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SECRET SCARLET WITCH X PHOENIX INTERACTION ULT BEFORE REALITY ERASURE = CANT GET MOVED ULT DURING REALITY ERASURE = PULLED TO GROUND INSTA ULT. NOT BREAKABLE.

328,302 次观看 • 6 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

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Two Colorado police officers ass@ult a man just sitting on the ground, get fired and cost tax payers 850,000 in the form of a settlement. ​Aurora Police officers John Haubert and Francine Martinez initially responded to a call regarding three individuals trespassing on private property near a local business. After running their names, officers discovered outstanding warrants for two of the individuals, who immediately fled the scene on foot. ​Kyle Vinson remained seated on the ground. Despite Vinson being unarmed, the situation rapidly escalated. Officer Haubert drew his firearm, pushed Vinson to the ground, and pinned him down. Haubert then assaulted vinson. Vinson can be heard repeatedly asking what he did wrong. Officer Martinez stood by during the encounter without intervening just watching the law broken in front of her face. ​Following an internal review of the bodycam footage, Aurora Police Chief Vanessa Wilson publicly condemned the actions, calling them "criminal" and "not police work." ​While a formal lawsuit was never filed in court, the City of Aurora bypassed a protracted legal battle by agreeing to a pre-litigation civil settlement, paying Kyle Vinson $850,000. ​While the civil side was settled out of court, the criminal proceedings against the officers drew intense public scrutiny: ​Officer John Haubert: Charged with multiple felonies—including second-degree assault and felony menacing—Haubert resigned from the department. However, during his criminal trial, a jury ultimately acquitted him of all charges. His defense successfully argued that Vinson had reached for the officer's weapon during the struggle, introducing enough doubt for a not-guilty verdict. ​Officer Francine Martinez: In a contrasting outcome, Haubert's partner was successfully convicted by a jury for failing to intervene under a strict Colorado police accountability law passed in 2020. She was sentenced to community service and probation. ​Two tier justice strikes again! Community service for the two criminal officers, and the citizens pay the bill.

Giggling Ganon

103,950 次观看 • 19 天前

Elon Musk said five words on Joe Rogan that explain everything wrong with your life right now. Musk: “Happiness is reality minus expectations.” Five words. And it explains why the most comfortable generation in human history can’t stop feeling empty. Musk: “If you just go try living in the woods by yourself for a while, you’ll learn that civilization is quite great.” He’s right. On Naked and Afraid, people tap out in days. Sometimes hours. They crawl back to the same civilization they spent years resenting. Because comfort is invisible until you’re sleeping in the dirt. But the formula has a second variable. It’s the one destroying you. Reality didn’t get worse. By every measure, it’s the best it’s ever been. Expectations did. Your grandparents compared themselves to their neighbor. Maybe a cousin. That was the whole universe. You compare yourself to 10,000 strangers before your first cup of coffee. Curated. Filtered. Showing you a life that doesn’t exist. Theodore Roosevelt said it a century before any of this was built. Roosevelt: “Comparison is the thief of joy.” No Instagram. No TikTok. No algorithm designed by the smartest engineers on the planet to show you precisely what you don’t have. And he still called it. Now run the equation. Reality holds steady. Expectations spike every time you unlock your phone. The distance between them stretches. And happiness doesn’t fade. It collapses. Not because your life got worse. Because your reference point moved. We built the greatest civilization in human history. Then we built the perfect machine to make sure nobody enjoys it. Every scroll. Every notification. Every “suggested for you.” None of it connects you. It’s recalibrating what you think you need. Upward. Constantly. Without your consent. And you wonder why you feel behind. You’re not behind. You’re running toward a finish line that moves every time you look up. The most dangerous lie of this generation isn’t that life is hard. It’s that everyone else figured it out. And you’re the only one who didn’t. Nobody figured it out. The formula doesn’t negotiate. It just runs. Raise expectations faster than reality improves and you will be miserable inside a paradise you built with your own hands. That’s not philosophy. That’s arithmetic. And the calculator is in your pocket right now.

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Box

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Founders oftentimes don't know how to communicate properly. They don't realize that it's a superpower they can develop. Great communication: -turns crises into trust-building moments -flips criticism to your advantage You can bend reality in your favor using Lulu Cheng Meservey's tips: >Stories are better than stats. Human stories with real people and relatable problems get better traction and recall. It's not "the tragedy that left millions without a roof," it's "the tragedy that left Mary and her three children [picture] without a roof." >Founders matter, not spokespersons. Bernie Marcus and Arthur Blank used to drive to Home Depot stores, take a group of associates to an office and talk. If they had let the message and philosophy spread by itself, it'd become amorphous. It's not "Bernie and Arthur think this," it's "we think this." >Let your inner circle tell you where you're wrong, or strangers will. Create a feedback loop before you broadcast. Your inner circle, the people who have context, care about you, and aren't afraid to challenge you, becomes your testing ground. >We're more convinced by people we like, and we like people that we trust. Identity plays a significant role in trust and how information is perceived. If you are not liked, what you say will not be taken at face value. There will be an automatic filter. The reverse is also true. >Use humor. Humor disarms. It signals confidence, intelligence, and that you don't take yourself too seriously. >Communicate for maximum impact. The main goal is not to communicate just for the sake of it, but help people understand. For your words to have impact, people need to attach their own emotions to them. You have to find the common ground where what you say collides with what they care about. This is from the amazing Shane Parrish podcast.

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“We were just trying to get him medication… But he was already gone.” Last week, the internationally renowned Indigenous chef Sean Sherman told reporter Nate Halverson that federal agents detained one of his employees on his way to work. The agents said his co-worker matched the description of someone they were looking for, and asked for documents to confirm his identity. By the next day, Sherman said, his employee was already out of Minnesota. He was discovered to be in Texas. “Our employees are not criminals,” Sherman told Nate in the Twin Cities. “They don’t have police records and they’re just here to come to work. We’re literally a nonprofit trying to serve healthy indigenous food to people. We shouldn’t have to worry if we’re going to have guns pulled on us on the way to work at all, but this is our reality.” Sherman said his team tried to intervene. “We were just trying to get him medication,” he added. “But he was already gone. And like, how do we get his medication to Texas now?” Sherman also pointed to a troubling historical resonance at Fort Snelling—the area where people are now being brought and detained in the Twin Cities: This is not the first time it has been used as a detention site. Fort Snelling is where Dakota prisoners following the 1862 Dakota uprising were brought and detained before being forcibly relocated down the river to the Crow Creek Reservation in what is now South Dakota. “It’s just more salt in the wound,” Sherman said.

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57,726 次观看 • 5 个月前