I think you may have misunderstood what I meant by inverting the mount. You need to invert the camera with it.
Then you can easily point it down 10-20°, away from the sky.
The camera should automatically rotate the video 180° for you. Even if it doesn't, that's super easy to do in any editing software.
"Everything in moderation." Too much of anything is bad. Including agreement.
Any group with similar ideas inevitably moves tward the most extreme form of that idea over time. Without people who disagree, that are able pull on the Overton Window preventing it's movement too far, the group will become out of touch with reality.
So yah, echo chambers breed extremist views. And are a bad thing. Disagreement and debate is an important part of mental health for everyone.
I spent a decade as direct care staff, working with -I don't even know how many kids. At least a couple hundred.
And yes kids do that. It takes time with a specific kid to recognize the difference between them having a tantrum, a meltdown, or a legitimate emergency.
This may be a suprise to a parent of a single non-verbal child. They aren't all the same. Each has their own personality, behaviors, and subtle ways of communicating. Knowing they're non-verbal tells you almost nothing about who they are. Some autistic kids will absolutely cry for hours over seemingly minor things. Giving them the time to get themselves under controll again is the appropriate thing to do, for those kids.
This is staff not knowing the individual kid, and their unique behaviors very well. So they just follow standard protocols. This one is called Planned Ignoring. It's effective when someone is looking for a reaction from staff. But if you don't know the kid well enough, you'll miss the subtle and individual signs that something real is going on. Learning those signs can only come with experiance with this individual kid.
The Quick Settings toggles are the simplest option.