3azy

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3azy

3azy

@3azyGamba

Sen Max Win

North Korea Beigetreten Mayıs 2025
179 Folgt41 Follower
jon
jon@NativeJon·
@DonJuliowwbs @martinez_j7902 But what did he do wrong? It’s freedom of speech and it’s saying accurate information? It’s like if he wore a shirt that said “grass is green and the sky is blue” ?????? Are you stupid?
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Irlandarra
Irlandarra@martinez_j7902·
Arizona USA Man arrested at gym for wearing 'Israel kills children' t-shirt A US activist wearing a shirt that reads "Israel kills children" was arrested for "trespassing" after his gym cancelled his membership and called the police. The man, who said he had been a member of this gym for three years he was detained for one full day by the police before being released.
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Hal
Hal@HAL31459·
Wrong. 70’s and 80’s construction was dismal. Modern construction at mid to high-end is vastly superior. You don’t know what you are talking about. Modern engineered laminate studs, joists and beams are extremely strong. If you’re framing with 2x4 and standard joists, your house will suck. When it comes insulation, envelope, and overall comfort older homes don’t come close.
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LMD (Arc.)
LMD (Arc.)@Layemie001·
Framing with Larry Haun. Would you rather have Larry’s 80’s speed or modern computer cut precision?
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3azy
3azy@3azyGamba·
@made_in_DRC @Chicago_History Chicago is in the North they had nothing to do with y’all, and didn’t want anything to do with y’all afterwards…
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Guy
Guy@made_in_DRC·
@Chicago_History They went to Africa to kidnap blacks and bring them to America as slaves. The only reason they are afraid it is because they know what they did to them was wrong, and they are afraid of retaliation.
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Chicago History ™️
Chicago History ™️@Chicago_History·
Racism in Cicero: This clip is from a 1966 CBS Documentary hosted by Mike Wallace called "Black Power - White Backlash." This part was filmed in Cicero, Illinois in 1966. #ChicagoHistory ☑️
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Jen Robichaux
Jen Robichaux@JenRobichaux·
His name was Akshay Gupta. He left India, came to America to earn his Masters degree, and moved to Austin to launch his health-tech startup, building technology which would help people age with dignity. He was brilliant, driven, and deeply kind, the sort of person others described as one in a thousand: someone with rare charisma, an extraordinary work ethic, and a heart that always wanted to share and lift others up. On an ordinary evening, May 14, 2025, that bright future was ripped away. Akshay was riding a CapMetro bus near Barton Springs and S Lamar, sitting quietly and not interacting with anyone. Without warning or provocation, a stranger sitting near him - Deepak Kandel, a 31-year-old man long plagued by severe mental illness - stabbed him in the neck. Kandel later admitted to police that he attacked because Akshay resembled his deceased uncle, a delusion born of profound psychosis. Kandel then calmly walked off the bus with the weapon still in hand and was arrested nearby after witnesses called 911 in horror. Akshay was rushed to the hospital, but the injuries were fatal. He was just 30 years old. A young innovator on a special visa granted for exceptional talent in science and technology, a devoted son and brother, a man whose work aimed to ease suffering for the elderly - gone in an instant on public transit. For his family in India - mother Manju, father Ashok, brother Ankur, and sister Noopur - the phone call from halfway around the world shattered everything. They describe a son and brother who was endlessly giving, never one to hoard his gifts or successes. More than a year later, the family remains paralyzed by grief that has rippled through an entire generation. The loss is total: the wife Akshay might have loved, the children he might have raised, the innovations he might have brought into the world, the quiet daily joys of a life well-lived. All of it stolen. Kandel was charged with first-degree murder, but the case has never moved forward. Court documents describe him as “profoundly psychotic and completely unable to interact with counsel.” He was found incompetent to stand trial and committed to a state mental health facility. His commitment was recently extended for another six months. Periodic reviews continue, but for the Gupta family, justice remains suspended in limbo. They have also filed a lawsuit seeking accountability from the bus operator. Kandel’s history included serious mental illness, homelessness at the time of the attack, and a long pattern of misdemeanors with repeated involvement in the justice system since 2016. Yet Kandel was on the streets that day, able to board a public bus and end an innocent life. His name was Akshay Gupta. He came to our city to make a difference. Instead, a preventable tragedy took him from his family and from the world he was trying to improve. Let us remember him, and the light and promise he carried. Let his story remind Austin that behind every tragedy is a person, with a family, whose life mattered deeply. kxan.com/news/local/aus…
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Clown World ™ 🤡
Clown World ™ 🤡@ClownWorld·
Woman walks into a family-owned ice cream shop, keeps changing her order, and racks up nearly $50 worth of food and ice cream. Then, when it’s time to pay, she suddenly says she has no money and claims the employees told her everything was free. A customer who watched the whole thing stepped in and backed up the workers, saying nobody ever offered her free food. After realizing people weren’t buying the story, she ditched the order and walked out empty-handed. Small businesses deal with enough already.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
European transatlantic slave traders mostly acquired slaves by purchasing them from African kingdoms, rulers, and coastal merchants at established trading posts and forts. African suppliers captured people through warfare between kingdoms, raids, kidnappings, debt, or judicial punishment—practices that existed in parts of Africa long before Europeans arrived. In exchange, Africans received European goods such as firearms, textiles, rum, and ironware. Direct European inland raids were uncommon; the trade depended on African middlemen who controlled supply from the interior. Historians estimate the large majority of those sold were first enslaved by other Africans.
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3azy retweetet
LittleKid
LittleKid@LittleKid·
🍒$1000 SHUFFLE GIVEAWAY 🍒 Heard some Shuffle streamers dipped to other sites? Real Gs never quit. The OG is still HERE, unbreakable😎🔥 Been stacking clean wins on Shuffle lately - balance looking disrespectful 😤 Drop your Shuffle usernames + tag the squad. Let’s make it rain. 🌧️ Winner announced in 24hrs on Stream. Follow Kick/LittleKid
LittleKid tweet mediaLittleKid tweet mediaLittleKid tweet media
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3azy
3azy@3azyGamba·
@SOM8400 @RedWaveCrewHP No the cashier is retarded and putting the money on the wrong pumps. It’s why all the customers are confused.
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Xamse Y. 👈🏾
Xamse Y. 👈🏾@SOM8400·
@RedWaveCrewHP She put $50 dollars in a Kroger card and now wants her balance back in cash. Lol Just go use the balance in Kroger. She dumb
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Build with Henry
Build with Henry@RedWaveCrewHP·
would you handle this situation?
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3azy
3azy@3azyGamba·
@btcMGTOW @CortlenR @AnHonestNode Why wouldn’t you just use something cheaper and faster like a normal person. There are so many better options 🤣 BTC is typically pending about 30+ minutes and you can lose $10-$20 moving it twice. I can send SOL or ETH instantly all over the place for pennie’s.
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btcMGTOW
btcMGTOW@btcMGTOW·
@CortlenR @AnHonestNode Do you know that regular credit card transactions take months to settle whereas Bitcoins settlement occurs within 10 minutes on average
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3azy
3azy@3azyGamba·
@AnHonestNode Bitcoin is not good for money. It’s a proof of concept and terrible for transactions for several reasons. There are many other cryptocurrencies that do the job much better.
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American Screed
American Screed@american_screed·
@laurahollis61 @heyshrutimishra @DebraMMason1 Corporations can create/distribute wealth and it can also siphon wealth from the system. And to a disproportionate part, that's what modern Wall St. does -- redistribute existing wealth to its principals, not create it.
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Shruti
Shruti@heyshrutimishra·
Elon just created 4,400 millionaires in a single day. 400 of them are now worth over $100 million. These aren't VCs. They're SpaceX employees, and the list includes welders, technicians, and cafeteria staff, because for two decades the company paid every level of the workforce in stock instead of higher salaries. Juan Hernandez immigrated from Mexico and took a $28 an hour contractor welding job in 2015. He says he didn't even know what SpaceX was. The company gave him a $10,000 equity grant and let him buy more shares through payroll deductions. That stake is now worth $880,000. Trevor Hise's parents wanted him to take a stable job at General Electric. He picked SpaceX instead, stayed 12 years, and accumulated over 100,000 shares. At the $135 listing price that's $13.5 million. He's 37 and semiretired. His words: "The magnitude of this has been ridiculous." The most telling detail came before the listing. Over 100 employees quietly banded together and negotiated a group wealth management deal covering up to $5 billion, because none of them had ever needed a wealth manager before. Software IPOs have minted millionaires for 30 years. This is the first one where the money went to the factory floor.
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Tea Party Barbie
Tea Party Barbie@laurahollis61·
@heyshrutimishra @DebraMMason1 The American corporation has CREATED and DISTRIBUTED more wealth than any other institution, program or government in the history of the human race. Tell that to the socialists and whiny left-wingers who want to destroy capitalism.
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3azy
3azy@3azyGamba·
@760_470_2515 @xsyntryk1 you can tell in the first few seconds of the video when they hold up that man hand, then the voice confirms it
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Probable spam
Probable spam@760_470_2515·
@xsyntryk1 It’s very interesting that many of the comments here are saying this must be a guy. I wouldn’t have thought tha, but now I’m not so sure….surely this is a female?
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JimmyDean
JimmyDean@JimmyDean407·
@WafflesYaya @SteveLovesAmmo Metcalf was suspended not Karmelo, it was a multipurpose tool, clearly legal, and there is no tent policy. Did you even keep up with the trial? This was a miscarriage of justice
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Steve 🇺🇸
Steve 🇺🇸@SteveLovesAmmo·
Just take a look at Hunter Metcalf’s face. This isn’t a face of being scared or fearful. This is a face that wants retribution. Pent up anger. It’s a 1,000 yard stare. I know this because I’ve been there before and seen it first hand.
Matt Wallace@MattWallace888

Austin Metcalf's twin brother stood motionless staring into the camera during the entire press conference tonight I vote we give him 5 minutes alone in the cell with Karmelo Anthony

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NahIm Good
NahIm Good@NahImGoodlr·
@HustleBitch_ With the amount of ppl that received the vaccs .. and they aren’t having this reaction (including myself) .. you’re lying buddy
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HustleBitch
HustleBitch@HustleBitch_·
🚨 DOCTOR SAYS THIS IS THE WORST VACCINE INJURY HE'S EVER SEEN — THE VIDEO IS HARD TO WATCH A doctor is going viral after sharing footage of a patient he says suffered the worst vaccine injury he's encountered in his entire career. The 52-year-old man says he received a COVID vaccine in 2021 and a booster shot in 2022. He claims that two months later, severe muscle spasms began. According to the patient, the condition became so debilitating that he was unable to properly sit, stand, or walk for the next four years. In the video, the doctor documents the man's condition and later shows what he says is significant improvement after several weeks of stem cell treatment. The footage is now spreading across social media and reigniting one of the most controversial debates of the last decade. Supporters say stories like this deserve far more attention. Critics argue there is no proof the vaccine caused his condition. But after watching the video, many people are asking the same question: What do you think we'll learn about the vaccine 10 years from now? 📹: Instagram/drmarkghalili
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