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NEXT PART FROM SESSION IN PERSON🌀 Duration: almost 14 minutes Hypnotist: ??? (friend) Voice: Yes - both Stuffs: slow freezing, rapid freezing, statue, posing, control, sleep trigger,... Link: #hypnosis #trance #freeze #statue #hypnotized #deep

45,861 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

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@Tomas_7_7_ so good 👍👍👍

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@Tomas_7_7_ Oh my god !!!! Exactly what I'm into being frozen as a manequin. My wish to be one

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@Tomas_7_7_ Holy shit, amazing.

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Evaluation Results Note: Technicians translated Russian instrument labels, added U.S. gauges (e.g., accelerometer, temperature probe), checked for booby traps, and modified minor systems (e.g., using standard JP-1 fuel and hydraulic fluid mixtures). Testing and Observations - The MiG was structurally sound, with good workmanship in critical areas but some neglect elsewhere. It had a clean aerodynamic look, negative wing dihedral, large rudder, and wing fences for better low-speed handling. - First flight by Captain Collins; subsequent flights included chase by F-86s, showing the MiG's superior acceleration and climb due to lower thrust loading. - Handling was conventional at medium/low speeds; landing speeds were similar to the F-80 (approach ~120 knots, touchdown ~105 knots). - Armament: Unique quick-swap package with two 23mm and one 37mm cannon under the intake, allowing fast rearming. Fired for only ~6 seconds continuously (vs. F-86's 14 seconds). Tests included strafing runs and static firing; casings/links jettisoned. - Performance data matched prior intelligence remarkably well. Strengths (Desirable Features) - Excellent high-altitude capability (reached 55,000 ft; F-86 max ~51,000 ft). - Superior rate of climb (45,000 ft in 9 minutes vs. F-86's 13 minutes). - Rapid acceleration from low speeds. - Short turning radius (effective in low-speed maneuvers). - Short takeoff/landing distances. Weaknesses (Undesirable Features) - Became uncontrollable above ~Mach 0.94 in dives (recovered only in denser air); F-86 remained controllable at higher speeds. - Slightly lower top speed than F-86 at all altitudes. - Poor handling at high speeds (small ailerons, ineffective elevators → slow roll rate). - Poor lateral-directional stability at high altitudes. - Inadequate cockpit features: poor rear visibility, inadequate defrosting, extreme cabin temperatures (up to 42°C low, freezing high), non-self-sealing fuel tanks, oxygen/cabin systems needing constant attention. - Limited ammunition duration and other equipment quirks. Overall Assessment The MiG-15 was a formidable but inferior fighter compared to the F-86 Sabre. Its advantages shone in climb, altitude, and low-speed maneuverability, but the F-86 excelled in high-speed control, handling, and pilot-friendly systems. The reported 13:1 kill ratio favoring F-86s over MiGs was attributed to superior aircraft design and better-trained pilots. After just 4 days and 11 flights, the MiG's capabilities were fully understood—no secrets remained.

Aviation Archive - Tim Farmer

13,707 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

WHY YOU WAKE UP IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT Your brain has 20,000 neurons clustered in the hypothalamus. They form the suprachiasmatic nucleus. This is your master clock. It's been running since before birth. At 25, this clock kept you unconscious until morning. At 65, the same clock runs on less melatonin, weaker signals, and a rhythm that physically shifted 2-3 hours earlier. It fires a wake signal between 2-4 a.m. Four systems inside your body shifted with age. They converge at the same hour every night. The thoughts that arrive at 3 a.m. feel different from the same thoughts at 3 p.m. because your brain runs a different program in the dark. The part that would normally tell you those thoughts aren't emergencies is still asleep. THE CLOCK MOVED FORWARD The suprachiasmatic nucleus generates a near 24-hour rhythm controlling when you feel alert and when you feel sleepy. In young adults, peak sleepiness arrives around 11 p.m. Peak alertness arrives around 9-10 a.m. Blue light at 480 nanometers activates melanopsin cells in the retina. These cells send signals directly to the suprachiasmatic nucleus, synchronizing your clock to the day-night cycle. With age, the clock shifts earlier. This is circadian phase advance. The sleepiness signal arrives at 7-8 p.m. instead of 11 p.m. The wake signal arrives at 3-4 a.m. instead of 6-7 a.m. The entire sleep-wake window moves forward 2-3 hours. The suprachiasmatic nucleus itself degrades. Neurons deteriorate. The amplitude of the circadian signal weakens. Peaks become shallower. Troughs become less deep. The radio station loses transmitter power until the signal becomes fuzzy and inconsistent. The clock's sensitivity to light cues diminishes through two mechanisms. The aging lens yellows and thickens, filtering more blue light before it reaches the melanopsin cells. The suprachiasmatic neurons themselves respond less robustly to whatever signal does arrive. Weaker input through a cloudier window. Less responsive neurons processing that input. The clock drifts. When the circadian clock drifts without strong light cues, it drifts earlier. Phase advance is the default direction of an unanchored aging clock. MELATONIN COLLAPSED The pineal gland releases melatonin at night to initiate and maintain sleep. This hormone declines with age. The pineal gland calcifies gradually over decades, reducing functional tissue and capacity to produce melatonin. By 65, nighttime melatonin levels can be one-third to one-quarter of what they were at 30. Sometimes less. Melatonin doesn't just initiate sleep. It maintains depth and continuity across the full night. When melatonin is low, sleep is shallower, more fragmented, more vulnerable to interruption. Even if you fall asleep at a reasonable hour, low melatonin cannot hold you through to morning. Your body tries to put you to sleep at 8 p.m. and wake you at 3 a.m. That's a 7-hour sleep window. It might be enough sleep for your shifted clock. But you fight the 8 o'clock drowsiness. Social life, television, family, habit. You stay up until 10 or 11. The clock doesn't adjust to your social schedule. It fires the wake signal at 3 regardless. The clock runs on light and biology, not preferences. You lost 2-3 hours from the front of your sleep window by staying up late. The alarm still goes off on the original schedule. The 3 a.m. waking isn't a malfunction. It's your shifted clock doing exactly what it was programmed to do. This is social jet lag. The gap between your biological clock time and your social clock time creates the same physiological mismatch as flying across two or three time zones. Your body is in one time zone. Your social life is in another. The drowsiness you fight at 8 p.m. is your body's genuine sleep onset signal. The waking at 3 a.m. is your body's genuine wake signal. The problem isn't the signals. The problem is overriding one without being able to override the other. There's a compounding factor. The shifted clock means your body wants to sleep earlier. The reduced melatonin means it cannot hold sleep as deeply or as long. You're caught between two problems: a clock that fires the wake signal too early and a chemical supply that cannot maintain the sleep signal through the full night. Even if you went to bed at 8, the reduced melatonin might still fail to hold you past 3 or 4. The clock shifted the window. The melatonin shrank it. DEEP SLEEP DISAPPEARED Sleep cycles through stages roughly every 90 minutes. Light sleep, deeper sleep, deeper sleep, then REM. The stage that matters most for feeling rested is slow-wave sleep, stage N3, the deepest phase. Brainwaves drop to large, slow delta oscillations at 0.5-4 hertz. During slow-wave sleep, the glymphatic system activates. Cerebrospinal fluid flushes through brain tissue along channels that open when neurons shrink slightly during deep sleep. This clears metabolic waste: adenosine, the molecule that builds sleep pressure during the day, and amyloid beta proteins, the plaques associated with Alzheimer's disease. Growth hormone pulses during N3. Tissue repair peaks. Memory consolidation occurs. The hippocampus replays the day's experiences and transfers them to long-term cortical storage. This is the sleep that makes you feel like you actually slept. At 25, roughly 20% of the night is spent in slow-wave sleep. By 65, that drops to 10-15%. By 75, some people get almost none. My sleep tracker tells me that I almost never get less than 30%... and I'm 60. It is possible to have restorative deep sleep no matter what your age is. In my case even at lower sleep duration. High energy availability alsp plays a big role. The slow wave generating circuits in the medial prefrontal cortex usually deteriorate with age, producing weaker and less frequent delta oscillations. The deep sleep itself becomes shallower. The waves are smaller. The duration shorter. The restorative process is less complete. If deep sleep is the period when the brain clears amyloid beta, then reduced deep sleep means reduced clearance. Less deep sleep leads to more amyloid, which leads to less deep sleep, which leads to more amyloid. The relationship is bidirectional and self-reinforcing. If you never feel fully rested no matter how many hours you spend in bed, if 8 hours produces the recovery that 6 hours used to produce, if you wake in the morning with the sense that something was missing from the night, the missing component may be slow wave sleep. The hours were there. The depth was not. Slow-wave sleep that remains concentrates in the first half of the night, the first two to three sleep cycles. By 2-3 a.m., most of the deep sleep budget has been spent. What remains for the second half of the night is lighter stage one and stage two sleep, interspersed with REM. Light sleep has a dramatically lower arousal threshold. Stimuli that would not have registered during slow-wave sleep can push you above the waking threshold in light sleep. A slight temperature change in the room. A bathroom urge from a bladder that fills faster with age. A noise from outside. Even the natural shift in body position. You wake at 3 a.m. partly because the sleep you're in at 3 a.m. is physiologically different from the sleep you're in at midnight. The fortress walls got thinner as the night progressed. By 3 o'clock, you're sleeping behind a screen door instead of a vault. You could sleep through thunderstorms at 30. Now you wake at the sound of a refrigerator cycling on. The physics isn't about the noise. It's about the stage of sleep you're in when the noise arrives. At midnight, during slow-wave sleep, your arousal threshold is high. The brain runs delta waves that suppress responsiveness to external stimuli. At 3 a.m. in stage 1 or stage 2, the threshold has dropped to a fraction of its midnight level. The same sound that the sleeping brain would have filtered at midnight wakes you at 3 because the brain is no longer running the program that filters it. CORTISOL ARRIVED EARLY Your body runs a cortisol rhythm called the cortisol awakening response. In the final hours of sleep, the adrenal glands begin increasing cortisol output, preparing the body for waking. Mobilizing glucose into the bloodstream. Priming the immune system for the day's pathogens. Raising blood pressure and heart rate toward daytime operating levels. In a young adult, this cortisol rise begins around 4-5 a.m. and peaks roughly 30-45 minutes after waking. With age, the rise begins earlier. 2-3 a.m. in many older adults. Low-carb diets can also trigger a relatively strong cortisol release, waking you up early.. The same circadian phase advance that shifted the sleep-wake window also shifted the cortisol curve. Every rhythm the suprachiasmatic nucleus controls moves in the same direction. Cortisol alone doesn't wake you. But combined with already light sleep and a shifted circadian clock, the cortisol rise adds a third signal, pushing you toward wakefulness at precisely the hour when the other two systems have already weakened your defenses. Three systems converging on the same window. The clock says wake up. The sleep stage says the walls are thin. The cortisol says the body is preparing for morning. All three signals arrive at 3 a.m. Not by coincidence. All three are governed by the same shifted circadian master clock. If the waking comes at almost exactly the same time every night, not randomly scattered across the early morning hours but clustered within the same 30-minute window, that precision is the signature of a circadian event. Cortisol is antagonistic to melatonin. The two hormones suppress each other. Cortisol inhibits melatonin production. Melatonin suppresses cortisol. In a young person with high melatonin and correctly timed cortisol, the two hormones hand off smoothly. Melatonin dominates the night. Cortisol rises toward morning. The transition is seamless. In an aging body with depleted melatonin and early-arriving cortisol, the handoff happens too soon. When cortisol starts rising at 2-3 a.m. and melatonin is already low, the biochemical conditions for staying asleep collapse. The melatonin that should be holding you under is insufficient. The cortisol that should not be arriving for another two hours is already here. Two hormones that are supposed to hand off like relay runners, one finishing as the other begins, instead collide in the same hour because both shifted on the same aging clock. The balance tips toward waking. THE WORST THOUGHTS ARRIVE When you wake at 6-7 a.m., cortisol is high, light enters your eyes, and your prefrontal cortex comes online in its task-oriented mode. You think about what to do, what to eat, where to go. Executive function engages. The thinking is directed, practical, forward-looking. Problems that exist at 7 a.m. feel like problems to be solved. Manageable, bounded, addressable. When you wake at 3 a.m. in the dark with no tasks to perform and no light to signal daytime, a different network activates. The default mode network. The brain's self-referential processing system fires in the absence of external input and directed task. This is the rumination network. It runs replays of conversations you had years ago. It generates worry scenarios about events that may never happen. It revisits regrets from decades past with a vividness that feels more real than memory should. It rehearses confrontations that will never take place. It asks questions that have no answers at any hour, let alone at 3 a.m. At 3 a.m., the default mode network has nothing competing with it. No light. No task. No external stimulation. No social interaction. And the executive prefrontal cortex that would normally evaluate, contextualize, and override the rumination is still partially offline. The prefrontal cortex is the last brain region to fully activate upon waking. It requires light exposure and time to reach full operating capacity. This is the region that says this thought is not an emergency. This worry is not proportionate to reality. This problem can wait until morning and will look different then. At 3 a.m., that region is sleeping while the default mode network runs at full power. You're awake enough to think. But the thinking is the uncontrolled, self-referential, catastrophizing kind. The system that controls and contextualizes thought has not caught up with the system that generates it. The worry loop feels more intense at 3 a.m. than the same thoughts would feel at 3 p.m. because the brain regions that regulate emotional response and assign proportionality are not yet operational. You're running the worry software without the control software. The thoughts feel urgent and catastrophic because the part of your brain that would tell you they are neither is still asleep. The thoughts are not true in the way they feel true. They're running on hardware that cannot evaluate them yet. The 3 a.m. thoughts have a specific quality that daytime worry doesn't. A sense of certainty. Of inevitability. Of problems being larger and solutions being fewer than they actually are. The distortion isn't emotional. It's architectural. The brain regions that generate worry are online. The brain regions that evaluate worry are not. By 7 a.m., when the prefrontal cortex has fully activated and light has entered the eyes and cortisol has reached its appropriate peak, the same problems that felt catastrophic at 3 a.m. feel manageable. Nothing changed about the problems. Everything changed about which brain regions are processing them. If you've lain in the dark at 3 a.m. and felt that your problems were larger, your regrets sharper, your fears more certain than they would be by breakfast, that wasn't weakness. It wasn't anxiety disorder. It was the default mode network running without prefrontal supervision, amplified by cortisol that arrived early, in a brain that had already run through its deep sleep budget and could not pull you back under. Four systems, all doing what the physics of aging programmed them to do, all converging on the same hour. Subscribers have access to detailed practical applications of remedies in a second attached post.

Metabolic Uncle

12,138 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce

13 years ago, eight million people watched a man step out of a capsule 39 kilometres above the earth and fall. He hit the speed of sound in 34 seconds. You could hear the sonic boom from the ground. Felix Baumgartner was an Austrian skydiver who had spent years doing things nobody else would try. He once made the lowest parachute jump in history off a statue in Brazil. He crossed the English Channel wearing a carbon fibre wing. But the stratosphere jump almost didn’t happen, and it wasn’t because of the height or the speed. It was the suit. The pressurised spacesuit he had to wear made him so claustrophobic he nearly walked away from the whole project. They had to bring in a psychologist just to get him to keep going. The jump took five years to plan and cost $20 million. On 14 October 2012, a helium balloon the size of 33 football pitches carried him up for two and a half hours in a capsule barely bigger than a phone booth. At the top, the door opened and his visor started fogging. Mission control had to decide whether to call it off. They didn’t. The only voice on the radio was 84-year-old Joe Kittinger, who had done a version of this jump himself 52 years earlier. Nobody else on earth could talk him through it. Kittinger’s last words before the step: “OK, we’re getting serious now, Felix.” He fell for 4 minutes and 19 seconds, reaching 1,357 kilometres per hour. Landed on his feet in the desert. Dropped to his knees. Afterward, Baumgartner said that when you stand up there on top of the world, you become so humble. That it’s not about breaking records anymore. “It’s all about coming home.” Baumgartner passed away in July 2025 at 56.

Dr. Lemma

191,523 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce

Bitcoin hashrate dropped ~20% in just a few days. Because extreme winter weather across the US punished weak mining operations. Here’s what actually breaks miners during a polar vortex (and how operators prepare) 👇 HOW WINTER BREAKS MINERS Cold doesn’t usually kill miners while they’re running. It kills them when: • machines cool down too fast • airflow isn’t controlled • miners restart while still cold Most damage happens during restarts and boot-ups, not steady-state hashing. HOW OPERATORS PROTECT HASHRATE 1️⃣ Control temperature swings (not just temperature) Rapid changes are the enemy. • Insulate containers and buildings to slow heat loss • Limit cold air intake until miners are hashing and warming themselves • Keep container lids closed during startup • Use hot-air feedback to warm machines gradually Goal: warm up slowly, cool down slowly. 2️⃣ Don’t let airflow work against you Airflow that’s great in summer can kill you in winter. Watch out for: • External fans pushing freezing air inside • Chimney effects that pull heat out too fast • Wide-open intakes during startup Common fixes: • Slow or pause intake fans during warm-up • Disrupt chimney effects temporarily • Use finer dust filters to reduce cold airflow Once machines are stable, airflow can come back. 3️⃣ Be careful when rebooting hashing miners Reboots in freezing temperatures are where most costly mistakes happen. Safer approach: • Reboot during the warmest part of the day • Do it one rack at a time • Keep lower shelves running so rising heat protects upper ones Rushing reboots saves minutes now and costs days later. 4️⃣ Booting miners that were offline is different For curtailment, demand response, or long downtime: ⚠️ Do NOT boot if boards are below 0°C What to do instead: • Warm machines gradually • Monitor ambient temperature inside the facility • Physically check miners if possible Cold hardware doesn’t fail immediately. It fails later. 5️⃣ Use firmware to avoid cold-start mistakes With Braiins OS, operators rely on: • Pre-heat to bring chips closer to target temperature before hashing • Fan speed vs chip temperature to confirm miners are actually warming up If fans are low and chip temperature isn’t rising, stop and warm miners more. Booting too early is the fastest way to lose hardware. 6️⃣ Network outages can freeze miners fast When internet drops, miners stop hashing and cool down quickly. Two common safeguards: • Multiple pool fallback URLs • A drain pool as a last resort to keep miners hashing and warm Drain pools burn power, but they can prevent far more expensive cold restarts. ❄️ THE COLD TRUTH Winter punishes poor preparation and rushed decisions. We’ve been running 2+ GW of live hashpower on Braiins OS through harsh winters. The patterns repeat every year. For the full deep dive, read the complete Polar Vortex guide on our blog. Mining is hard. Braiins OS is built for this.

Braiins

12,141 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

So, life update that worries me... Didn't sleep well last night. Was too worried if this drunk and drugged-up native was going to come back. My daughter took the garbage out and forgot to lock the door when she came inside. This guy showed up about 10 minutes later, and walked into my house. We were both just in our sleep shirts, relaxing, she in the living room and I was in ny bedroom working on an article Im posting shortly. I came scrambling out of my bedroom and found this guy plastered drunk standing in my kitchen. I immediately forced him out the door into the porch and closed the door behind me, putting myself between him and the door. He was so drunk he couldn't speak words, just mumbled. I calmly told him to get lost. He just smiled and stared at me with all his tear drop tattoos next to his eyes scrunching up. I told him again to leave. He stood there looking stupid. Finally I told him if he didnt leave I would call the cops, then I turned around, went inside, locked the door and retrieved my firearm. I had enough time to load ammo into a clip, get the trigger lock off my firearm and get back to the front of the house to find him sitting in the car still. I was waiting to see if he was leaving, or coming back. Because he gave off a vibe that he was willing to get violent for whatever he was pursuing. Just after Dave died, a white vehicle showed up and parked next door on the road at the abandoned property. A man came to my door and kept trying to get me to go to his vehicle to "look at something". Of course I didnt go with him, but it was enough to get me to hire an electrician to install the security cameras, especially after my kid's bow was stolen. I have 3 more cameras to go up still. But since Dave passed away I have to hire people to do these things and, well, its not cheap or easy and definitely hard to find someone with the time in their schedule to fit me in. I showed this video clip to a person I know here in town, who informed me this guy and his friend were revived multiple times over the weekend from fentanyl overdoses. All I know is the guy was so plastered if I lit a match while he talked he would have become a human mmolatov.i have no idea who drove him. As soon as the snow is gone, I will be fortifying my property like its a military compound so the next time one of these fuckers shows up word will spread real quick not to mess with "The Widow" as I've learned I am called in this town. Yes, I filed a police report and yes, I have passed on the footage to RCMP.

Melanie In Saskatchewan

44,485 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

Here’s the ICE watch training video Cam Higby 🇺🇸 found. Let’s deconstruct the first few minutes. Lead by Eric Ward, a senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center, a far-left NGO with nearly a billion-dollar endowment. His academic work is in “Stochastic terrorism,” which is “using hostile public rhetoric, repeated and amplified across media and communication platforms.” Literally, his expertise is manipulating minds. He’s not an expert on peaceful protests. He’s not an operational guy. His background is in psychological warfare. Participants were told “for their safety” they must “have training,” but this training isn’t about situational awareness, first aid, or practical defense against pepper spray. It’s, in fact, teaching you how to mentally prepare to escalate violence. Let’s look at his tactic. First, a meditation session. Why? To get you “out of your brain” and in “touch with feelings.” He then explicitly tells everyone to tune out everything but their feelings. Next… the four thousand people here are being asked to confront armed federal agents. What is the natural reaction for anyone confronting armed men? Nervousness. I love the police; my father-in-law was an NYPD officer, but my heart beats faster when I’m pulled over by my local PD. He’s telling them to listen to that “heat behind the eyes, tremble in your hands,” which is fine, but then he is lying. He’s telling you to interpret that natural panic when facing authority as moral superiority and your “conscious.” Next, he has to dehumanize opponents and set the stage for “us vs. them,” but this is tricky because almost every American knows a Republican. So he says “I want to be clear who they are,” and he gets very specific so the picture of your MAGA uncle or priest doesn’t enter your mind. Then he states the obvious, which everyone (even MAGA) will agree on: “Renee Good should be alive. Alex Pretti should be alive.” I agree with that statement, but the question is who’s responsible for their deaths. IMHO, the person most responsible is Eric Ward, but of course, he’s not going to blame himself. Then he says, “The people who died at the hands of ICE snd border patrol should be alive.” What people? He doesn’t say. It’s not about the people; it’s about drawing a straight line from Renee and Alex to ICE. Then he says, “Let’s tell the truth.” Which any kindergartener knows is followed by lies, but his listeners are in a trance from the breathing exercise. Listen to the sing-song nature of how he speaks. It’s literally hypnosis. Hypnosis for the BIG whopper lie: “Federal law enforcement is not here to keep us safe.” Really, Eric? Maybe you can make an argument that some federal law enforcement isn’t here to keep us safe… but you didn’t specify. You didn’t exclude organizations like the US Coast Guard, which is federal immigration law enforcement and does keep us safe. Why? Because he needs to paint with broad strokes in case other agencies are called in. Nad now the stage is set to dehumanize: “Federal law enforcement is killing people, beating people…” And the worst lie: “Detaining people like disposable objects.” Once you are hypnotized. Once you trust your feelings over facts. Once you know those feelings make you morally superior. Once you know ICE thinks you are “disposable garbage,” then you are prepared to act with violence! Just trust your feelings and don’t look at the massive endowment the Southern Poverty Law Center has to fund physiological operatives trained in Marxist theory like Eric Ward.

John Ʌ Konrad V

229,826 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

Couldn't sleep. 3AM. Opened Gemini Live. Earbuds in. Lights off. Talking to AI like a late night phone call with a friend. Started with random stuff. Macro. Bitcoin. Then I asked something I didn't expect to care about. Is it actually possible to make consistent money on prediction markets? Or is it all luck? Gemini paused. Then: The market is efficient on average. But 15 minute BTC rounds update slower than exchanges. If software sees the Binance price before the platform does, it buys at 10 cents what already pays $1. This is not a prediction. It's a delay. I sat up in bed. You're saying the answer already exists before the market closes? For a few seconds, yes. Useless for a human. Enough for a script. → Wallet: I spent the next hour asking questions by voice in the dark. Gemini explained everything. Where the lag comes from. Why it doesn't close. How the math works. At the end I asked: If this works, someone is already doing it? Check the leaderboard. High frequency. Entries in the first seconds. Win rate above 70%. Morning. Laptop. 20 minutes of searching. guh123. $181,775 profit. 16,314 predictions. Joined February 2026. Everything Gemini described. Exactly. 16,314 trades. One month. $181K. Entries between 6 and 14 cents. Profit curve like a staircase. No pullbacks. Small bets. $700 to $1,800 each. But 400+ per day. Every day. The wallet doesn't swing for home runs. It collects $2,000 to $3,000 four hundred times. I showed the wallet to Gemini the next night. Same earbuds. Same dark room. Asked: Is this the wallet you were describing? Entry timing, position size, and win rate are consistent with the latency arbitrage pattern I explained. This wallet enters an average of 7 seconds after Binance price movement. The platform needs 25 to 30 seconds to update. 7 seconds. That's the entire edge. 16,314 times. The best investment insight I've ever gotten came at 3AM lying in bed talking to my phone in the dark. Gemini didn't find the wallet. It explained why a wallet like this should exist. I just went and found it. $181,775. 6,800 views. Most people scroll past it. They don't know what they're looking at. Now I do. Because I couldn't sleep and asked my phone the right question.

Marlow

34,756 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

This How I Write guest is an underrated gem of a human being. She launched Stripe Press, wrote the famous About Us page for Figma, and is an expert on all things business writing. I bring you Brie Wolfson, and 14 things she's learned about writing: 1. You cannot do great work without admiring the great work of others. Those who create tasteful things are almost always deep appreciators. This is why... 2. …Put your favorite paragraphs in a word document. Revisit this doc when you’re out of ideas or looking for inspiration. 3. The First Ten Minutes. The Marriott group obsesses over the first ten minutes guests spend in their hotels. You should obsess over the first paragraph of your essay. Did it spike an emotion? Raise an eyebrow? Land a joke? No? Rewrite until it does. 4. You can't acquire good taste doesn't come by mistake. It requires intention, focus, and care. Taste is a commitment to a state of attention. It’s a process of peeling back layer after layer, turning over rock after rock. 5. Finding the right word is overrated; finding the right vibe is underrated. The vibe comes first. Find the feeling you want to deliver and the right phrase will find you. 6. George Saunders perhaps came up with the most minimal definition of good writing: Good writing is when someone wants to read the next sentence. 7. What Brie learned from George Saunders about editing. He imagines a little meter in his head whenever he reads his own word. One with "P" for positive. The other with "N" for negative. He edits and edits until the "P" stays active for the entirety of the text. 8. Dial down your “teacher voice.” Avoid banal superficialities and the uptight voice they’re usually delivered in. Lean into your learner voice instead. Let the reader hear curiosity in your words. 9. Dial up your inner voice. Turn up the dial on feelings and sensations that most people would ignore, for they hold the keys to what you actually think and feel. 10. Sports players watch their performance on tape to see where they went wrong. Brie Wolfson records herself reading her essays and then plays them back to notice where she doesn’t sound like herself. 11. Writing pressurizes you, both consciously and unconsciously, to polish your ideas. Just like the prospect of guests makes you tidy up your house, the prospect of sharing your ideas with others makes you tidy up your thinking. 12. A great essay is the result of a writer being obsessed with the subject. Ditch your essay if your commitment to the topic is lukewarm. 13. A Steve Jobs quote that applies to every industry: “I think part of what made the Macintosh great was that the people working on it were musicians and poets and artists and zoologists and historians who also happened to be the best computer scientists in the world.” Be obsessive about your side-hobbies. 14. Your readers will love you for the same reason your friends do: for your authentic weird self. Do you have the courage to show it? I've shared the full conversation with Brie Wolfson below. If you'd rather listen on YouTube, Spotify, or Apple, check out the replies…

David Perell

137,511 görüntüleme • 2 yıl önce

This is painful to write, but I need to get it out... For years, my “news” came almost entirely from left-leaning podcasts and media outlets. The other day I scrolled back through my podcast history from that era and it honestly made my stomach drop. Thousands of hours of my life, just gone. Hours I’ll never get back, the vast majority of it I know now wasn’t even information… it was just propaganda packaged as news. I’m writing this because I want to warn you, because I wish someone had warned me. It’s hard to explain to people who haven’t lived inside it just how insanely bubble-like the grip on your perception of reality becomes. How it doesn’t feel AT ALL like you’re being shaped to think a certain way, it just feels like you’re being informed and in the process... you feel morally superior and smarter than "them" (the conservatives). For me the routine was simple: A couple minutes of CNN with my morning coffee. A “breaking news” push notification from the NYT. Pod Save America or The Daily on my commute. They all said the same stuff!!! Same framing. Same villains. Same moral conclusions from the news. It's literally the right-wing meme of "the script has gone out!" It's so so true. Yeah the companies were different, but they all had essentially an identical script, all corroborated by experts. In hindsight, it's a freaking miracle I ever broke out of it. It's a near-perfectly-sealed echo chamber. And now, as I'm scrolling through my past, it looks like a record of someone slowly being put to sleep. Episode after episode. Commute after commute. Day after day. Just thousands of hours of my life with headphones in, letting someone else narrate reality to me. And I'm sick with regret. Because I know that a part of me liked it. Like I was smarter, kinder, and more evolved because I just knew so much more, and was on the team of empathy! I was wrong. And I can’t rewind who I was in those years. But I’m writing this because I KNOW there are people still living in that trance. I talk to you (yes, you know who you are) often. And I know you think you're just “staying informed,” and I hear in your voice the moral superiority, the immediate reaction to take offense on behalf of some group or people... Please. Please wake up before you lose years of your life the way I did. Because one day you’ll look back and realize the biggest thing they stole from you wasn't just your time... They stole the truth.

Matt Van Swol

486,309 görüntüleme • 6 ay önce

🚨 EXCLUSIVE — Megyn Kelly refused to label as a "terrorist" Ayman Ghazali, who targeted a Michigan Jewish preschool. Mohamed Jaloul at Old Dominion in Virgina? "Terrorist." Ndiaga Diagne in Austin? "Terrorist." But Ghazali? "Naturalized citizen from Lebanon." This was no slip of the tongue on her Friday show. The previous night, shortly after the attack, Megyn Kelly's only mention of Ghazali targeting the Detroit-area Jewish preschool was to repost Ryan Grim, who has deep, longstanding ties to Qatar. That Thursday evening Ryan Grim post was a clear attempt to blame Israel for Ghazali's terrorist attack by claiming that his kids had been killed recently in an IDF military strike in southern Lebanon. However, by around that same time on Thursday, Hussain Abdul-Hussain and others had posted credible reporting that Ghazali's brothers had been Hezbollah operatives taken out by Israel. And if the brothers had both been Hezbollah, Ayman Ghazali himself almost certainly would have been, as well, just based on how such dynamics work in that Hezbollah-infiltrated area of Lebanon. So by Friday morning, it was already widely suspected that Ghazali was affiliated with Hezbollah — and that was confirmed later that day. Not that it mattered to Megyn, though. Which shouldn't be too surprising in light of Megyn's newfound leanings, considering that Leftists and anti-Israel types have long insisted that Hezbollah is more of a political organization than terrorist in nature. Never mind that Tucker Carlson has been claiming recently that ANY discussion of Islamic terrorism is just pro-Israel propaganda. That helps explain why during her show on Friday — the day after two radical Islamists had attacked in two different states — Megyn spent almost no time discussing either attack, just under two minutes out of two hours. Rather, Megyn's primary focus was blaming Israel for Trump's decision to go to war in Iran with her guest, close Tucker Carlson friend Saagar Enjeti. To her credit, Megyn said, "Luckily, the only person killed in that attack was the attacker. And truly, it is a blessing." But she did NOT mention that the target was a preschool — a rather bizarre omission. Megyn Kelly has had repeated opportunities to call Ayman Ghazali a terrorist, yet she simply refuses to do so. She can't even admit that the man trained and inspired by Hezbollah was targeting preschool kids. This is who Megyn Kelly has become. The scary part? She's probably going to plunge even further into the anti-Israel fever swamp.

Joel Mowbray

211,553 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

[Trans] PROUD OF WIN ACTOR 🐰: Sawasdee krub 😊 🎤: How do you feel about receiving these awards? 🐰: Today, I received awards from the Thai Box Office Awards, via LINE TODAY votes. I’m so happy to win in both the Series and Movie categories. I’d like to thank all my fans for voting for me. I regularly check Twitter and see how everyone boosted one another in voting. Thank you so much for that. 🥹 🎤: You won in both categories with the highest votes! How do you feel? 🐰: I’m really happy, especially for the movie award. It’s my first time working on an international project, and I’m so glad to be part of it. 😊 I’m also thankful that everyone still supports me and looks forward to my projects. Once again, thank you to my fans for voting and always being there for me. These awards are motivation for me to keep improving myself. 💚 🎤: Yesterday was a reunion for you guys. How was it? 🐰: It made me really happy. I’ve missed the times when we were all together. Yesterday, we kept saying, “We miss moments like these so darn much!” Just taking pictures together by the sidewalk reminded us of when we traveled for fan meets overseas. We haven’t gathered like this in almost a year. I can’t even remember the last time we were all together. 🎤: How fun was it yesterday? 🐰: We’ve already planned who will be the host for our next meal! Every time we meet, we take turns treating each other. #dew_jsu was the host this time, and he said, “I’ll book Omakase 🍣 because next time it’s P’Win’s turn!” 😅😂 So I made sure to fully book my schedule. Sorry, can’t make it! 😆 🎤: Did anyone tease #hirunkit_ about bringing a new friend into the group? 🫣☺️ 🐰: Of course! 😆 But actually, it doesn’t have to be just the F4 gang, anyone who’s our friend is always welcome. 🥰 🎤: How is his new friend, #skywongravee ? 🐰: Sky is a really nice person. From the moment we met, I felt like we clicked instantly like there was some invisible connection. I always feel comfortable around him, and I’m happy to have him as a friend. 😊 🎤: Even though you guys hadn’t seen each other for a while, did you notice that you guys were still in sync? It was so cute to watch! 😊 🐰: We’re always in sync, it’s the bond we share. Even if we don’t see each other for years, when we reunite, it feels like no time has passed. We talk like we meet every day. That connection between the four of us is always there. We’ll definitely plan another get-together because this one was too short! 🎤: Your group of friends is growing! 🐰: Yes, the more, the merrier! We welcome everyone. 🎤: Any upcoming projects? 🐰: Please stay tuned! This year, I have #Enigma2, which will air soon, and #ScarletHeartTH, which will start filming soon. 😅 🎤: Last question—have you asked Sky & Nani for lucky lottery numbers? 😂 🐰: LOL, I did! I asked them for their license plate numbers. 😇 #TBOAwards2024xWin #winmetawin Winmetawin

◡̈ ✿〜*:.。. ꕤ M a R y ꕤ*・.。.*・*✿.

25,119 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

Cowboy Carter Tour Review (Spoilers, sorta kinda 😭) Where do I even begin?! NoBODY right now is doing what Beyoncé is doing, I’m sorry! I’ve been to many of the bigger-name shows y’all would mention off rip and while they were good, they weren’t GRAND. A lot of artists put on shows and simply perform. Beyoncé runs a finely tuned machine that’s powered by her raw talent. It’s magical. Every little detail is intentional. From the lighting that hits your skin and reacts to a hi-hat, a lyric, or a moment, it’s designed to make your senses feel seen. Your spiritual spotlight. Then there’s the visuals (and yes, the visuals are going to EAT). She’s not just entertaining you, she’s teaching you, alarming you and most importantly, sharing with you. From the aesthetics and diverse representation of her dancers, singers, and bands, it’s much deeper than you think. It felt like she took us through time: nods to MJ, James Brown, Tina, Prince, to modernized elements like Renaissance. I’ve never seen a stage that massive used so perfectly, in every detailed and intimate way. You feel like you’re inside her jukebox. The interludes? Not too long at all and stunning. The moment you go to sit (if you even try), she’s back up. A 3-hour show that somehow feels like an hour and a half. We stood the entire time, didn’t even leave for the bathroom, barely recorded anything. We were locked in, absorbing everything. She cares so deeply about her audience that even when she rides the car out to wave, it feels personal. Watching the smiles on the faces of all ages and backgrounds, just getting lost in gratitude as she waved over our heads? Whew. I was next to an older Southeast Asian couple in their 50s (they were HAVING a time last night, I tell you, cig in hand 🚬, I was like okk). She had grown married men screaming, fanning, glowing in joy beside their wives. All love. No judgment. We were just living. WITH THE CLIPS floating online, it might seem like this show is for her babies, Rumi and especially Blue. And yes, it may be for her personally, but let’s be clear: this is a Beyoncé show, PERIOD. She masterfully includes Blue in a way that feels complimentary and loving, not centered. If that makes sense. By the end, you forget Blue was even on stage that long because it feels like just 15 minutes. But Blue, wow! The talent that's emerging.. whew! 😩😤Both parents’ otherworldly talent and her own special gifts. Speechless. 🎁 Beyoncé is PERFORMING. Cut all that noise. She IS. And anyone who went to the show will tell you, age ain’t nothing but a number. Beyoncé is a beast at her craft and said, “Let me show y’all how this is done.” Knee surgery or not, this superhuman is unstoppable. 💡Like MJ, Prince, Tina, Whitney, her talent makes her one of the greatest musical superhumans of our time. You can’t buy or replicate this kind of gift. It’s in you, in her. Highlight: Now let’s talk VOCALS. BEYONCÉ… your VOICE? I have no words. Can we get a billion-dollar insurance policy on her throat?! 😭😩 We need scientists to study this woman’s voice! I’m not doing too much. When I say… her voice? I’m almost afraid to even speak on it because I cherish it so much. But what I will say is, thank you, God, for giving her that gift. Not just to heal herself but to help heal the world. And yes, she’s doing that. As someone who lost my sense of self nearly two years ago when my entire world shattered, when my Mom transitioned, Cowboy Carter healed a part of me I’d been searching for. It reminded me who the f**k I am. Thank you, Beyoncé. Ty. 🫡 Salud. This show MUST be seen in person. No livestream, no video is going to match this otherworldly experience. Maybe a concert film could come close because she’s a visionary genius but this is the kind of concert we’ll hear about in future documentaries. I’m not exaggerating. I promise you. Go see that damn concert! Beyoncé, you owe me nothing. Act III is about to devour. 😉 Y’all, Beyoncé is the GOAT.

Josh P. Jackson

137,743 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

🚨UPDATE: Hunter Kozak Offered $20,000 To Take A POLYGRAPH TEST Did He ACCEPT? In the ongoing investigation into the assassination of Charlie Kirk on September 10, 2025, at Utah Valley University, renewed scrutiny falls on Hunter Kozak, a participant in the Unfuck America tour. Kozak was the final individual to question Kirk before the fatal shots were fired, posing an unexpected query about transgender-related shooters. Notably, he had misrepresented his intended question to the preceding speaker, claiming it would focus solely on transgender statistics in America. Video evidence captures Kozak in the moments prior, appearing to rehearse a reaction in the crowd—standing alone, intensely focused, without evident interaction with others. This has raised legitimate concerns about the authenticity of his presence and actions. To address these allegations transparently, my good friend and colleague 🔥Jesse ON FIRE🔥 extended a formal offer of $20,000 for Kozak to undergo a live polygraph examination. Kozak initially responded affirmatively, stating he would participate and questioning why anyone would decline such an opportunity. However when both myself and 🔥Jesse ON FIRE🔥 tried to contact Hunter to make arrangements including to escrow the funds, Hunter Kozak subsequently ceased all communication, effectively withdrawing from the process. Compounding the mystery, Kozak has been quietly removed from the Unfuck America tour roster. He appeared on their website as recently as one week ago. Discussions with tour founder Z, a cooperative and forthright individual, revealed her reluctance to press the matter, citing Kozak's reported trauma. Yet, as with all involved, the emotional toll of this tragedy extends far beyond one person. In a recent interview, Kozak attempted to clarify the footage, describing it as a habitual "bit" where he feigns exaggerated surprise at unremarkable comments. A review of the video, however, shows no such conversational context—only solitary preparation. Kozak has expressed aspirations in acting, which may contextualize his behavior, but it does little to dispel doubts in this high-stakes scenario. The polygraph offer remains open: Kozak may vet the administrator, whom we would select to ensure impartiality. A session of approximately 90 minutes could resolve these questions definitively for a substantial financial incentive—if his account holds true. Was Kozak merely an unwitting participant, or does his evasion suggest deeper involvement? The official narrative of a lone gunman continues to unravel under such inconsistencies. We urge hunter kozak 🧦🇺🇦🏳️‍🌈 (Hunter Kozak) to reconsider and the public to examine the evidence closely. Tag Hunter's account hunter kozak 🧦🇺🇦🏳️‍🌈 and let him know the offer is still good. RT and let's and make this blow up. In the same episode 🔥Jesse ON FIRE🔥 also revealed some bombshell information pointing the finger at Lance Twigg's involvement in Charlie Kirk's death, I highly suggest you all go watch the FULL episode, also FOLLOW 🔥Jesse ON FIRE🔥. I'll drop the link to the FULL video in the comments below.

Project Constitution

54,396 görüntüleme • 8 ay önce

🚨🇨🇳 PROF. YASHENG HUANG: “CHINA OVERPLAYED ITS HAND” He was born in China, raised inside the Communist Party system, and now teaches at MIT after graduating from Harvard. Few understand Beijing’s power structure like Professor Yasheng Huang. In this exclusive, Yasheng Huang 黄亚生 breaks down what’s really happening behind China’s global image. •⁠ ⁠Why Beijing’s rare earth restrictions could backfire on its own industries •⁠ ⁠How the trade war exposed deep cracks in China’s economy •⁠ ⁠Why its military buildup signals desperation, not dominance •⁠ ⁠His warning that a Taiwan invasion would trigger economic collapse •⁠ ⁠And why the idea that “autocracy equals success” is one of the biggest lies of the century Huang says the world isn’t watching China’s unstoppable rise, it’s watching its slow decline. 00:48 – Meet Yasheng Huang: Born into a CCP family, Harvard-trained, and now at MIT 02:00 – A Clash of Systems: the struggle between 2 political economies: state-led capitalism vs. open-market democracy 03:10 – Rare Earths as a Weapon: China’s dominance in rare earth refining (≈90%) becomes a tool of strategic leverage 04:40 – U.S. Dependence & Global Shockwaves: Rare earths in phones, cars, and missiles 06:05 – Tech Becomes the Battlefield: From chip bans to tariffs, both sides weaponize technology 08:44 – The Xi–Trump Trade Gambit: China wields rare earths ahead of the summit as a bargaining chip. 10:00 – Did Beijing Overplay Its Hand? Huang argues yes - coercive strength often breeds global distrust 12:00 – The New Resource Race: Japan, Australia, and the U.S. rush to secure alternative rare earth supplies 14:00 – Short-Term Dominance, Strategic Weakness: China can shock the system now, but decoupling will hurt it more later 17:00 – Hard vs. Soft Assets: Why China’s dominance in infrastructure doesn’t equal innovation power 18:10 – Innovation Wars: China’s imitation-driven model versus America’s innovation advantage 21:00 – 3 Critical Years Ahead: innovation, resilience, and diplomacy will determine the decade 23:15 – China’s Economy Under the Microscope: beneath it lies debt, inefficiency, and shrinking productivity 25:30 – The Illusion of Prosperity: Ghost cities, unproductive infrastructure, and overinvestment 28:00 – Misread by the West: Investors still treat China like a high-growth miracle 35:00 – Militarization of the Economy: Civilian industries repurposed for defense 38:45 – Taiwan and the logic of deterrence - “They want to win without fighting” 41:00 – The Invasion Dilemma: Any move on Taiwan risks economic collapse and regime legitimacy 44:00 – Nationalism & Public Opinion: Propaganda builds unity, but enthusiasm for real war low 46:30 – Inside the CCP: The shrinking circle of advisers. “No one tells the emperor he’s wrong” 49:00 – The End of Debate: Technocrats are replaced by loyalists 55:00 – America’s Advantage: Democratic systems self-correct - “a feature autocracies can’t replicate” 58:00 – The Next Decade: Multipolarity emerges; both superpowers constrained by internal limits 59:30 – Closing Thoughts: Peace requires strength - and restraint

Mario Nawfal

1,729,580 görüntüleme • 8 ay önce

A 23 year old in Idaho built an AI influencer named Aubrey in his bedroom and made $48,000 in 90 days from her. She has 113,000 TikTok followers. She has never been to a single brand event. She does not exist. He posted a 26 second reel last week showing exactly how he built her. Most viewers scrolled. A small group paused, watched it on 0.5x speed, and started copying the workflow before the reel ended. The whole stack fits on one tab. He opens a face cloning tool first. Uploads three reference photos of a woman who does not exist. The face locks. From that moment every photo of Aubrey shows the same eyes, the same chin, the same beauty mark above the left eyebrow. Then Claude. He feeds it her bio. 23 years old, raised in Boise, runs a wellness brand part time, just got a French bulldog named Marlow. Asks for 20 spoken word reel scripts. Each one 27 seconds. Each one written like a girl talking to her phone camera in her kitchen. The scripts go into a motion reference engine. Aubrey speaks them. Her lips sync. Her hands gesture. Her eyes blink at irregular human intervals because the engine was trained on women who blink at irregular human intervals. TikTok next. Two reels a day. By week 6 she had 113,000 followers and 4 million views. Then the money. A skincare brand DMs Aubrey asking if she does paid UGC. He replies as Aubrey. The brand pays $2,200 for one reel. He delivers it in 90 minutes. The brand wires the money to an LLC named after her bulldog. Then a vitamin company. Then a phone case brand. Then a candle company whose founder asks if she does affiliate. He says yes. Aubrey earns 18% on every sale through her bio link. The bio also says: "Boise // morning person // bulldog mom." 8 brands in 90 days. $48,000 in revenue. $39,400 in profit after API costs and one $89 face license. His mom thinks he does graphic design freelance. He showed her his Stripe dashboard at brunch last Sunday. She asked who Aubrey was. He told her. She put her fork down and stared at the screen for 11 seconds. Then she asked if Aubrey was hiring. Most people will read this and feel the rush. A few will open a new tab. The few are the only ones who matter. While the rest of the internet argues about whether AI art is real art, a quiet group of 23 year olds in Idaho is making the question irrelevant. The face is generated. The voice is synthesized. The brand check is real.

Marlow

120,377 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce

🚨🇭🇺 EXCLUSIVE w/ PM VIKTOR ORBAN ON THE IRAN WAR If there’s ever a person who can give us insight into Trump’s thinking, and what could and should happen next in Iran, it’s Prime Minister Orban He’s Europe’s longest serving Prime Minister, gone through the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria and Ukraine, he’s a friend of Trump who also gave him advice before the war, and he’s one of EU’s most respected and powerful voices. I sat down again with the PM to get his thoughts on the current war, NATO’s potential involvement, and whether Trump is prepared for a prolonged conflict. He was brutally honest with me, explaining why he believes NATO should support Trump, and why the war should end soon before it becomes a crisis for Iran, the U.S., and the entire world It’s a delicate line between a success and failure, and we are at that crossroads now We also discuss the future of the EU in a world dominated by the U.S. and China, the impact of the Iran war on Ukraine/Russia, and the repercussions of a prolonged conflict on Europe and the world. The decisions being made right now will shape the next decade. This conversation with Orbán Viktor explains why. 02:10 Destroying Iran’s capabilities could bring peace… or trigger a much bigger war. 03:40 In that region, going in is easy. Getting out is almost impossible. 05:10 You cannot control that region from the air. It doesn’t work. 07:20 My first question is never global. It’s always: what does this do to Hungary? 08:30 Migration from Iran could hit Europe fast… and countries won’t be able to handle it. 09:40 If oil prices rise again, Hungary will take a direct economic hit. 11:20 Europe made a huge mistake by mocking Trump… and destroyed its relationship with the U.S. 12:40 Sanctioning cheap Russian energy was politically crazy. 14:50 Sooner or later, Europe will have to go back to Russia for energy. 16:00 Europe is becoming irrelevant because it’s trying to act like an empire. 18:10 Europe misread the global shift and is now falling behind the U.S. and China. 20:30 The Western elite became tired, boring, and out of ideas. 22:40 If this war ends fast, it will look like a success. If not, it becomes a disaster. 25:00 Thinking anyone can beat China is a mistake. China is unbeatable. 26:20 There won’t be just one global power. There will be at least two controlling the world. 30:10 Europe lost its identity and now doesn’t know what it stands for. 32:20 Central Europe is mentally stronger and ready to rise. 36:10 Mixing civilizations is too risky. We won’t take that risk. 45:20 Russia will reach its war goals by any means. The question is how we respond.

Mario Nawfal

2,476,700 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce