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Coach's Tip #41:Double penetration isn’t chaos. It demands precision from both tops. When they find their rhythm, the bottom surrenders — and the pleasure becomes unmatched. 😈 🍑 Tom WolFFur Folsom Berlin 🍆 Miles GMX 🍆 Coach Joe BAREBACK TOP in PARIS #gaysex #groupsex #doublepenetration

124,605 次观看 • 3 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

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NEW: JD Vance and Joe Rogan discuss old-school liberals who support free speech like Elon Musk, Robert F. Kennedy Jr, Tulsi Gabbard 🌺, and Chamath Palihapitiya leaving the Democratic Party. ROGAN: "When Elon Musk purchased Twitter it changed the entire game. Now you have this Wild West uncensored version of social media that's run by a super genius madman with all the money in the world. Without him, we're in a lot of trouble... Then you have Michael Shellenberger and Matt Taibbi; they go into the Twitter files, and they find industrial-scale censorship. "And it turns out all the things they were saying were either lies or incorrect, and there are no repercussions, and no one on the left has any problem with it, and the people who have a problem, their solution seems to go to the right. They don't even think you can reform the left. Like Tulsi Gabbard becomes a Republican, and people abandon these, I can't talk to you people." VANCE: "I'm doing an event with Tulsi Gabbard tonight in Pennsylvania. I love her. She's awesome. She basically decided the left could not be reformed, and that's what happened with Bobby Kennedy and a lot of old-school liberals. They believe in the fundamental right of people to speak their minds, and the Democrats don't believe in that anymore. The entire modern Democrat party grew up in an era where there was consensus. They grew up in a high social trust era. A lot of them are trying to reimpose that social trust from the top, not recognizing that social trust came organically from the way American society worked. "If you have people trying to reimpose it from the top, it degrades the very social trust you're trying to create. I've seen family members of mine who got really radicalized by saying wait a second, should we be masking 3-year-olds in our schools? They would get kicked off Facebook because a person with 900 Facebook friends dared to question the prevailing narrative, and again, they ended up being right about it. I actually think what the left is doing is degrading social trust by trying to create it from on high. A lot of great things that we do come from high levels of social trust, but you've got to reestablish it organically. You can't try to force it on people."

KanekoaTheGreat

12,525,291 次观看 • 1 年前

No integrity at all from coach Cedric Kaze and Khalil Ben Youseff. Both coach Kaze and Khalil have started speaking against the same things they gladly accepted while at Kaizer Chiefs. No backbone, you start to understand that they don't operate with principles, they chase immediate opportunities no matter what its worth. Listening to Khalil speak now, it's clear that success was always going to be difficult under his guidance with Kaze. He openly admits he never liked the co-coaching arrangement, questioning the football logic behind management's decision to implement it. He points out that top clubs rarely operate that way and laughs at this. He started by highlighting how decisions can become difficult to make when you don't agree but each strongly believes in his own approach. He later mentions that they had disagreement with substitutions with Kaze, an area we always looked like a team without a coach. Yet, the contradiction is that he was willing to accept the role and become part of the very structure he now criticizes. The same applies to coach Kaze. Today, he confidently speaks about the unrealistic expectations management had given the quality of the squad[reaching CAFCL spot]. But he, too, accepted the position that became available after his head coach was removed with this mandate without hesitation. The Kaizer Chiefs management and their inconsistency in decision-making have played a major role in the club's struggles over the years. These interviews and many more, keep revealing this. Khalil and Kaze got the job because they were an easy excuse to get rid of a coach who demanded better from those who have power to change things at the club. They did not get the job because they were good enough. That's why they now laugh at the demands and arrangements they had to face at the club. This is what happens when a club looks for shortcuts instead of establishing a clear football structure and supports its own decisions. The unfortunate reality is that Kaizer Chiefs' management continues to avoid accountability in such situations, rather direct the poor performance to someone else. Even after years of disappointing performances, they still seem unwilling to recognize that many of the club's problems originate from the decisions made in the boardroom rather than on the pitch.

El Capitano⚪

48,316 次观看 • 1 个月前

What Elon Musk dreams of, we already live in the UAE. Here it isn’t theory, it’s law. Enter like a guest in our home. And like any home, if I wouldn’t trust you near my children, why should I trust you near my country? Every citizen is family. Every family is sacred. And sacred things we protect always. Elon said: "Respect the law, respect the culture, contribute, and do no harm." Even a Tesla understands that. Because when law collapses, chaos doesn’t just arrive, it sets up a company in London or Paris and opens a bank account. Look at the UK. Look at France. Some immigrants bring talent, but the majority bring Hamas. Some arrive with laptops, others with fatwas printed in Sudan by the Muslim Brotherhood-led army, the Hamas of Africa. And Paris? It welcomes immigrants from the Houthis in Yemen..militias who treat death like a lifestyle brand. And the numbers? Britain lost 16,500 millionaires in 2023. France lost 10,000 in the same year. And the UAE? We gained 9,800. That is not migration, that is profit. London and Paris are the drain. Abu Dhabi is the magnet. Here in the UAE, 200 nationalities live as one. Mosque, church, synagogue, all side by side. In #London, they debate banning knives because stabbings are now the national pastime. In Paris, they cannot decide if the riot is over or just taking a coffee break. Churchill said: “Civilization will not last, freedom will not survive, peace will not be kept, unless the majority unite to defend them.” De Gaulle would add today: “And please, stop importing chaos with your baguette.” Meanwhile, Britain spends £215 billion a year on immigration. France spends over €25 billion a year. What do they get? 280,000 homeless in the UK. 330,000 homeless in France. Knife crime in London, car-burning in Paris. Islamist networks in both. Not diversity. Disaster. And let us not forget the terror money. In the UK and France the Muslim Brotherhood runs charities to support terrorists like Hamas, who kidnap babies as they did on October 7. The UAE already named the companies laundering cash for terrorists in the Middle East, no different from Hamas in #Gaza and Islamist armies in Sudan. Not charities. Not community hubs. Just blood money in suits: Nafel Capital, Holdco UK Properties, Wembley Tree, Ima6ine, Cambridge Training. Terrorist accountants with nice logos. London knows. Paris knows. Both could ban the Muslim Brotherhood tomorrow. But they will not. They prefer the photo op, the smile, the handshake, while their own houses burn. Jihadist immigrants in France and the UK protested against normalization with Israel. The UK and France gave them citizenship. We in the UAE gave them numbers. Trade between Israel and the UAE jumped from 190 million dollars in 2020 to 6.4 billion dollars in 2024. Flights went from zero to 100 a week. Over 1 million Israelis visited in three years. In January alone, 116,000 Israelis flew to the UAE, ten percent of all Tel Aviv flights. A land corridor now slashes shipping time from 14 days to 4. And the deals? Fifty agreements in tech, healthcare, AI, energy, and agriculture. Solar, hydrogen, cancer research. And culture? In the UAE, over 2,000 Jews live openly with three synagogues, kosher restaurants, and schools. In London and Paris, they don’t open kosher restaurants, they burn them. While Britain and France host extremists, we host entrepreneurs. While they lose millionaires, we gain them. While they drown in ideology, we rise on innovation. That is the math. That is the story. That is the future. And that is why what Elon Musk dreams of, we already live.

Amjad Taha أمجد طه

141,067 次观看 • 10 个月前

3 Reasons there aren’t more Black Head Coaches in the NFL. -Circumstance -Comfortability -Access It’s not a coincidence. The NFL Head Coaching fraternity is hard to break into with the amount of great coaching candidates, nepotism and back scratching that occurs that makes it tough for former players to break into the profession and climb to positions that are coveted for Head Coaching jobs. Often times owners and front office executives want to hire the people who are the best for the job, but are also the ones they are most comfortable with because they look like them, have the same or similar life experiences so they connect better with them and who they want to go golfing with. BUT ACCESS is the issue that has clear examples of how black players don't get the same treatment in coaching circles. That’s not an opinion. It’s a fact. Take a look at Quarterbacks after they finish their playing career. Some go from playing to QB coach to Offensive Coordinator to head coach conversations quickly. The fast track is real for some players. Kellen Moore went from playing to QB Coach to Offensive Coordinator in 2 years after retiring and became the New Orleans Saints Head coach 8 years after retiring. Kevin O’Connell went from playing to coaching in 2015, was an OC in 4 years by 2019 and the Minnesota Vikings Head Coach in 7 years by 2022. FAST TRACK Philadelphia Eagles OC Sean Mannion and Washington Commanders OC David Blough both went from playing to NFL Coaching staffs and OC in 3 years. FAST TRACK. We’ve seen Black quarterbacks go into coaching in this same pipeline like Byron Leftwich who became an NFL coach in 2016 as a coaching intern and was the OC of the Buccaneers by 2019. But despite winning a Super Bowl with Tom Brady, he never got a chance to be an NFL Head Coach. Why? Did he bomb the interview? Or was he just not in the right circumstance, where he made the right people comfortable or had the proper connections to determine his access. Right now if you are on Sean Mcvay's staff you are a walking head coach in waiting. All 4 of his last OCs are head coaches. -Liam Coen -Mike Lafluer -Matt Lafluer -Kevin O'Connell Because they were the best men for the job, great coaches, had the right circumstance, made the right people comfortable, and had the right conections to get access to the job. Seneca Wallace, Jason Campbell, Cleo Lemon, Randall Cunningham. Why didn't they get the same opportunity after their playing days? It’s not just a coincidence. Maybe they didn’t want to be a coach because of the long 20 year cycle they would be presented with to get to the top of the profession that is standard for most. But if you told any of them they would be an OC in 3 years or less and a Head Coach in 8 years or less. ALL OF THEM WOULD TAKE IT. But they never had access to that Fast Track pipeline. The NFL cant say we want the best leaders’ while recycling the same leader profile. And if the NFL is truly a meritocracy, then the pipeline should reflect merit, not comfort. Not ‘who looks like the last guy we trusted.’ Not who gets the benefit of the doubt for being associated with family lineages. In a league that is 70% black, the leadership should be more representative of the leagues players. There are qualified Head Coaching candidates of all skin colors. They just want a chance to succeed or fail just like their competition when their resumes clearly say they have earned it.

Robert Griffin III

66,479 次观看 • 5 个月前

Cancer, MS, and other diseases are caused by parasites? 😳 Really? 🤨 The first video is from Dr. Lee, the second from Dr. Jack. 🙇🏻‍♀️ Sometimes I ask myself… why do some people die of parasite infections while others don’t? What makes one person get infested, yet another host the same invader and stay alive and well? If parasites were truly the cause of diseases, then everyone who carries them should be in bad shape, right? But that’s not what happens. 🔬Look at cancer: Doctors have started noticing that, under a light microscope, cancer cells often look almost identical to parasite egg sacs. The resemblance is eerie 🍑 but resemblance isn’t causation. The question isn’t “How we kill the parasite?” It’s “What made the terrain so attractive to it?” 🪱Parasites are part of a broader family of environmental and energetic stressors. They thrive only when the mitochondrial terrain collapses and falls too low to repel invasion. Strong redox = strong current. The cell’s voltage fence is alive and vibrating(immune system) Weak redox = low current. The gate opens, and opportunists enter. 🗿For thousands of years, humans and parasites have coexisted. The real problem isn’t the presence of the parasite; it’s the absence of coherent energy in the host. When light, water, and magnetism(Nature’s triad) are broken, our inner environment becomes chaotic. That chaos invites scavengers. 🪰Blaming parasites for cancer, MS, or other deadly diseases is like blaming flies for garbage. The flies didn’t create the rot…,they sensed it. 🦝 Parasites are opportunists, nature’s cleanup crew; drawn to areas where electrical order has failed. They’re not the cause; they’re the symptom of entropy inside us. Cancer, MS, and autoimmune disorders…, arise not because parasites attack, but because mitochondria lose their ability to maintain redox balance. Once our bioelectric shield weakens, so does our immune system and thanks to artificial light, blue screens at night, non-native EMFs, lack of grounding, and DHA-poor diets and so on.. As our inner light fades, lower forms of life rush in to feed on the decay. 🔬 ☣️ Pleb Kruse = BTC foundationalist in exile 🟩🔆 on Iron and Parasites In his blog “CPC #4: Evolutionary Friend or Foe?” He wrote: “Parasites seek out iron stores in the body.” Why does that matter? Because excess free iron catalyzes oxidative stress — it rusts tissues and steals electrons from mitochondria. When iron piles up and redox drops, parasites sense an easy meal. They don’t cause the rust; they feed on it. 👇🏻 So instead of waging war on parasites, Dr. Kruse would tell us to restore the current. Rise with the sun. REDOX! 🌞 Let infrared light recharge our EZ (exclusion-zone) water. Ground. Eat local, DHA-rich seafood to rebuild the photonic highway. Sleep in darkness. Let magnetism retune your circadian orchestra. When the body’s voltage rises, the immune system awakens, and parasites lose their foothold. When this happens, the body either keeps them where they belong or reaches a point where they simply can’t survive. ✨ In the End Parasites are not the enemy; they are the mirror. They reveal where our system has lost coherence. In strong light, they vanish. In weak light, they feast. The true therapy isn’t antiparasitic drugs, but photonic resurrection.., restoring the body’s original current, so the terrain remembers who it is. 😌 When the inner sun shines in the right way, no parasite (microbial or energetic) can dwell in that frequency of light. 🌞

Light Me Away ☀️

31,110 次观看 • 8 个月前

Most of the crypto × AI narratives you hear are backwards. They start with a conclusion and work their way to a demo. The real story is simpler and more interesting. LLMs proved that intent can be compiled into code. You describe an outcome in natural language, and software figures out the implementation details. DeFi proved something orthogonal but just as important: Code can directly express and execute financial actions. Lending, borrowing, repayment, and liquidation; not as products, but as callable primitives. Put those two facts together, and you get a new class of system: GenFinance. Where intent itself becomes the instrument. This only works onchain. Not because blockchains are trendy, but because they expose every financial primitive as a permissionless API. There is no equivalent environment in TradFi. Once you see this, many “UX problems” in finance reveal themselves as coordination failures. We’ve been forcing humans to operate software because software couldn’t reason about states, risks, or intents. The video below shows a concrete example of this: A Chaos agent takes a user’s natural-language intent to go long on GMX 🫐, inspects the user’s wallet state, and generates the required sequence of actions to make that position possible. For this wallet, it meant: - borrowing on Aave - bridging from Ethereum -> Arbitrum - finally, going long ETH on GMX 🫐 The result isn’t a nicer interface, but rather the removal of the interface entirely. This is what finance looks like when it’s native to software: Not something you operate, but something that operates on your behalf.

Omer Goldberg

19,667 次观看 • 6 个月前

Bill Cowher said, "Get comfortable being uncomfortable...Because that's the only way you could be as good as you can be." "I pushed them to be as good as they can be, but it doesn't mean I don't care about you as a person." High standards aren't cruel, they're a sign that you care. It means pushing people beyond their comfort zone and showing genuine care for people. Great leaders master the balance of high standards and compassion. 𝟓 𝐒𝐢𝐠𝐧𝐬 𝐘𝐨𝐮'𝐫𝐞 𝐋𝐞𝐚𝐝𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐰𝐢𝐭𝐡 𝐇𝐢𝐠𝐡 𝐒𝐭𝐚𝐧𝐝𝐚𝐫𝐝𝐬 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐂𝐨𝐦𝐩𝐚𝐬𝐬𝐢𝐨𝐧: 1. You challenge people to be their best, not just do their best - It means you encourage your team to stretch beyond their comfort zones. You coach character and growth. Growth happens when get comfortable being uncomfortable. You're no longer satisfied with "good enough" because you believe in people and their potential. 2. You give honest feedback with genuine care - It means you deliver feedback with respect and a focus on growth. Honest feedback builds trust. By communication with compassion, you ensure feedback is received as a tool for improvement, not as an attack. 3. You hold people accountable with support - It means you expect people to meet standards and give them the tools they need to succeed. Accountability without support feels like criticism without direction and support without accountability feels hollow. Ensure people have the coaching, encouragement, and process to do what they need. 4. You lead through example - It means you model the standards that you expect from others. People follow leaders who live their values and they see what you do, not what you say. Take the time to show those values consistently whether it's communication, accountability, or work ethic. 5. You build trust with consistency - It means people know what to expect from you no matter the outcome. Inconsistency breeds uncertainty. Trust grows when people they can count on you and your leadership. It becomes a representation of character and integrity. Bottom Line: Leading with high standards and compassion isn’t easy because it requires intentionality, self-awareness, and a deep commitment to others’ growth. - - - The video comes from Bill Cowher's interview with Trey Wingo (trey wingo) on Half-Forgotten History. A great listen if you want to hear more on Bill's story!

Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness

53,250 次观看 • 1 年前

Meet the man inside the minds of the execs building AGI at OpenAI: Joe Hudson (Joe Hudson) is an executive coach who works with the senior execs at OpenAI and runs courses and trainings for researchers from all of the major AI labs. "It feels like being in a hospital during birth," he says. Except everyone in the delivery room—including him—is giving birth to their own replacement. But instead of fixating on what he'll do when AI replaces coaches, Joe is asking himself who he's becoming as the technology advances. I had Joe on Every 📧's AI & I to talk about how he's answering that question. We get into: The identity collapse from AI is actually freeing—if you let it be Joe says he feels "massive grief" watching AI's potential to replace human coaches—and he's choosing to lean into it. For him, the "identity collapse" we feel as AI commoditizes our skills is an invitation to discover who we are beyond our professional labels. Why thinking isn't enough—you need to feel and sense too Joe thinks of humans as having three "brains": the prefrontal cortex for thought, the heart for emotional processing, and the gut for instinctive responses. Real transformation requires engaging all three—not just intellectually understanding change. True growth demands that you step into the unknown According to Joe, the transformation we're living through can be a powerful catalyst for personal growth—but only if we resist the pull of familiar patterns. "Stay in the unknown for as long as possible," he advises. "It creates the most freedom." How he's preparing his daughters for a world he can't predict Joe doesn't pretend to know what the post-AGI world looks like. Instead, he's radically transparent with his 16- and 19-year-old daughters about his own fears and excitement. "Their ability to pivot is going to be based on their emotional resilience," he says—not on learning specific tools. How he handles the weight of his job OpenAI executives shoulder the weight of bringing unprecedented change—and while Joe admits feeling that burden too, taking responsibility for someone else's journey robs them of their agency. His role? Opening doors and following their lead through whichever one they choose. This is a must-watch for anyone who wants to learn how to grow—both personally and professionally—with AI. Watch below! Timestamps: Introduction: 00:01:49 What it feels like inside the room where AGI is being built: 00:03:14 The most important question to ask yourself as AGI approaches: 00:08:15 The importance of sitting with uncertainty: 00:17:49 How Joe is preparing his daughters for a post-AGI world: 00:21:11 How we think, feel, and react; the three layers of human awareness: 00:27:25 Staying grounded while coaching the people shaping our future: 00:35:34 Why Joe doesn’t take things personally—even when the stakes are high: 00:42:44

Dan Shipper 📧

22,101 次观看 • 1 年前

Tony Robbins on how to change someone who doesn't want to change: 1. People only change when they link enough pain to staying the same or enough pleasure to changing. Ideally, both at once. This is not a mindset shift. It happens in the nervous system, not the head. Your head can know exactly what you should do, and your gut will override it every single time. 2. Yes, you can change someone who doesn't want to change. But not by forcing them. You find the leverage that makes them change themselves. Everyone has a point that will get them to follow through. For some people, it is not even the threat of their own life. For others, it is their children. For others, it is spiritual growth. The leverage is different for everyone, but it always exists. 3. The food poisoning example. You used to love a food or a drink. Then one night it came back up with enough intensity and enough aroma that to this day you cannot look at it without feeling repelled. No willpower required. Your brain simply rewired what it links pleasure to. That is the entire mechanism of change in one story. 4. Scrooge did not want to change. He was certain he did not need to change. Three ghosts showed up and did one thing: they made him link unbearable pain to his past, his present, and his future simultaneously. When there is nowhere to escape, change happens in a heartbeat. Robbins calls this the Dickens pattern. Lock pain into all three time zones at once, and there is no exit. 5. People avoid changing by escaping to a different time period. If the present is painful, escape to a good memory from the past. If the past was also painful, invent a better future and escape there. As long as one of those three zones offers relief, the pressure to change dissolves. Removing all three exits and change becomes inevitable. 6. Problem is some people have accidentally linked pain to things they actually need: exercise, intimacy, and hard conversations. The association is wrong, but it runs their life anyway. The job is not to build more willpower. It is to change what you have linked pain and pleasure to in the first place.

Jaynit

279,313 次观看 • 28 天前

My wife and I had a 12-hour layover in Cairo today, and so I was tremendously privileged to be able to make a quick visit to the maqām of Imam Husayn. The sublime energy of pure light in that place contrasted forcefully with the demented chaos of urban horror that surrounds it for endless miles of rubbish-strewn concrete outgrowth, around which brutal traffic swarms. The British were the first to attempt social engineering through soul-destroying urban planning here, when they maliciously cut Islamic Cairo in two by driving a busy modern traffic corridor right through Imam al-Husayn and al-Azhar, thereby separating them. In doing so, they badly impaired the environmental cohesiveness of the area, and thence, indeed, impeded the ability of the spirituality that both informed and supervened upon that environmental cohesiveness to flow therein. They did this because they were afraid; they wished to attempt to curb, in whatever small way, the alarming power that radiates from Islamic civilization when it is true to itself, and thence imbues its corresponding urban environments with the beauty and goodness that allow us to live and move and have our being within environments which affirm our deepest metaphysical convictions, rather than calling them into question. Naturally, the post-Islamic secular authorities dutifully followed suit in their rush to ‘keep up’, to genuflect to ‘modernisation’, to assure their former colonial overlords (and more than anything else, to assure themselves ) that they were not backward natives, even if they were regrettably still surrounded by such great swarms of them. Only spineless sycophantic stooges such as these could have allowed the tumoral malignancy of modern Cairo to fester unchecked around one of the greatest and most beautiful cities of Islam. This reminded me of the hadith in which we are told that we should expect the Hour when authority becomes standardly invested in those unfit for it. The worst of people. And so this vomitous vision of hell surrounded us the entire way from the airport to Imam al-Husayn; until the ancient mosques from the days of the splendour and majesty of Islam began to appear, and we quite suddenly found ourselves enveloped in an effusion from the timeless reality in which that glorious past had participated so fully, and upon on whose vestiges that baraka still supervenes. Yes, the Islamic city, and indeed, the Muslims, used to be something else entirely. Our dīn was founded in dhawq or direct tasting of spiritual light, and this taste inspired us to establish truth in our vision of the world, beauty in our environment, and goodness in our conduct. If we find ourselves comfortable in the dehumanising nightmare of the modern post-Islamic city, it is because we have lost that ability to taste. And we thus have very little to do with the pure light of the maqams of Imam Husayn or Sayyidatuna Nafisa, or the spiritual radiance of the Old City of Damascus, or the luminous maqam of Shaykh Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani in Baghdad. We share nothing with the spirit that enlivened the Islamic past other than proximity in location; and indeed, when we are untroubled by its disfigurement, we have become its active enemies.

Hasan Spiker

43,041 次观看 • 2 个月前

ICARUS INTERNATIONAL CONSULTING GROUP Proactive Intelligence Brief Subject: Strategic Spotlight – The B-2 Spirit Bomber: America’s Invisible Hammer Classified Edge. Unmatched Signal. Immediate Readiness. The B-2 Spirit is not just a stealth bomber—it’s a floating threat cloaked in radar silence, capable of unleashing global consequences from 50,000 feet. Designed for deep-penetration nuclear and conventional strike missions, it remains the only aircraft on Earth that can invisibly deliver gravity nuclear weapons deep into denied airspace. Key Strategic Features Stealth Dominance: Radar cross-section smaller than a bird. Immune to most modern air defense systems. Global Strike Range: 6,000+ nautical miles unrefueled. Global targets reachable within hours. Payload Versatility: Delivers both conventional JDAMs and B61/B83 nuclear bombs. Command & Control Integration: Fully integrated into U.S. strategic triad and nuclear C2 networks. Why It Matters Now The recent surge in B-2 visibility—strategic runway deployments, high-profile flyovers, and refueling ops—is no accident. The U.S. is flexing an asset historically reserved for “endgame” scenarios. Forward-Looking Assessment Psychological Warfare: Its mere presence in theater destabilizes enemy calculations and deters escalation. Operational Posture: Expect increased B-2 activity near Indo-Pacific and CENTCOM AORs as deterrence ramps. Strategic Messaging: Any nation probing U.S. resolve—be it Iran, North Korea, or adversaries in the Taiwan Strait—must calculate with the B-2 in mind. Bottom Line When the B-2 flies, the world listens. And someone, somewhere, rewrites their war plan. Icarus ICG – Predict the Shift. Preempt the Threat.

Icarus International Consulting Group LLC

87,183 次观看 • 1 年前

🚨 THE REAL COST OF KAGAME’S WEALTH IS RWANDAN LIVES 🚨 Justice Delayed = Justice Denied. Full Stop. 💥 8 YEARS. 💥 Hundreds of Families. 💥 Zero Accountability. While Rwanda’s top leadership parades global rankings and luxury wealth, ordinary citizens are paying the price with their homes, dignity, and future. This is not development. This is dispossession. 🏚️ Kangondo & Kibiraro: 8 Years of State-Made Suffering In 2018, families from Kangondo & Kibiraro were pushed out, 🏗️ homes demolished, 📉 properties undervalued, 🚫 promised compensations never delivered, 🏢 and many forced into tiny Busanza units that don’t match what they lost. City-appointed valuers put absurd figures like $8k for 1,000m², then even THAT money vanished into thin air. Meanwhile… the same land they were removed from? 💰 Now tied to high value redevelopment worth $475,000 for 320m². So it was never about “urban planning.” It was about power. It was about who gets to live where. It was about who benefits, and who suffers. ⚖️ And Now? Kigali City RUNS From Court. After years of appeals, protests, and a 2024 High Court ruling confirming these families deserve compensation, the City suddenly decides to withdraw from the very case citizens filed? 😡 This is cowardice. 😡 This is manipulation. 😡 This is the opposite of transparency. 😡 This is NOT justice. Kangondo & Kibiraro families were not “relocated.” They were squeezed, silenced, and abandoned. 🧨 THE PATTERN IS CLEAR Concentration of wealth + power at the top ⬇️ Suffering at the bottom. When “prime land” becomes the excuse, citizens become obstacles. And when powerful investors ,including those linked to the first family and figures like Denis Karera ,step in, ordinary Rwandans are pushed out of the picture entirely. This isn’t accidental. This is a system. ✊🏾 Kangondo & Kibiraro Families Deserve: ✔️ Fair compensation ✔️ Respect ✔️ Restoration of dignity ✔️ Accountability from leaders Their courage for 8 YEARS exposes something the powerful fear most: 📢 A generation that refuses silence. 📢 A movement that refuses fear. 🔥 This is why #MillenZMovementRw exists. To speak. To expose. To refuse the lies. To refuse the suffering of our people while the elite grow richer and louder.

U.Sheila C kamuzinzi 🇷🇼🇸🇬

60,589 次观看 • 7 个月前

Section 4 of 4 🟢 Dr. Khalil Al-Hayya’s final section is a direct, urgent appeal to the Arab and Islamic world—and an unflinching condemnation of its failure to act. He frames the humanitarian crisis in Gaza not as a tragedy alone, but as a moment of historic betrayal by those with the power to intervene. “The Palestinian people feel deeply abandoned,” he says. “At a time when they are facing unimaginable horrors—children starving to death, men too weak to stand, women weeping in hunger and grief—our people cannot understand how this great Ummah, with all its wealth and capacity, remains paralyzed.” He describes the suffering in stark terms: families forced to flee repeatedly, children dying of hunger, women crying in desperation, and people dying in the streets with no rescue in sight—while Arab governments watch. “How is it that we are enduring extermination and siege, while food, water, and medicine are withheld from Gaza’s honorable people?” He denounces the complicity and the passivity: “How can we tolerate the spectacle of our nation watching us be slaughtered and starved live on air—in one of the most horrific genocides of our time?” 🔸 A Call to Action Al-Hayya demands an end to hesitation: “Isn’t it time for the Ummah to act—not just speak—and break the siege on Gaza with food, water, and medicine?” “Isn’t it outrageous that the criminal Zionist occupier enjoys unlimited support, while no hand reaches out to our people—not even with food?” He calls on Arab and Islamic governments to sever all ties with Israel: “We call on the governments and peoples of the Arab and Islamic world to cut all forms of political, diplomatic, and commercial relations with the Zionist entity.” And he urges the street—particularly in countries bordering Palestine—to rise up and intervene: “March by land and sea toward Palestine. Surround the embassies. Intensify the boycott—economic, cultural, and touristic—of everything connected to the enemy and its interests.” He adds: “Isolate them. Prosecute their leaders, their soldiers, and their war criminals in international courts.” 🔸 A Personal Plea to Egypt and Jordan Al-Hayya issues specific appeals to Egypt and Jordan—countries he says hold both the responsibility and capacity to act. To Egypt: He invokes Egypt’s regional stature and moral weight: “We speak to you from a place of trust. Egypt holds a weighty place in our region and in the world.” He describes the Rafah crossing—once a lifeline—as now a gate of death, “part of a plan to forcibly expel our people.” To Jordan: He praises the Jordanian people for their sacrifices, recalling those killed at Palestine’s borders. He urges them to continue their uprising and resist the Zionist right’s ambitions to impose “an alternative homeland” and partition Al-Aqsa Mosque. “Continue your uprising. Double your efforts to stop this horrific crime against your brothers and your holy sites.” 🔸 A Cry for Moral Leadership To the religious scholars and free thinkers of the Islamic world, Al-Hayya said: “The women of Gaza—wives, mothers, and sisters of the martyrs—are holding empty pots. They search for crumbs to feed their children. They endure humiliation and hardship, even unto death.” He demands: “Have you not heard their cries? Their pleas: ‘O Islam!’” And with that, he places the burden of action on the Ummah’s moral authorities: “The responsibility on the scholars of this Ummah is heavy. It is time you fulfill your duty: to lead your people in confronting this criminal enemy.” 🔸 Closing With Resolve Al-Hayya closes with gratitude and resolve. He thanks those who have acted—from Yemen’s popular and military efforts to the land and sea solidarity convoys launched from Tunisia, Algeria, Libya, and the “Madleen” and “Handala.” These efforts, he says, “broke through the wall of despair to declare: We are with you, Gaza. And with will—nothing is impossible.”

Drop Site

28,980 次观看 • 11 个月前

With the Russia hoax being exposed more every single day, there is another hoax making its rounds again. Hoax: In 2018 Putin said that he directed his people to help Trump win the election. A short, out of context clip is now their "proof" of Russian election interference to help Trump in 2016. Brennan talked about it. Peter Baker posted about it a couple days ago. Bill Maher played it on his show last night, claiming it was proof of Russian interference to help Trump. It's all over MSNBC and CNN again. They probably all know the truth about the clip but it doesn't stop them from lying about it. Firstly, it should come as no surprise that CNN's clip is different from almost all of the others broadcasted, as you will shortly see. Top clip is the hoax: Putin is asked if he wanted Trump to win and then asked if he directed his officials to help him. Putin answers "yes I did." Here's what actually happened. Putin had just stated that he in no way directed anyone to interfere in the election, that there was no collusion, and that it was all ridiculous nonsense. Putin called the accusations garbage more than once in the press conference. Putin was then asked by a reporter why people should believe his denials about election interference and if he would hand over the 12 people Mueller indicted (show indictments btw). Putin took out his translator ear piece and gave a long answer about working with Trump to find out if crimes were committed, America and Russia working together on other stuff, treaties, etc. During that answer (bottom clip) he again said the accusations of interference were not true. At the end of his answer, the same reporter who asked him the previous questions asked "Did you want Trump to win and did you instruct officials to help him." By watching any other broadcast than CNN, it becomes very clear what happened. Putin did not hear the first half of the reporter's followup question because he was putting on an ear piece and the volume of the reporter's mic was down. Watch the top clip and the last 20 seconds of the bottom clip. Look at the difference. You will see it is obvious that Putin did not hear the first question and only heard the second question about if he instructed people to help Trump. It's obvious that he thought it applied to what he was just talking about, which was America and Russia working together. It's so funny how in the foreign broadcasts and some of the American ones, it's clear that Putin didn't hear the first half of the question. But on CNN the volume is magically up and it appears that Putin heard both questions. But the fact is that Putin had just spent most of the press conference denying any interference in the election or collusion with Trump. He wasn't all of a sudden admitting it now. He didn't hear the first question. The hoaxers never play any of the rest of the press conference with all the denials. In another press conference after this one Putin again says it was all a hoax cooked up to undermine Trump's presidency. If the MSM cared at all about America or the truth they would lay out what I just did. If you don't want to watch all the context, just watch the top clip, the beginning of the bottom clip, and the last 20 seconds of the bottom clip and you will see clearly what happened.

MAZE

58,564 次观看 • 11 个月前

“Jayden Daniels is CJ Strouding Caleb Williams!!!” FULL STOP. This isn’t Jayden Daniels vs Caleb Williams. It’s a battle of expectations. When you give a player Three #1 WRs, a dynamic running back, a #1 TE, a defense everyone expects to be top 10 and the Bears barely missed the playoffs last year, expectations are going to be HIGH. I tried to warn everyone of that in the offseason about Chicago. But stay with me. Now Chicago is sitting at 1-2 and some people are panicking because Caleb Williams has played like a rookie. Caleb will be fine, but the expectations are weighing on that entire team. Jayden Daniels and Washington have expectations for themselves, but no one gave them a chance to win against the Bengals except myself and true Washington Commanders fans. Everyone said Chicago was the better destination in the offseason. And when I said Washington was a better situation for a young QB because of the stability of the ownership, GM, Head Coach, OC and veteran pieces it pissed off a lot of people. “How could he say that?” “Chicago has the best personnel a rookie QB has ever had coming into the NFL.” I said it because I know first hand the importance of the environment to a young QBs success. In Chicago, there are a lot of clinched butts walking around because they know how much money they spent to improve their roster and they can’t have the same result or worse than last year. It also doesn’t help that the QB they traded away for a bag of layaway chips in Justin Fields has led the Pittsburgh Steelers to a 3-0 record. In Washington, Jayden Daniels has taken a team with no expectations to a 2-1 record with a SENSATIONAL performance in front of the entire football world. 91.3 % completion percentage, which is the HIGHEST EVER for a Rookie in NFL History. More total Touchdowns than incompletions against the Bengals. Washington sees Jayden Daniels and gets an overwhelming feeling of hope. Chicago sees Caleb Williams and gets an overwhelming feeling of panic. Not JUST because the players’ play. But because of the expectations of the team. It’s still early in the season. And a lot can change in a matter of weeks. But the expectation for both teams is still the same. Washington has a chance to beat anyone when Jayden Daniels plays dang near perfect like he did against the Bengals. No one is all of a sudden picking them to win the Super Bowl, make the playoffs or win their division. But for them that doesn’t matter. They needed to find their Franchise Qb and in 3 weeks they did just that. Chicago made the moves they did not to find their franchise QB and give him time to develop. They did it because they believed Caleb Williams is already that guy and could get them there this year better than Justin Fields could. The pressure is on just 3 weeks in. Some people picked them to win the Super Bowl. Some picked them to win their division. Most picked them to at least make the playoffs. EXPECTATIONS were and still are high for them. Caleb Williams played terrible against the Tennessee Titans and the team won the game because of special teams and defense. The Bears are ready to win now. They are just putting everything on their young QB’s arm to get it done. The Commanders can win now, but aren’t asking the World of Jayden Daniels. He is just giving it to them. Expectations shape the narrative. Don’t worry. There’s still a lot of story to tell.

Robert Griffin III

743,983 次观看 • 1 年前

Last year, we casually told our American friends, who have lived in Berlin for years, “We’re going to the celebration at the gate on New Year’s Eve!” They both stared at us, horrified. One of them said, “Celia, it’s truly post-apocalyptic. It’s like the Fourth of July, but a hundred times worse. You have no idea.” I looked at her, somewhat incredulously. “We’ve survived New York City on the Fourth of July. That was chaos. How bad can it be?” Oh, I was *so* wrong. To play it safe, we left the kids with my mom, who was visiting from South Carolina. My husband and I went alone. We arrived six hours early because I was determined to be as close as possible to the stage for Riverdance (and no, I’m not joking about this 🤣). Fireworks started soon after the performances ended… but not over the gate, as you’d expect. No, they were behind us. We had to turn around to even see them. As we left, I thought, “That wasn’t so bad!”—until we realized the roads were blocked and the police were essentially herding the crowd to another part of the city. “No big deal,” I said, “We’ll just walk to the nearest S-Bahn or U-Bahn station.” And that’s when the *real* chaos started. We walked, and suddenly it felt like we’d entered a very different reality. Fireworks went off in every direction. People were running through the streets, carrying fireworks in their hands and setting them off in the streets. Smoke filled the air, and the sound of popping fireworks was deafening (and constant). Every S-Bahn and U-Bahn station we passed was closed. So we just kept walking. And walking. We finally made it to Alexanderplatz, only to discover that many of the trains were disrupted or had intermittent service. Eventually, we made it to an U-Bahn station that would take us home. By then, we were starving. We found a döner stand that was still open and packed with people. I asked the guy behind the counter, “So, have you worked on New Year’s Eve before?” He smiled and said, “Of course. That’s why I stay open this late. Berlin stays awake all night to celebrate, and people are going to want lots of döner.” Wise man. *And* maybe the best fries I’ve had in Berlin. Or, you know, maybe I was just starving. We finally made it home well after 2 AM. My kids and mom were still awake. My mom, wide-eyed, asked, “WHAT is happening out there?!” And my kids were still pressed to the windows, hoping for more fireworks—two hours after midnight. Our legs were aching from hours off standing and walking, and I have a video of my mom hysterically laughing (which she would never let me share on social media) as we told her about our night and asked, “How many ibuprofen do you think we’ll need tomorrow?” In the end, we learned that New Year’s Eve in Berlin isn’t just a celebration—it’s a wild, exhausting adventure, where chaos, excitement, and a few too many fireworks make for a night you’ll never forget.

Celia

26,722 次观看 • 1 年前