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Cliffnotes from Silvervale's stream talking about her experience with Vshojo. (sorry it's wordy) • She wants to think it was incompetence, not malice, but with everything coming out it’s hard to say • VShojo had good people, it wasn’t all evil. Just “a lot of mishandling” and “people handling...

110,572 просмотров • 10 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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👤i thought that story was really cute…that you kissed each other to catch the flu 👤 this really feels like ‘divorce camp’ (*tv show); how did this come about? 🐰 it was probably right before the debut line up was decided, right? 🦊 yeah 🐰 it was the end of the year and it was a hard time for all the trainees…nobody could sleep or eat…and the flu was really going around at the time so a couple of people got to sit out of it…yeonjun hyung was one of them and i really wanted to sit out of it too because it means you can rest so as a joke, i rubbed against hyung and was like “hyung~ pass your flu onto me~” but the next day, i was shedding tears of blood because i was so sick 👤🤣 “shedding tears of blood” 🐰 it was the first time i got that sick, my body hurt so much, it felt like it would shatter….but the other members…something that made me feel really unfair was that if the other members were like “i feel like i caught the flu”, the dance teacher would be “okay okay, go home and rest” but starting from me, they started stopping us like “leave after you do this! finish this and then go!”…after the dance lesson, i looked like i was about to die so the dance teacher was like “this is not it, you should go home too” so on my way back to the dorm, i was sobbing like crazy because i was so sad like “why didn’t they let me sit it out 😭” because i was so sick…! 👤 so did it pass on to you when you were like “hyung, pass it onto me~” 🐰 probably..i wasn’t in contact with anyone else that got it and i was only like that with yeonjun hyung so i think it probably passed on then

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164,637 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

The moment that drew my attention to Freen was when you went to Cannes and there was a photo of your in a red dress which got tenth of thousands of likes—I was like, who’s this? I want to ask how you view Cannes before and after you went there. When I found out that I will be there, I felt it was such a grand event. Never imagined… like me? ME? Who am I to get to go there? And when I was there… it was really grand. And the photo time was so long that I thought…. Are we done? Didn’t know what to pose already. Was very nervous inside but had to act confident. Come…. Take photos… but inside, scan around…. How many? How long is the camera wall😅 It’s a good moment in life. Saw Queen Chompoo went so many years and looked so grand every time. I was one who was excited to see what she will wear. So when it was me, I was excited. And when was there, was a bit pressured—what dress and accessories to wear. I had to do a lot of homework. I was a bit surprised with myself. They have dresses for me to choose from. Had to pick what fitted me. But when I liked the red design… but it was red, which I have to wear to a red carpet… I was like… what to do… and decided to go for it. I’ll go with it. Not sure how red on red will be but went with it. MC: for me it was a good choice. I felt. This kid is brave. You could handle it and made it seem effortless/ not stressed. Felt you weren’t stressed out by the red carpet. I thought you handled it well. Thank you so much. It was my first time. I was really scared. The necklace. I’ll tell you about was the first time in my life that I went to choose it all by myself. Had to pick accessories worth many tenth of millions alone. Had to go through 3-4 doors with massive guards and there was one guard with me. They went do you like this, no? Next. No? Next. Was not able to put on the dress and tried… had to imagined it. I think that room had accessories worth tenths of billions. All could do was put it against my neck and imagined it with the dress I picked. Was difficult but I think I got a perfect total look. MC: I’m also interested to know which part you like the most about Cannes aside from the red carpet. There were so many eventful stuff. First I missed my flight! Instead of two stops/transfer I had to take four or five. …. …. Anyway that’s fine. My team was good and professional—the manager, makeup, hair. We had to deal with the situation but got through it while still had good humor about it. MC: what thought about hotel Martinez iconic stairs. Met so many people/celebrities. It was like a check in spot for everyone. After you finished getting ready, had to take photos there. It was another memorable moment. Not everyone can be there. Overall, glad I experienced getting ready there and went to the red carpet.

panpan

25,405 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

LINGORM X 3ZAAP #หลิงออมเพียงเธอx3แซ่บ - Sasaeng Orm: There was a case of selling our schedule. When I found out, I was the one who caught it myself. I was shocked. Really shocked. My hands were all shaking. P’Chom: How? Was it like he told someone, “She’s at home now”, “she’s going here or there”, even though it wasn’t part of your official schedule? Orm: It was like “She already left the channel”, “she already entered the channel”, “she’s heading to this place next” with (specific) times. P’Chom: Did you suspect anything before that? Orm: A little. I noticed he had a new smartwatch, smartphone - the latest model, a branded wallet. I was confused because when we first met, he wasn’t like that but I thought he had been working with me for a while, so he had probably just saved up to buy them. So I didn’t suspect at all, until that day, I was changing the destination and he was driving, so I told him to let me do it. I was about to open my own chat, but accidentally saw something else. Orm: But honestly, I was okay, just shocked. Mentally I was totally fine. Once I realized, I immediately told P’Ling. She was the first person I told. I called her right after everything settled down. P’Chom: The moment it crossed the line, what was the most invasive sasaeng experience you’ve had? Orm: Following us home. Ling: Yeah. They followed us to our house or condo. They were able to get inside. P’Chom: You mean like you opened the door and they were right there? Ling: Not that far, (I mean) I saw them when I was entering. P’Chom: Like sitting in the lobby? Ling: Yeah. Not okay. Orm: They knew the name, you know? Let’s say they said they were visiting Mae Koy and the security just let them in. There are more measures now.

lingdennn.

15,072 просмотров • 10 месяцев назад

RFK Jr. explains how he first became involved in the topic of vaccines: "The Water Keepers were mainly focused on mercury. So I was also pushing legislation about mercury, lobbying EPA to reduce it, and I was giving lectures all over the place." "So these women start showing up at every lecture that I give, public lectures, and they would come and sit in the front seat, occupy the front, they'd come early. Occupy the front row and then afterwards they'd stay late and they would ask to talk to me." "And they would say to me in a cut in a very respectful and by the way these women were all very all looked kind of similar. They were very pulled together. They were women in childbearing years. As it turns out they were all the mothers of intellectually disabled children and they believed that their children had been injured by vaccines, by mercury in the vaccines." "So they would say to me in kind of a respectful but vaguely scolding way, if you're really interested in mercury contamination exposure to children, you need to look at the vaccines. Now this is something I didn't want to do because I, you know, I first of all, I'm not a public health person. I wanted to do environmental stuff." "Second of all, I've been involved since I was a little kid in the whole area of intellectual disabilities. My family, it was part of the DNA of my family. My aunt had been intellectually disabled. My aunt Rosemary, my aunt Eunice Shriver, who was my godmother, founded Special Olympics in 1969." "But she was called, before it was called Special Olympics, it was called Camp Shriver. She lived 10 minutes from my house and I would go over there every weekend to be a hugger and a coach in Special Olympics. And then when I was in high school, because this was so much part of my family DNA, I spent 200 hours in what's called a comfort retarded, you know, working, doing service." "But it wasn't something I wanted to do with my life. Other people in my family were devoting their lives to that. started best buddies and many other people. My family had written a lot of the legislation that protected people and gave rights to people with intellectual disabilities. My father had kicked down the door of Willowbrook, which was a big hospital in Staten Island." "So my family was deeply involved, but it was not what I wanted to do with my life. But these women kept... continually, I don't want to say harassing me, but they were following me, and it was different ones in every speech. And one of them got, and I was like, I, you know, I was, I did enough research to show that the public health authorities were saying that they, these women were crazy. But they didn't look crazy to me. And they were rational. They weren't excitable." "And they had done their research. And I was like, I should be listening to these people, even if they're wrong, somebody needs to listen to them. I mean, you know, and by the way, I had, you know, I'd worked on the Hudson River with commercial fishermen and I'd seen so many times when the scientists were wrong and the commercial fishermen were right about what was happening in the Hudson River." "So anyway, that was just part of the background of my, you know, a little bit of skepticism about government scientists that they're not always right, that sometime you have to listen to people. and that human experience is valid and that if a woman tells you something about her child, you should listen." "And so then one of these women came to my home and she found my home in Hyannis port at a little bungalow and her name was Sarah Bridges. She was a psychologist from Minnesota and she found my home. She came to it. She took out of the trunk of her car, a pile of scientific studies that was 18 inches thick. She put it on my front porch, my stoop, and then she rang the bell, and then she pointed to that pile, and she said, I'm not leaving here. Do you read those?" "And her, as it turns out, her son Porter Bridges had been a perfectly healthy kid, got a battery of vaccines when he was two. and lost the ability to speak, he lost the ability to, he lost his toilet training. He began head banging and engaging in other stereotypical behavior like stimming, hand flapping, toe walking, and got an autism diagnosis. And the vaccine court had awarded her 20 million dollars for acknowledging that the child had gotten autism from the vaccines. and she didn't want it to happen to other kids." "And so I sat down with this pile of studies and I'm used to reading science. I'm very comfortable reading it. I wanted to be a scientist when I was a little kid. And my life, my legal career has been about science. It's, you know, virtually all the cases that I've been involved with, hundreds and hundreds of cases, almost all of them involve some scientific controversy." "And so I'm comfortable with reading science and I know how to read it critically. I know how to look for the flaws in it and, you know, how to weigh the, uh, attribute weight to various studies, et cetera. And I sat down while she was there and I read through the abstracts of these studies, one after the other." "And, uh, before I was six inches down in that pile, I recognized that there was this huge delta. between what the public health agencies were saying were telling us about vaccine safety and what the actual peer-reviewed published science was saying. Then I took the next step, which is I started calling people, high-level public officials, and I had access to everyone." "I called Francis Collins, I called Marie McCormick, who ran the Institute of Medicine at the National Academy of Sciences. I called Kathleen Stratton at the National Academy of Sciences. who was the chief staffer and I was asking her about these studies and I realized during these conversations that none of these people had read any of the science. They were just repeating things that they had been told about the science."

Camus

82,789 просмотров • 1 год назад

Danny Sheehan says that David Grusch and Lue Elizondo told the house oversight committee a UFO reverse engineering program is trying to make a delivery system for nuclear weapons that can strike Russia or China in 2 minutes and he knows the company that’s doing it “Now they didn't, they didn't testify in public about the latter part of it, but I knew about it. And so I was telling everybody about this you know, I, I had never taken any security oath and Lue had not conveyed that to me, you know, under attorney-client privilege or anything. But I had, because of my representing Lou and knowing all of these other people, I was able to talk to other sources who gave that information to us. And I even knew the, the aerospace company that was working on it.” Source -UAP files podcast 🔗 in comments Danny -“what we did is we got the, the House Oversight Committee eventually to bring forward David Grush to testify about the, and asserted to them not only that it was true that there was this top secret program going on inside the Pentagon, and that Lue was telling the truth and the Defense Department was lying about it. But that in fact, we had a full scale program going on. Retrieving crashed UFOs. And there was a program designed to try to back engineer the technology from these crashed UFOs. And that there was a program going on trying to, utilize this technology to back engineer them, to not only create, you know, craft that could duplicate what the UFOs were doing, but they were trying to use the technology to develop a secret weapon system, that could deliver nuclear payloads into the heart of Russia or China within two minutes, you know, so that it was like a first strike weapon that nobody could defend against. Now they didn't, they didn't testify in public about the latter part of it, but I knew about it. And so I was telling everybody about this you know, I, I had never taken any security oath and Lue had not conveyed that to me, you know, under attorney-client privilege or anything. But I had, because of my representing Lou and knowing all of these other people, I was able to talk to other sources who gave that information to us. And I even knew the, the aerospace company that was working on it. And so I was telling everybody about it”

neandrewthal

72,769 просмотров • 1 год назад

I’m not sure about this but I think being a vet is hard…Many people think being a vet is a very cool job but not many people see the behind the scenes. I once had a dog, she was sicked so sudden. I brought her to a vet clinic, got her some medicine. She was good for a while but after the medicine ran out, she was sicked again. She had never been sick for so long like that. I was worried, so I took her to the vet clinic for inpatient care since I was so busy and had to live in another city at that time (where I couldn’t bring her). The vets were always reported what they had done, how was her condition back then. I was very thankful and I trusted their work on my beloved dog. She was getting better after a week or so and was ready to get home. I want her to be groomed so she came at home clean and fresh. Suddenly, her condition got worse. Worsen than ever. She started to have seizures, unresponsive. Her body was stiff, like a log. In the next 24 hours, it was a nightmare for me. She’s been in critical period twice. I decided to go home the next morning at 5 a.m, I was scared that I would miss the moment she went away from this world to the rainbow bridge. Then, I saw her. She was laying in her cage, so unresponsive, her body all tensed up. I choked up and then cried like my world has torn apart. I could see the vet was unable to say anything but I felt the sense of guilty, feeling of responsibility, and sadness at the same time. But he had to keep the composure in front of me who was crying like crazy. After one and two hours later, she was gone. I watched her until her last breath, listening to her last pulse. I stared into her eyes until her pupils dilated, a sign that she was gone. The vet was there. He was remain silent. He just stood there and at the last moment he said he was very sorry. He told me that he wouldn’t charge me on anything since the first time she was in inpatient care. I refused. I knew they were doing great, they were doing the best as they could. I took her dead body and wrapped her with a towel in my arms. Never once in my heart I blamed the vets. In fact, I thanked them so much for always being there while she was sick. Always gave me a report. That was enough for me. She was gone in good hands. I respect to all veterinarians because I think not everyone knows that they are grieving too when they lost their patients.

Nello

11,042 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад

⭐️ the story of how papago turned soobin into a man who got dumped by his girlfriend 🐰 the group of people from paris that we met at the amusement park couldn’t speak english very well and i don’t know their language either so we spoke to each other through papago 🐰 when we met them the second time, i wanted to tell them that we were sad that we parted ways with them and that we were happy to see them again so i typed it “we were really sad because we parted ways with you guys, we missed you” and those people looked at me with such pity and suddenly started patting and comforting me 🐰 i got confused and was like “why? why?” but it turns out that papago mistranslated the thing and instead of saying “because i parted ways with you guys”, it translated to “i’m sad because i broke up with my significant other” 🐰 they kept showing me their phone that said “how can someone like you get dumped? the girl who dumped you will definitely regret it” so i was diligently typing to explain that that’s not what i meant and just then those friends…where is the picture? 🐰 they told me to gain strength & that i was out of her league and pulled this really big candy out of their bag and gave it to me 🐰 as a gift to comfort me being like “you’re out of her league, we don’t know the girl but you’re way better than her” 🐰 i just took it hehehe 🐰 i thought it might be awkward if i corrected them so i just said “thank you thank you” and took it 🐰 this candy is still in my room

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275,324 просмотров • 1 год назад