Hi! I’m David Hepworth. I like working to make the internet better. I’m a front-end web developer who focuses on user interface design to improve user experiences. My professional work spans multiple companies in disparate industries, but I’ve managed to remain focused on the creative fields related to web design and development and content coordination across each position. I enjoy being challenged to learn new technology or methods to complete a task.
If anything I write here prompts you to respond, please send me a message at hello@dhepworth.com. I want to share my thoughts but be open to learning from the opinions of others, and I welcome your input.
I know some of these are dubious in their quality, but there is something appealing to me about being able to link someone to a distillation of who I am and how I see things. People can have such widely varied worldviews that I think it’s helpful to share them early, perhaps so others can use these results as a way to dismiss my viewpoints in a succinct and time-efficient manner.
INTJ: Have original minds and great drive for implementing their ideas and achieving their goals. Quickly see patterns in external events and develop long-range explanatory perspectives. When committed, organize a job and carry it through. Skeptical and independent, have high standards of competence and performance — for themselves and others.
Progressive Activists have strong ideological views, high levels of engagement with political issues, and the highest levels of education and socioeconomic status. Their own circumstances are secure. They feel safer than any group, which perhaps frees them to devote more attention to larger issues of social justice in their society. They have an outsized role in public debates, even though they comprise a small portion of the total population, about one in 12 Americans. They are highly sensitive to issues of fairness and equity in society, particularly regarding race, gender, and other minority group identities. Their emphasis on unjust power structures leads them to be very pessimistic about fairness in America. They are uncomfortable with nationalism and ambivalent about America’s role in the world.
Closest Match: Libertarian Socialism