Tunisia and Morocco are both below replacement level, combined... with high emigration rates, while having a GDP per capita of only around $5,000. If these trends continue, it is inevitable that North Africans will be replaced by Africans. Just look at how many are arriving:show more

Rune
77,092 views • 1 month ago
People say running is bad and that it makes... you look old and wastes away your muscle People are dumb That only happens if you run for to long at to high of a heart rate If you run at 130-140 beats per minute with a smile on your face it’s actually some of the best therapy there is If you are running and you can’t smile and it looks like you are in agony and can’t hold a pleasant conversation you are doing it wrong and that’s what will cause you to look old and frail This is called “the sweet spot” folks and it can be used for way more than just runningshow more

Thor Torrens
19,510 views • 4 months ago
These stories of Black people being the "real indians"... is dangerous because it erases the Native Americans who are still here. Yes, there are Native Americans that enslaved Africans. There are Africans (Buffalo Soldiers) who slaughtered Native Americans. There are also many more moments of solidarity like the Natchez Uprising and the 1521 revolt in Santo Domingo. Also the rebellion of the Black Seminole nation, one of the most overlooked partnerships in Native American/African American history. The Seminole Nation of Florida had one of the most amazing alliances with freed Africans. They formed partnerships and deep relationships with Maroons/ freed Africans. Both groups fought for freedom and the right to exist in peace, away from the colonizing forces trying to stomp them out. Any argument that erases these stories is ignorant babble and should be dismantled and ignored. Happy Native American Heritage Month 🪶🪓🍂show more

The Cake Lady
71,880 views • 8 months ago
Kwasi Kwarteng pointing out that GDP figures can be... easily manipulated by not counting growth per head Of course he didn't point this out when the Conservatives were crying out the same phrase, "fastest growing economy in the G7" And I hate that the guy who crashed the economy, shot up everyone's mortgage rates, has been given a platform and is the only one explaining correctly how both the Conservatives and now Labour are doing the same thing with GDP figuresshow more

Farrukh
64,757 views • 1 year ago
The rain has largely ended but its impacts will... continue to be felt for a while. This is a look at the traffic camera at the Redmond Road exit. Many area roads are partially if not completely covered in water. Do not drive around any barricades you may encounter. #arwxshow more

NWS Little Rock
28,154 views • 1 year ago
🚨JUST LOOK AT HOW MANY PEOPLE ARE AT RIGHTFUL... PRESIDENT TRUMP'S GEORGIA RALLY! The arena is PACKED to the brim & there are THOUSANDS outside! The FAKE NEWS won't report this. It sure would be a shame if everyone shared this and it went viral!show more

Bo Loudon
1,100,163 views • 1 year ago
The earliest man-made mirrors were crafted around 6,000 BC... in Anatolia. These were made from polished obsidian — a naturally occurring, glossy volcanic glass. Later, around 4,000 to 3,000 BC, civilizations in Mesopotamia and Egypt began making mirrors out of polished copper and bronze. China made copper mirrors around 4,000 BC and bronze mirrors as early as 2,000 BC, and they were mass-producing them by the 2nd Century BC. In the Indus Valley, bronze mirrors were made between 2,800 and 2500 BC. In Europe, Minoan and Mycenean mirrors date from the Second millenium BC. Celts made them up their conquest by the Romans, who were the first to make crude, glass mirrors out of tin and lead in the First Century. So what happened in sub-Saharan Africa? If, as we have repeatedly been told by woke-science since the Second World War, we are ‘all the same’, all homo-sapiens with the same DNA, and race is a construct of White supremacism rather than the genetic and environmental inheritance of thousands of years, why didn’t Africans invent the mirror, along with pretty much every other technology since the Iron Age? We accept that the Danish are the tallest people on the planet; that South-east Asians are the smallest; that Ethiopians are the best long-distance runners; that Pacific Island rugby players are genetically built for rugby; and that the inheritance of generations of farmers makes French players from the south uncommonly strong. But as soon as we come to the brain, which is part of our body, differences are all attributed to environmental and social factors, and anyone saying otherwise is racist. The average IQ in sub-Saharan Africa is 68. Out of 49 countries, 10 have average IQs below 60, indicating feeble-mindedness. 18 have average IQs between 60 and 69, indicative of what in the West is categorised as an intellectual disability. 15 are between 70 and 79, indicative of of cognitive impairment, difficulty with learning and abstract thinking. The remaining countries have produced no data. None are above 80. This disparity continues even among Africans in Western countries, where their improved health, medical, environmental and educational conditions have failed to raise their average IQ to anything approaching that of Europeans. In the USA and around the world, Europeans have an average IQ of about 100, while Africans have an average IQ of about 85, only slightly above the highest average IQ in Africa. Even this is indicative of difficulty in learning skills or graduating from a secondary school or only doing so with low grades. Studies show that these racial differences show up before the age of 5 and, most importantly, they last a lifetime. When we look at the ongoing inability to socialise, educate and civilise Africans in Europe and across the world, particularly in the Western countries to which they are being imported in their tens of millions, we should recall this footage of members of the Hadzabe tribe in Tanzania being shown a mirror for the first time. Unsurprisingly, both their fellow Africans and the acolytes of woke have denied the veracity of this footage, which does not accord with the fantasies of their ideology, and of course have denounced it as ‘racist’. But it is genuine. Africans got their first bronze mirrors from trading with Romans, not from making them themselves. It is significant that, like the Africans setting off fireworks in an AirBnB let in the video on the right, the Africans in Tanzania in the video on the left react to the mirror first with fright and then by trying to smash it. Like the Black immigrants who go on rampages of destruction whether celebrating the victory of a football team or protesting the arrest of an African for the numerous murders they commit, Africans do not create; rather, they destroy. We have been trying for centuries to get Africans to pick up the mirror and discover how it works, then to imitate it and build one for themselves; but whether it’s in the home of a White family or the bush of Tanzania, that will never happen. The mirror is smashed, the firework is lit, the bottles are smashed, the car window is broken, the bus stop torn down, the woman is raped, the White person is stabbed, our towns and countries are turned into African slums and jungles. This won’t change. Under the UN programme of replacement migration, it will only get worse. If you want to know more about this programme and what we, the people of Britain, Europe and the West who have to live with the behaviour of Africans every day, can do to stop being overrun by incompatible cultures, races and behaviours that are destroying our own, you may be interested in my new book, The Great Replacement and the Islamisation of Britain. The link is below.show more

Simon Elmer
48,399 views • 4 days ago
Oh my god PLEASE link your eye blinking! (if... you use webcam tracking at least) Look how wonky my eyes are just looking around and blinking normally with it off v.s. with the "always" setting on. Only a few angles track right. AND you can still wink by setting an animation!show more

Valiant Valorie ⚔️ Knight Vtuber
77,877 views • 6 months ago
Ontario's Premier Doug Ford has a message to the... Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem: "You have to lower these interest rates! We at 2.75%, you said you will lower them if we were below 2% inflation, we are at 1.9%." Except the headline CPI, while core inflation is 2.6%. Do you think the Bank of Canada should be cutting rates? (I don't)show more

Kirk Lubimov
134,388 views • 11 months ago
BREAKING: The world is facing a historic birth rate... collapse, and many countries are already far below replacement level. Recent fertility rates: children per woman: • 🇰🇷 South Korea: 0.80 • 🇸🇬 Singapore: 0.87 • 🇹🇼 Taiwan: 0.89 • 🇲🇹 Malta: 1.01 • 🇪🇸 Spain: 1.10 • 🇱🇹 Lithuania: 1.11 • 🇯🇵 Japan: 1.14 • 🇮🇹 Italy: 1.14 • 🇨🇦 Canada: 1.25 • 🇨🇭 Switzerland: 1.29 • 🇬🇧 England and Wales: 1.39 A country needs around 2.1 children per woman just to replace its population. This is exactly what Elon Musk has been warning about for years.show more

DogeDesigner
48,658 views • 28 days ago
🚨WOW! LOOK AT HOW MANY PATRIOTS ARE AT RIGHTFUL... PRESIDENT TRUMP'S MINNESOTA RALLY! The arena is PACKED to the brim & there are THOUSANDS of people still entering! The FAKE NEWS won't report this. Sure would be a shame if everyone shared this and it went viral!show more

Bo Loudon
1,359,917 views • 2 years ago
One thing we are watching now is potential ERC... (eyewall replacement cycle) beginning. Pressure / wind may have temporarily peaked. Some of the hurricane models have suggested multiple eyewall replacement cycles through Tuesday. For tonight, it is possible this eyewall replacement is quick then we see another dip even stronger overnight with lower pressure and even higher winds. These eyewall replacement cycles will have impacts on how the storm comes into FL Wednesday night. Eventually these should grow the eye and core with time. If the cycles are finished before it hits the wind shear, that could make it a little more resilient to the wind shear. A smaller eye and core probably gets bothered more by the dry air intrusion/wind shear that should be meeting up with #Milton late Wednesday off the Tampa coast. So, these cycles are important in the eventual core structure as it nears the coast late WED.show more

Noah Bergren
111,627 views • 1 year ago
Our historic heat dome is just getting going, will... peak Thursday and Friday, but continue well into next week. Here’s a look at day by day high temps. Wait for it. Many cities will break all-time March and even April heat records. And the heat dome itself will likely be the strongest in the US prior to early June!! #heatwaveshow more

Jeff Berardelli
15,404 views • 4 months ago
Russian propagandist Solovyev: "Excuse me, but the only real... democracies, if we look at it, are now us and the Belarusians because of the will of the people - the people rule, the people decide." I wonder how many Russians actually believe they live in a democracy...show more

Anton Gerashchenko
170,874 views • 1 year ago
A view from a plane... What is happening! Are... we living in a parallel universe? How is it possible for anyone to look out of a plane window at 38k feet and see this, above the cloud cover, and just go with the propaganda narrative that it's only condensation?show more

nogps
48,683 views • 2 months ago
Common people in both states are living peacefully, while... only a few create tensions and tarnish their state’s image. If we recognize that these issues stem from just a handful, while the rest simply want peace, such problems will never arise in the future. But can such actions ever be justified? Running away without paying for fuel—is this the right way?show more

Nikhil saini
49,874 views • 1 year ago
What you see in these visuals is really painful... if you are an African, watching black people treating each other in this manner. But we must also understand that such things will not go away until we address the root causes that drive people from their own countries into other lands. It is ironic that today it is the Ghanaians who are chasing Nigerians from Ghana, when in 1983 Shehu Shagari, then president of Nigeria, chased Ghanaians away from Nigeria, accusing them of messing up the economy. History has a cruel way of repeating itself on our continent. Instead of learning from past mistakes, we recycle the same prejudices and injustices. It is tragic that more than forty years later, Africans still treat fellow Africans as outsiders, forgetting that our destinies are tied together. Until African leaders create economies that give dignity, jobs, and opportunities to their people, the cycle of forced migration, resentment, and xenophobia will continue haunting us.show more

Hopewell Chin’ono
99,129 views • 10 months ago
Dear Africans. I know you think we are cowards.... You think we have allowed Mnangagwa to rule with impunity. This is is what we face. We have been facing this for the past 45 years. The problem is, we have been doing it peacefully but met with live bullets. SADC & AU are OK with us being killed. A time will come when we are going to pick matchets and guns and chop each other like what happened in Rwanda. SADC and AU will condemn us as barbarians. Millions of us have left our country not because we desire to be in your countries. We cannot live under this perpetual suffocation. Now we see that South Africans are tired of us. We don't want to be in your countries. We want to be in Zimbabwe. We have asked your presidents to restrain this rabid junta led by Mnangagwa but none of them has tried. We tried elections and we all saw what happened. We are at the end of out wits. and about to snap. If any of you can convince your governments to give us guns and a forest, you will see that we are not cowards.show more

Freeman
166,013 views • 10 days ago
There is no doubt that this man, Ibrahim Traoré,... is the most popular African leader at the moment. He is a soldier who took over power in Burkina Faso and became president. His popularity highlights two key issues; the lack of faith in electoral democracy on the continent and the tragic failure of elected governments to deliver basic services to their citizens. Many political science scholars I have spoken to argue that perhaps the time has come for Africa to reflect on the type of governance that works for it. Today’s democracy is inherently foreign to how Africa was governed before colonial rule. Colonial rule brought immense cruelty to the natives, robbing them of their cattle and looting their resources. When colonialism ended, democracy was imposed as a prerequisite for independence in many African countries. Sadly, this project has largely failed, with success stories limited to just a handful of nations. Was it ever realistic to implement a one-size-fits-all approach across all 54 African countries without considering their unique local circumstances? Should Africans think about what might work in the absence of the many senseless rigged elections? Is it possible to get all stake holders on one table and instead govern together? Many thinkers have argued that Africa's governance systems were diverse before colonialism and often centered around local customs, traditions, and values. The imposition of Western-style democracy at independence did not consider these indigenous systems, and this disconnect has contributed to the challenges many African countries have faced in consolidating their democracies. Young Africans are looking at the style of governance in the Sahel region, particularly in Burkina Faso, where Ibrahim Traoré has revolutionised the country, implementing many changes that have greatly appealed to young Africans. Many young Africans are asking themselves if electoral democracy has not been part of the problems they have because it is easily manipulated and abused. “What has democracy done for Africa and Africans except feed the insatiable appetite to loot by Africa’s political elites,” many are now asking loudly! What is your view?show more

Hopewell Chin’ono
56,929 views • 1 year ago