of Heaven and All Living, went down to the underworld and mated with the Lord, which is a version of the myth of Persephone…
The next paragraph goes on to say that witches (Wiccans) are “heavily affected” by the Murray theory, base their rituals on ancient paganism, that they celebrate the four Celtic festivals, and that they perform their rituals naked. “Whether they adore the black bulk of the Goat, squatting on its altar, is not known, but they say that their rites bring them a profound sense of security and peace.”
And… that’s it. Clearly, Cavendish doesn’t know much about Wicca, and I don’t know if that’s simply because it isn’t his field or because Wicca hadn’t gained enough of a presence in the mainstream for him to know. He doesn’t mention Gerald Gardner in the witchcraft section at all, despite Gardner enthusiastically calling himself a witch. The only mention of Gardner is in the ceremonial magic chapter: “Gerald Gardner, a member of a modern witch coven, says that witches work naked, so as not to impede the release of magical force which their ceremonies generate in their bodies.” And that’s it! Wicca obviously did not have the cultural traction that it has now, which is why I don’t begrudge Cavendish for using the word “witchcraft” to refer to devil-worship. The word “witchcraft” meant something different then than it does now.
The final section of the book is about the use of Mass in magic, and the perversion of it into the “Black Mass,” a sort of variant of the witches’ sabbath where Satanists worship the devil by subverting the Mass. It all sounds very edgy to me. I’m not sure if anyone actually has performed a Black Mass or if it’s just a shock-value urban legend type thing. Cavendish helpfully points out that most occultists don’t believe in Satan, believing that God is the whole of the universe, good and evil, and to separate it into a “good” and an “evil” is to miss the point, “failure to understand the true nature of the universe.” I agree with that, and it’s nice to have my sentiments validated.
I think that, despite this book’s age, it’s still a very good theoretical introduction to the history of and concepts behind occultism. Most of the flaws in this book come from it simply being out of date in some places. I definitely recommend it for anyone who wants to know more about old-school magic, and it’s also a good resource for writers who want to add some realism to their magic systems without studying occultism in-depth. Practicing occultists probably won’t be exposed to any new information, but there’s a lot in here, and I definitely liked having a thorough summary.
#my writing#old writing#book review#occult books#occultism#occult#witchcraft#witchblr#ceremonial magic#gematria#alchemy#astrology#goetia#folk magic#long post
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Question from Quora: "When Democrats talk about 'democracy', they really mean socialism, don't they? If so, why do they appear not to know that socialism isn't democratic?"
My answer: Social Democracy is not pure socialism. Rather, it is fairly reminiscent of FDR’s era where Capitalism was somewhat balanced with social policies, business regulations and tax rates on Corporations & wealthy individuals were much higher than in today’s 21st century economy.
Many of the rubes and uninformed voters of today who have been given the false ideology of “trickle down” economics and “Free Market”(no such thing) Globalism as being to their benefit, do not know history well enough to see through that nonsense when they read it or hear it.
US Universities and many business oriented colleges churned out 1000’s of MBA graduates who went directly to Wall Street and consistently defended runaway capitalism and huge tax cuts during the Reagan administration, while also using an anti-union narrative that Reagan boosted during his 2nd term.
Plus..and this is a significant shift…Several “blue chip” corporations off shored to Brazil, India, China and the Philippines, 100’s of 1000’s of US jobs in the Tech industry over the two 1990–2000 decades that put American middle class laborers Out of Work.. Then they blamed unions for off shoring when very few (if any) companies that went overseas were unionized in the first place!
Americans ‘drank those sewage polices’ as if it were a ‘honey’ sustenance of the whole US economy…when in reality, it poisoned the US balance of social democracy and the pro-corporate anti-social policies Congress passed as multiple financial laws that the American people had no knowledge of and no clue how it affected main street & suburban American working people.
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Hi
How do you start a blog on a website of its own?
What to write in the about and what to publish as the first article?
1. First you pick a niche for your blog.
2. Choose a blogging platform. I recommend Wordpress.org / Wordpress.com. You can also use Blogger.
3. Choose a domain name for your blog and web hosting provider.
4. Download a blog template and design your layout. You can use Envato market place (I use this one but there are loads)
5. You want to start off with about 5 posts. Here are some things you can do to figure out what to write about:
a. Look at your audience. What are their pain points, concerns, and obsessions when it comes to your products?
b. Use sites like Quora where there are millions of people asking questions to get the best answers.
c. Use blog directories to search by topic.
d. Research competing blogs. Other blogs’ ideas for content in your niche can be a valuable source of inspiration.
e. Use Semrush’s Topic Research tool. With the Topic Research tool, you can enter any blog topic to get a list of related topics and questions that people are searching for.
f. Ask your readers. You can get feedback from your readers on what they want to read about by asking them directly or through surveys.
6. You can use your existing platforms, as well as Pinterest, or other social media platforms to promote your blog and drive traffic to it. It can be under your name or you can make an anonymous account.
7. There are several ways you can monetize your blog:
a. Sell a product or service. You can sell your own products or services on your blog, such as ebooks, courses, or coaching services.
b. Create gated content. You can create premium content that is only available to subscribers or members who pay a fee.
c. Promote external brands. You can promote other brands’ products or services on your blog and earn a commission for each sale made through your affiliate link.
d. Offer sponsored content opportunities to other brands. You can offer sponsored content opportunities to other brands that are relevant to your niche.
e. Provide coaching services. You can offer coaching services related to your niche.
f. Market your freelance writing skills. You can market your freelance writing skills and offer writing services to other blogs or websites.
g. Participate in affiliate marketing. You can participate in affiliate marketing programs and earn a commission for each sale made through your affiliate link.
8. You can use a free image website like: unsplash, pixabay, pexels or canva to create content.
hope this helps!
<3
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where the fuck did anakin get those credits to give to c-3po for his market run in tcw
i’ve been trying to find solid info about if the jedi get paid by the republic for being part of the grand army. it makes sense, to me, that the jedi (that are part of the war) have to be on payroll in some way and paid with currency they don’t use so they recycle it in some way. donate it to charity, back to the republic’s cause, to the temple, or just let it collect virtual dust.
but all i’ve found is flimsy quora shit i have no idea is sourced from somewhere and it might as well be someone’s opinion saying: “no the jedi don’t get paid because it’s against their code of conduct. they fight in the war because it’s for peace etc.”
i get that jedi in the order do not get paid simply for being in the order. their clothes, their food, their rooms are all provided for them. financed by something i have no idea what.
they have no need for money, which means that the republic could see them as a way to save a penny. but one of the benefits of paying someone to do a job is that if they screw up that job then there’s someone to blame. they’re registered, and they’re held accountable because they’re getting paid to do something and they didn’t complete it.
i know the jedi would never intentionally screw up things, but i’m thinking in the eyes of the corrupt republic.
but it makes sense that the republic is like, “since you’re a literal general, here’s your salary for being a general.” because that’s just the normal general salary ™, and it just so happens that a jedi is now allowed to be a general. what’s the jedi supposed to say? “no i’m just going to volunteer.” i guess that makes sense too?? there are volunteer soldiers in all kinds of historical wars. but if the republic has the funds to employ, would they not use those funds? volunteer soldiers were used when their side could not possibly finance them. at this point, the republic is still very much capable of employing soldiers with pay.
all this and it’s just to help me justify anakin gets paid and keeps money in an account somewhere because he feels like he’s not allowed to use it on himself but uses it on everything else. ship parts, droid repair, you, etc. he’s lowkey a sugar daddy you don’t even realize how loaded he really is bcos he never talks about it.
but he’s also got broke boy energy 😭someone fucking sedate me i cannot stop going back and forth
#help#indy shoots the shit#anakin#anakin skywalker#star wars#sw#anakin skywalker x reader#star wars fanfiction#star wars prequels#star wars fanon#anakin skywalker imagine#star wars writing#the clone wars#tcw#star wars commentary#sw commentary#tcw commentary#the clone wars commentary#sw meta#star wars meta#anakin meta
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Another correction with GenAI as the lead
Leads with a GenAI image, so... still give it a chance? Maybe not written by AI but by a human? Then why so many errors?
A great way to tank yourself as a creator is to use a GenAI image as a cover, as part of your marketing. People will start to doubt if you wrote anything.
So to demonstrate, I'm going to go through the errors in this article. Because often people think, "Oh, self-pub is EASY and I'll make all the mulah" from articles like these, but the hardships aren't showing up.
The first issue is this table...
Screenshot 2024-12-24
That's an odd thing....
Did you write this?
So this is attributed to Jane Friedman, who is a real person.
The problem with this chart is that this is not her chart. Look at the actual chart here: https://janefriedman.com/key-book-publishing-path/
Huge honking red flag.
This is shaky legal ground, I would think too, attributing a work that is soooo clearly shoddy to a professional.
This is also why it's so filled with errors.
So let's go over the items: Trad Publishing:
Publisher contracts with author for rights to manuscript
Not always easy to sever relationship
Possible royalty paid up front and with book sales; author may need to pay for extras
Offset printing for large runs
Traditional Publishing Today The “Big Five” major publishing groups handle most traditional publishing, earning approximately 25% of their income from ebooks. You must secure an agent to present your work to these (or most other) houses. Getting an agent can be a daunting task, and crafting an agent’s query letter is an art in itself, but it’s necessary to avoid your request landing in their proverbial slush pile. Once a publisher accepts your manuscript, they own its rights, and your contract specifies what they can do with it. You receive royalties, while they manage editing, cover design, marketing, and distribution. You have minimal input or control over these processes, but they cover all associated costs. A traditionally published book can take up to two years to reach bookstore shelves. Royalties from traditional publishers are smaller than those received from self-publishing, but an expected larger number of sales offsets this.
The “Big Five” major publishing groups handle most traditional publishing, earning approximately 25% of their income from ebooks.
That's their source. No. It's authors who earn about 10-25% from ebook sales of their total sales within traditional publishing. This does not mean the publishers do.
I smell genAI. Like how could you be an author and miss this from your *checks source* Reddit and Quora??? Like really? You're taking these figures from Quora?
Again, for small presses that are genuine small presses, you DO NOT ALWAYS need an agent, however, when dealing with an entity not your own with a long term contract, you should have an IP lawyer or an agent or at least be up on your legal shit before you sign.
Getting an agent can be a daunting task, and crafting an agent’s query letter is an art in itself, but it’s necessary to avoid your request landing in their proverbial slush pile.
This sounds like a copy-paste of the other article?? Is genAI spreading misinformation and bad organization skills?
A query letter ain't that difficult. Does it take time? Yes, but can you learn the art of it? Yes.
To be clear, the system for trad publishing, which is why I have suspicions they didn't really do the research is:
query an agent (usually for bigger presses and medium sized presses)
If you get accepted, then you go to signing the contract with the agent, who usually asks for 15-20% of your total earnings. Money flows first to you.
You have to make a comp package.
The comp package goes out to editors at presses. You need to communicate clearly to your agent which type of publishers you wish to court.
The book is picked up by a publisher who edits your manuscript and often works with you on your press releases, etc. Sometimes you are given control of the cover. If you make the cover yourself, make sure you get paid separately for that. There should be a built-in reversion clause. !@#$ Make sure there is a reversion clause.
The payment from the advance is made out in installments over a long period of time.
If the publisher fails to publish, then the rights should revert back to you. Usually the time period is a year (more likely) or two.
The book is then after copyedits, etc released at a given date.
You get your first payment on the first book signing (usually)
Royalties only happen after the advance amount is met in sales, not before then.
I should note that often people who are shitty at queries are great at synopses and people who are shitty at synopses are great at queries.
So let's go over the list items:
Publisher contracts with author for rights to manuscript
Yes. This is true. Limited rights to publish the manuscript in various forms. The publisher pays for each form of the media which should be delineated in the contract. Look out for in perpetuity. Agent, reversion should be in the contract especially sinc eit's popular these days for publishers to try to screw you over by saying they own your manuscript's license for the rest of your life+copyright time. That's what the reversion is for.
Not always easy to sever relationship
More often than not the publisher severs the relationship with the writer by usually either non-payment or failing to publish. It's often more often than not for the writer to be both paid and published.
The only reason to sever is if there is something egregious.
Possible royalty paid up front and with book sales; author may need to pay for extras
Untrue.
The ADVANCE is the usually 15K-20K for the PoC authors. And that you have to make back in sales. A whopping 20% only make that back. You in effect borrow that against the sale of your book. But if you ask for a lower advance, you better ask for a higher royalty rate.
The "standard" royalty rate is around 20-30% last I saw.
You absolutely do NOT need to pay for marketing, editing, translation, etc. The publisher handles all of that and the covers, typesetting, etc. They sometimes will also assign a publicist, though famously, this is usually for famous white male authors, which shouldn't get me into trouble since it's been reported waaaaayyyy back.
Offset printing for large runs also make books available through online channels
They do absorb the cost for printed books. They do help with listing it on amazon and getting you an official ISBN, etc.
With Indie the problem is the costs are absorbed by the author.
I've known writers to pay up to 5,000-25K dollars to be published. Which is eye watering. And you should be getting full service editing at that point.
You can also circle around and get no profit and face a loss of 4,995. Again, you need great marketing to make any money off of it and be aware of marketing, which you may or may not know.
I've seen authors that only got 5 dollars back from their sales because they simply don't know how to market their book. They didn't do the reading, they didn't start doing the marketing, their marketing is too timid, they didn't know how to network to other writers, etc.
The most successful online sales writers usually write shorter works, nonfiction, and put a lot of effort into doing a professional type setting and layout, including the covers. They really put themselves out there in terms of marketing. They know how to build connections, get onto podcasts, into newspapers and know how to angle themselves so they can break that 10% barrier.
But this comes with an additional cost as well. These people often don't have the time to write another book because the time chasing podcasts and arranging, etc is the time you're not writing. So to be an indie author, you really, really need to be able to make back your investment and research before you write the book.
True Indie authors have to write a TON of books in addition to the marketing. And it's an eye watering amount.
As for combination outfits...
They are often rife with scams, and usually aren't worth your time. It's often better to find a small limited press that's genuine with a genuine track record than to pay a combination press.
The problem is when you do indie there are less automatically there supporting authors to help you out.
BUT getting through the doors of trad publishing is hard and you may, especially as a queer disabled PoC, etc face more discrimination.
Ultimately, the choice is yours, but I wouldn't listen to the idea that Indie publishing is a quick and easy buck either. You have to absorb a lot of costs up front, and have A++ hussle game. This doesn't mean that Trad publishing doesn't have the problem of you having to do your marketing, but there are more support systems in play.
Either way, I'd look at Jane Friedman's actual chart rather than what seems to be an AI generated chart. I defer to people who have experienced it all versus a chart that is wholly inaccurate.
So my last bit of advice is this:
Gen AI is not your friend.
It never will be and never should be used for official articles or images. There is nothing faster to tank your sales than to use GenAI for those things. Nobody wants to read GenAI. And GenAI fails become rapidly apparent when people do things like fact check you and find out you got your info from Reddit and Quora and didn't pause for a hot minute to consider if that was the wisest source, which then makes people think, you're a shitty writer, or you used GenAI. Don't do it. Don't be a creator that steals from other creators, whether they are known to you or not.
Humans love, love when they feel something genuine from your heart and work. Practical effects are coming back in movies.
And there is always someone like me out there that will check your work. And I'll catch you. Like Kenneth Rowe stealing from other writers, despite being a Lit professor. I'll be sure to let people know. And do you want to do that to yourself?
Simply don't do it.
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The Great Shift Quadra Hidden Traffic Surge Reviews Complaints - Is It Legit?
Explore how "The Great Shift Quadra Hidden Traffic Surge" revolutionizes website traffic generation with its innovative strategies. Achieve unprecedented growth today!
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Top Quora Marketing Tactics for Startups and Small Businesses
1. Understanding Quora:
Target Audience: Identify your perfect consumer on Quora. What are their pursuits? What questions are they asking?
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Connect Social Media: Link your social media profiles on your Quora account to boom visibility.
Write a Compelling Bio: Briefly describe your knowledge and what you may offer to the Quora network.
3. Finding the Right Questions:
Use the Quora Search Bar: Search for applicable key phrases and topics associated with your commercial enterprise.
Explore Related Questions: When viewing a question, take a look at the "Related Questions" segment for greater opportunities to engage.
Follow Topics: Follow subjects relevant to your industry to live updated on the trendy discussions.
Follow People: Follow enterprise specialists and influencers to learn from their insights and have interaction with their content.
Four. Answering Questions Effectively:
Provide Value: Offer insightful and informative answers that address the question directly.
Be Authentic and Engaging: Write in a pleasant and conversational tone.
Use High-Quality Images and Videos: Visual content can make your solutions more appealing and engaging.
Include a Call to Action (Optional): If suitable, gently manual readers in your website or different relevant sources.
Five. Promoting Your Quora Content:
Share Your Answers: Share your nice answers in your social media channels.
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Create a Quora Digest: Compile your first-rate answers right into a downloadable PDF or e-book.
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10. Key Takeaways:
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Track your consequences: Monitor your development and refine your method based totally in your effects.
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Boost Your Online Reputation with Sociocosmos
Are you looking to enhance your brand’s online visibility and credibility? Sociocosmos is your one-stop solution to elevate your Quora presence.
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![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/18b0c139ec32ccbe7ae01117df1a031b/008b58c13a50c8bc-d4/s540x810/9a01918d6eef2b84b71f75e32319a4afd2bafba8.jpg)
How To Use Quora For Free Traffic In 2023
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Social Media Platforms
Definition of Social Media
Social media refers to interactive digital platforms that facilitate the creation, sharing, and exchange of content, ideas, and information through virtual networks and communities. These platforms enable users to communicate and engage with others, both on a personal and professional level, using various formats such as text, images, videos, and live streams. The essence of social media lies in its participatory nature, allowing users to actively contribute and influence content instead of passively consuming it. Social media operates on web-based applications or mobile apps, driven by real-time interactions and algorithmic content delivery tailored to user preferences.
Social media can be categorized into various types based on their primary function:
Social Networking Sites: Platforms like Facebook and LinkedIn focus on connecting individuals or groups for social and professional networking.
Media Sharing Networks: Sites like Instagram, YouTube, and Pinterest emphasize sharing visual and multimedia content.
Microblogging Platforms: Twitter and Tumblr allow short-form content sharing for instant communication.
Discussion Forums: Websites such as Reddit and Quora provide spaces for sharing knowledge and engaging in topic-based discussions.
Importance of Social Media
Social media has become an integral part of modern life, influencing how individuals, businesses, and organizations interact with one another. Its significance is manifold, touching various aspects of personal, professional, and societal dimensions.
1. Communication and Connectivity
Social media enables instant communication across the globe. It fosters connections among friends, family, and colleagues, transcending geographical boundaries. Video calls, live chats, and group discussions through platforms like WhatsApp and Zoom have redefined traditional communication methods.
2. Information Dissemination
With the rise of citizen journalism and user-generated content, social media platforms are now primary sources of real-time news and updates. Websites like Twitter are instrumental in disseminating breaking news, while platforms like LinkedIn serve as hubs for industry-specific information and thought leadership.
3. Marketing and Branding
For businesses, social media is an invaluable tool for marketing and branding. Platforms like Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok allow companies to engage directly with consumers, promote products, and build brand loyalty. Influencer marketing has also gained traction, enabling brands to leverage social media...
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Did you ever get stuck trying to come up with content creation ideas 🤔?
You’re not alone! We’ve all been there.
But here’s the good news – generating fresh content ideas doesn’t have to be hard. Let's look at a few strategies that might really assist with and motivate your creativity once again!
1️⃣ First, think about context. Who are you creating for? What are their interests and needs? Once you have that, it’s time to look for great content. Find sources that offer interesting and helpful info your audience will love. Finally, think about curation. How can you package and present this content in a way that’s valuable and engaging for your audience?
2️⃣ Another great way to spark ideas is to follow the trends. Stay in the loop with what's hot right now 🔥. Tools like Google Trends and Twitter can show you what people are talking about. This keeps your content relevant and exciting.
3️⃣ Also, don’t be afraid to ask your audience directly! Polls, questions, or even casual chats on social media are perfect for discovering what your followers want to see. It’s an easy way to generate content ideas that resonate and build stronger connections with your audience.
4️⃣ Lastly, mix things up! Don’t just stick to one type of content. Try lists, videos, infographics, or even short podcasts 🎙️. Experimenting with different formats keeps things fresh and exciting, both for you and your followers.
At the end of the day, it’s all about delivering value while keeping things fun and interesting for your audience!
👉 Follow me for more simple, actionable tips on SEO, digital marketing, and how to boost your online success 🌐💼. Let’s grow together! 🚀
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#digital marketing#content creation#marketing strategy#audience engagement#online marketing#social media#copywriting#seo services#india#tumbler#search engine optimization#tech news#artificial intelligence#openai#chatgpt
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This day in history
Tomorrow (December 5), I'm at Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill, NC, with my new solarpunk novel The Lost Cause, which 350.org's Bill McKibben called "The first great YIMBY novel: perceptive, scientifically sound, and extraordinarily hopeful."
#15yrsago Berlin hacker con will use RFID badges to simulate life in a totalitarian panopticon https://events.ccc.de/congress/2008/wiki/OpenBeacon_with_OpenAMD/
#15yrsago RIP, Forrest J Ackerman https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-ackerman6-2008dec06-story.html
#15yrsago Googling Security: book that opens your eyes to how much you disclose to Google https://memex.craphound.com/2008/12/05/googling-security-book-that-opens-your-eyes-to-how-much-you-disclose-to-google/
#10yrsago 75% of American silent feature films lost https://variety.com/2013/film/news/library-of-congress-only-14-of-u-s-silent-films-survive-1200915020/
#10yrsago NSA collecting unimaginable quantities of mobile phone location data for guilt-by-association data-mining https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/nsa-tracking-cellphone-locations-worldwide-snowden-documents-show/2013/12/04/5492873a-5cf2-11e3-bc56-c6ca94801fac_story.html
#10yrsago Democratic lawmakers share a squalorous house in DC https://edition.cnn.com/2013/12/04/politics/real-alpha-house/index.html
#10yrsago Rob Ford police document: allegations of heroin use and more https://torontolife.com/category/city/toronto-politics/2013/12/04/new-bombshells-from-police-documents-suggest-rob-ford-may-have-tried-heroin-been-blackmailed/
#10yrsago NYPD shoot at unarmed man, hit bystanders, charge man for making them shoot https://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/05/nyregion/unarmed-man-is-charged-with-wounding-bystanders-shot-by-police-near-times-square.html?smid=pl-share
#10yrsago Orange UK plumbs the depths of insulting, stupid marketing, finds a new low https://memex.craphound.com/2013/12/05/orange-uk-plumbs-the-depths-of-insulting-stupid-marketing-finds-a-new-low/
#5yrsago What it’s like to be a woman reporter on a cryptocurrency cruise where nearly all the other women are sex-workers https://web.archive.org/web/20181205144647/https://breakermag.com/trapped-at-sea-with-cryptos-nouveau-riche/
#5yrsago See you in court: amid protests, shameless Wisconsin GOP neuters the incoming governor in an all-night, lame-duck session https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politics/2018/1205/Wisconsin-GOP-pass-slew-of-measures-during-lameduck-session
#5yrsago British Member of Parliament publishes 250 pages of damning internal Facebook documents that had been sealed by a US court https://www.parliament.uk/globalassets/documents/commons-committees/culture-media-and-sport/Note-by-Chair-and-selected-documents-ordered-from-Six4Three.pdf
#5yrsago The longest-serving Congressman in US history proposes a four fixes for American democracy https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/12/john-dingell-how-restore-faith-government/577222/
#5yrsago RIP, George HW Bush: a mass-murderer and war-criminal https://theintercept.com/2018/12/05/george-h-w-bush-1924-2018-american-war-criminal/
#5yrsago Trump cybersecurity advisor Rudy Giuliani has no idea how the internet works https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2018/12/rudy-giuliani-doesnt-seem-to-know-how-the-internet-works.html
#5yrsago Not just breaches: Never, ever use Quora https://waxy.org/2018/12/why-you-should-never-ever-use-quora/
#5yrsago Obamacare study: 25% decline in home delinquencies among newly insured poor people https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-12-04/how-access-to-obamacare-cuts-late-housing-payments
#5yrsago Poland rejects the EU’s copyright censorship plans, calls it #ACTA2 https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/11/poland-saved-europe-acta-can-they-save-us-acta2
#1yrago Monopoly's event-horizon: The true capitalist singularity https://pluralistic.net/2022/12/05/eldritch-physics/#wouldnt-start-from-here Banning surveillance ads and banning drm as good politics
It's EFF's Power Up Your Donation Week: this week, donations to the Electronic Frontier Foundation are matched 1:1, meaning your money goes twice as far. I've worked with EFF for 22 years now and I have always been - and remain - a major donor, because I've seen firsthand how effective, responsible and brilliant this organization is. Please join me in helping EFF continue its work!
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