Sam Ted

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Sam Ted

Sam Ted

@SamTed1993

Physiotherapist👩🏻‍⚕️ Sarawakian 🇲🇾

Kuching, Sarawak انضم Temmuz 2011
117 يتبع279 المتابعون
Sam Ted
Sam Ted@SamTed1993·
Noraqilah Maisarah and Low Zi Yu finally got the attention that they deserved. Been watching them since junior world championship, and I hope BAM will NOT fuck their talent up. We have so many talented young players now.
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NO CONTEXT HUMANS
NO CONTEXT HUMANS@HumansNoContext·
I love the internet
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Sam Ted
Sam Ted@SamTed1993·
It boggles me how some people have no idea that their breath literally smell like sewer.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Picture a thick rope pulled tight across your chest for years. This whale shark has been living it. His skin is six inches thick, the thickest armor of any animal on Earth. The rope in this video sawed through years of it. Most whale sharks in this shape never get found. This one got lucky. Scientists in Indonesia spent 13 years studying 268 whale sharks in a stretch of ocean called the Bird's Head Seascape. It's supposed to be one of the safest places on Earth for them because fishing is restricted. The study came out in August 2025, in Frontiers Marine Science. Out of the 268 sharks, 206 had visible scars. Just over three quarters. And 80% of those scars came from humans: boats, ropes, nets, fishing platforms. And this is inside the protected area. Outside, things get worse. Every year, about 2% of the world's fishing gear is lost or dumped into the ocean. That adds up to around 25 million crab traps and fish pots sitting on the seafloor. Enough fishing line to wrap around the equator 18 times. Commercial nets covering an area the size of Panama. And somewhere between 500,000 and 1 million tons of rope and netting. The rope doesn't rot. Nylon hangs around in seawater for centuries, long enough to outlive the people who tied the knots. It just drifts, catching whatever swims into it. The WWF figures almost half of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is old fishing gear. Whale shark numbers are down more than 50% in the last 75 years. In the Indo-Pacific, it's 63%. These animals don't start having babies until they're about 30. They can live to 130. So a rope around a young whale shark is a 20-year wound. If it survives. The rescue you just watched took a diver maybe five minutes. That rope had been on the shark for years. Around 300,000 whales and dolphins die every year from getting tangled in fishing gear. Almost none of them get a camera crew.
Earth@earthcurated

“Years of discomfort disappeared in just 30 seconds.” 🕒🐳

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Sulaiman Ahmed
Sulaiman Ahmed@ShaykhSulaiman·
FIRST FOOTAGE OF U.S/ISRAEL ATTACK ON AN IRANIAN HOSPITAL 38s in, you can see a nurse trying to save as many children as she can.
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@
@@anthraxxxx·
Korean father and daughter 16 years later
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ًِ
ًِ@bckupacc99·
To Pizza Hut Kepala Batas, Penang, saya tak pasti ini arahan dari manager Pizza Hut atau staff tu sendiri yang rela. Bila tanya staff tu kenapa jual pizza tepi jalan tanpa payung dalam panas terik, dia cuma senyum dan diam. Merah padam muka adik tu. Kalau ya pun, pasanglah canopy kecil. Terdesak sangat ke sampai berniaga tengah panas macam tu? Pizza Hut syarikat besar, mesti ada banyak cara lain untuk buat jualan. Walaupun adik tu rela hati sekalipun, tetap tak okay. Bukan nak kecam Pizza Hut, cuma kesian. Saya beli juga sebab kesian dekat adik tu.
ًِ tweet media
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Khairul Aqmal
Khairul Aqmal@KhairulAqmal·
Dear @JPJ_Malaysia . Please stop with this annoying push notification.
Khairul Aqmal tweet media
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Sam Ted أُعيد تغريده
Pop Base
Pop Base@PopBase·
Pop Base has donated $10,000 to The Ghassan Abu Sittah Children’s Fund which provides medical attention to children in Palestine and Lebanon amid the ongoing genocide. We encourage anybody with the means to contribute if they can. Find out more here: gascf.org
Pop Base tweet mediaPop Base tweet media
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Before it took off, the bird ate parts of its own liver, kidneys, and gut. That was the only way to be light enough to fly. Then it flew 8,425 miles from Alaska to Australia, in 11 days, without eating, drinking, or landing once. The bird is called B6. It's a bar-tailed godwit, four months old, weighing about as much as a can of beans. In October 2022, scientists at the US Geological Survey tracked its flight from Alaska all the way to Tasmania. The trip took 11 days and 1 hour. It is still the longest non-stop flight of any animal on Earth. For two weeks before takeoff, godwits eat until they almost double in weight. Fat ends up being 55% of their body, more than any bird ever measured. Then they shrink their own insides. About a quarter of their liver, kidneys, stomach, and intestines gets broken down and reused for fuel, making room for the extra fat and cutting weight. Their heart and wing muscles grow bigger at the same time. They never drink along the way. The water they need comes out of burning fat, the same reaction their muscles use for energy. They also never really sleep. B6 flapped its wings for 264 straight hours, cruising around 35 miles per hour with help from storm tailwinds. By the time it landed, it had lost almost half its body weight. The shrunken organs grew back over the following weeks. Scientists still cannot explain the navigation. B6 had never made this flight before. Adult godwits leave Alaska weeks earlier, so young birds fly alone with nobody to follow. How a four-month-old bird finds its way across 8,425 miles of open ocean to a place it has never seen is still an open question. About 100,000 bar-tailed godwits leave Alaska every fall. Most of them land in New Zealand or Australia 10 or 11 days later, having eaten parts of themselves to get there.
All day Astronomy@forallcurious

#BREAKING🚨: This 5-month-old just flew 8,425 miles from Alaska to Australia with no food, no water and zero stops for 11 days straight

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Sam Ted
Sam Ted@SamTed1993·
Was about to comment "If only the bird knew the earth is a sphere", luckily looked down at the comment and people showed its correct flight path.
All day Astronomy@forallcurious

#BREAKING🚨: This 5-month-old just flew 8,425 miles from Alaska to Australia with no food, no water and zero stops for 11 days straight

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Miles
Miles@C139999·
Hearing birds chirp outside and you haven’t slept
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`
`@lisaawrites·
Sorry to interrupt your scrolling but, i hope life gets better for you
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