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Tradermayne breaks down ethereum:native's underperformance vs $NVDA. "There was a period of time where, yeah, you were better off holding ETH, but I mean, for the last five years, this is that chart, you know, kind of visualized, and NVIDIA's just kicking the shit out of Ethereum. And there...

14,175 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat •via X (Twitter)

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“The last time that we were touring and stuff, I think touring is quite an isolating experience. And on top of that, when we started touring, it was 2021, so it was kind of like still depths of the pandemic. We were like one of the first tours to go back out. So I think that tour started in that way where it was like, I was really bubbled up even kind of within the tour. And then staying on that tour, we put an album out and it ended up being like two and a half years type time. It's just a long time to be in like a bubble where you're not really spending that much time like in the world around you, other than shows and hotels and stuff. And when I finished, I kind of went off and was spending a lot of time in Italy, and was kind of like having this quiet time, and I was just feeling a lot of my life as I was kind of like, craving like quiet and kind of like private spaces. I was just feeling myself kind of like shut out a lot of the world, “I think, and I think the last couple of years for me was about, you know, there's a lot of things that I think I got used to saying no to, like invites from friends and like maybe a weekend trip or like a birthday party or something. I think I just got used to, you know, if I have a week at home, I don't want to go somewhere else for three days. I just want to stay home, you know. And I think when I got to Italy and was kind of out in this quiet place, I felt like, okay, if I'm going to spend all this time out here and I'm going to keep saying no to everything, I'm just going to like shut myself off from the world. And while parts of that sound appealing, I also like, I love people and I love like being in the world, you know, so it was kind of, I think for me, like there's been both the thing of like learning to set boundaries and stuff is a large part of that has also been learning when not to set boundaries and when to open up. Being intentional with the things that you don't do and being intentional with the things that you do do. So, you know, as a message in the album sleeve, where I said like thanks to all the people who helped me know when to say no and when to say yes. I think both of those have like greatly enriched my life.” - Harry about feeling isolated during his last tour and opening himself up to the world again on Q

HSNews

90,121 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten

🗨️| “Absolutely beautiful place. I'd spent a bit of time there on tour, but not enough time, you know, not working. Um, and I just wanted to surround myself with the kind of atmosphere and feelings that I wanted from the records. And, you know, the more you surround yourself by that, it, that those feelings are infectious completely. Um, there was a lovely kind of tempo to where we were in Costa Rica, place called Santa Teresa. It's like really kind of slow and like lovely like way of living. So the kind of tranquility that you'd hope for when making a record, it's often the other way and pressure, pressure, pressure. It was really nice to kind of, lay back on that. And in terms of the honesty on the record, I almost meant that in a slightly less literal sense. I've always been a quite a motive and honest songwriter, but I think this is the first time that I've been willing to embrace things that I was maybe a little bit scared of at first. It was really important to me post One Direction to kind of show who I was as an artist. So I resisted anything that was too close to centre. All the while forgetting that's what created me, you know, and that's the reason I'm sat in this chair. So I think it's, this record comes from a braver and more Honest standpoint. Yeah, I just, I deserve melodic songs like, Lemonade, you know, and like Palaces where in the past I might have kind of ignored melodies like that. So yeah, that's kind of what I meant by the record that I always deserve to make.” — Louis Tomlinson via #MostRequestedLive

World Tomlinson

11,606 Aufrufe • vor 6 Monaten

Hero–Doctor Kirk Moore, who's now facing 35 years in prison, defends his decision to give saline injections instead of COVID death jabs: "What law did I break?.... [there was] no ingredient list... no toxicity studies... [the jabs were] studied for a total of two months." This clip of board-certified plastic surgeon Dr. Kirk Moore (@Moore22K) is taken from an interview with Shannon Joy (Shannon Joy) posted to Rumble on June 10, 2025. ----------------Partial transcription of clip--------------- "So my one position that I've said all along is, what law did I break? There is no law. There was no Covid law passed. There was no. Nothing that said that I had to do whatever the government says that I need to do. There's no law that says that. And the government is trying to kind of put me into this fraud side, like you said, you know, saying I. That I absconded or I misused or I purloined, you know, $28,000, $28,800 worth of product that they gave me for free and that, you know, that I had a contract with them to give it in such a way. So, I think that's, you know, that That's That's the law side of it. "The ethical side of it wasn't that hard for me. I'm doing what my patients wanted me to do. After a full discussion of what it is. I, have no ingredient list. I don't know what this product is. There are no toxicity studies. There are no carcinogenic, you know, carcinogenic studies. There are no mutagenic studies. There's nothing out there. This is something that was studied for a total of two months. "And the control group was. Was terminated, because they found that it had 95% effectiveness. Once the numbers came out and it showed that that actual effectiveness was less than 1%, by an absolute risk reduction, then that in and of itself should prove, you know, should show that, hey, this is just ridiculous. There was no benefit. There's nothing out there. "You know, you look at Brook Jackson's study and what it was that she was, you know, that she's tried to present in Texas. That's been thrown out, at least twice now. And you just look at all of the. Everything that's behind it. You know, you mentioned, you know, the ethical side of it. You know, the AMA code of ethics says that a physician is supposed to take care of the patient that's in front of them. Okay? That's your oath. My oath is if you were my patient, I would take care of you. You tell me what your concerns are, you tell me, you know, what your symptoms are, and we come up with a plan. I explain to you what the pros and cons of that are, and then you and I come up with a plan on how to treat you. "And I'm not treating you for your husband or your kids or your neighbors or anybody else. I'm treating you that's in front of you. Okay, that's in front of me. And we come up with a plan. So that's the code of ethics. "There's also a known issue with medicine and the legal system. And the, again, the AMA code of ethics says two things. We know that there is going to be a conflict between ethical and moral medical treatment of people and the law at times. And so as a physician, your duty is to try to do what you can, to do both to take care of your patient and to kind of reconcile the law. "So I did. I went to the state of Utah, I went to the House, I went to some of the Senate subcommittees, I, I was, I testified in some of these committee hearings, to try to get laws changed, mandate laws, mask mandates, Covid mandates, shot mandates. And we were successful. In the state of Utah, we were able to pass laws, that reversed the mask mandates. That made it actually, to some degree, a fineable offense for businesses to require Covid vaccines in order to go to work and to go to school. "And so that was my first step. The second step out of this is that if you cannot change that during the time that you're doing, you are, by ethics and moral values, you are required to take care of your patient in front of you, not to abide by, like you said, to abide by the law. So where is the AMA and all this? That's their code of ethics. I don't see them standing behind me and, you know, and trying to support the medical values and ethics that they, that, you know, that they claim on their website is one of, you know, one of their, you know, bastions of health and what physicians need to do."

Sense Receptor

75,523 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

josh horowitz: "so where are you at on the chemistry thing, because obviously you and joe [locke] have it. can that be manufactured? you obviously like each other a lot off-camera, too. you get along very well. i mean, do you remember the first couple days and being like, 'oh, there's something…we have a connection that's gonna translate on screen.'?" kit connor: "it's interesting. it's such a nuanced conversation, the whole chemistry thing. because, obviously the kind of simple answer is, i don't think it can be manufactured. but i also think that—you know, i remember when joe and i were first doing our kind of chemistry reads and i couldn't really tell. i couldn’t, i wasn't sure, you know. we didn't know each other at all. we're both quite, especially on the first meeting, we're both quite timid people. i think we were both shitting ourselves, and we were both very nervous. i was just kind of…maybe i was too overwhelmed to clock whether or not there was chemistry. but they obviously thought that there was. from that, i think we then began to work together and then it was clear that these scenes were really making sense and that we were getting on like really, really well and he's obviously become one of my one of my closest friends. but yeah, it is one of those things where i i don't think it can be manufactured but i also don't think it's as simple as just, you know, you start getting to know each other and it’s there." 🎥:

kit connor updates

56,001 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

Ross Coulthart has heard stories about 2027, 2034, catastrophes, and “arrivals” but says they’re just stories you can’t corroborate, He does think the NHI is showing itself to people and prodding our awareness of it and that the drones are part but not all of it. (Speculation) Source -Disclosure Team 🔗 in comments Full quotes for context 👇🏼 Ross -“I don't know. Simply, I don't know. I've heard 2027, I've heard 2034. I hear stories of catastrophes, I hear stories of arrivals. They're just stories. I mean, how do you corroborate things like that? I mean, that's the problem I have with, for example, things like abductions and mutilations, unless I'm there to see it. How, how do you prove this stuff? So if somebody says to me, as has been said to me that 2027 is gonna be a big year, and then later on I hear 2034 is gonna be a big year. Frankly, I, I don't know. I mean, I really have no idea. But yeah, I mean, there are, there are people who say that there are time limits. I certainly think this, I think the NHI, whatever it is, is prodding humanity's awareness of itself. And I think that the so-called drones are part of that, not all of it. But part of that, I think that what's happening is there is a deliberate engagement by the NHI with certain people, you know, they're, they're trying to prod human consciousness. And I find it really interesting, the number of people I meet who have suddenly developed an interest in the phenomenon after they've had one or two weird anomalous encounters. It's like what's happening is the NHI is showing itself to people.” “it may be wrong, you know, and I hasten to add, it's just speculation on my part,”

neandrewthal

72,205 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

Namjoon said that there were another option like choosing “Wonder where the waves are taking you” instead of “I could spend a lifetime watching you” Loved that version too😭 Q: So your song “SWIM,” I'm sure it's open to interpretation from anyone anywhere. The way I look at it, I don't know. I see it as, look, you're swimming in the ocean and you just got to go where the tide takes you. Is that partly what it's about? 🐨: It's just funny that like some people like listen to it like a just like a you know, like a typical love song, like oh, I spend lifetime watching you, like because of the lyrics of that girl, like something like that. But I think you got the point because the last, the actually the most… This is kind of behind the scene. I ever, I never told but uh, the last important like debates was that. 🐨: So there were two lines for the like “swim swim water falling off your skin swim swim, I could spend a lifetime watching you.” So there were a candidate, which is “Wonder where the waves are taking you?” So between “I could spend lifetime watching you” and Wonder where the waves are taking you”… Everybody like have talked a lot, but some people just told me, like I just loved this song because of that single line, like which is saying it's just singing like “I could spend lifetime watching you.” So we decided to got with that. 🐨: But I actually loved the vibe that it has, like “wonder where the waves are taking you?” So the song is just about it, could be also a love song for somebody because it could be quite universal. And I was thinking of the lives at the time that we were not beside the fans because we were in the military. We spent like five hundred and fifty days in the troupe, and we were just like counting day, like okay, five hundred forty nine, four hundred thirty seventy or something like that. So I was like thinking of just like swimming with the time and just one one one step, one step, pedal, pedal, pedal. So yeah, the song is actually about that!

bangtan⁷ | ⊙⊝⊜

51,417 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten