FalseCatalyst

11.2K posts

FalseCatalyst

FalseCatalyst

@FalseCatalyst

Rena (Ray-na). She/Her. ✊🏽🏳️‍🌈 #MFFL #HTownMade

Dallas, TX Beigetreten Nisan 2009
398 Folgt353 Follower
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FalseCatalyst
FalseCatalyst@FalseCatalyst·
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Jay
Jay@othersidedj·
Portland said WHITES ONLY.
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Samuel
Samuel@kingochepr·
The mother fail to give her the adult education.....💔
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Claire
Claire@ClaireMargaBear·
CBA verbally agreed upon. This gonna be the season where names are spelled (and said) correctly! Aaliyah is on the Sun. Aliyah is on the Fever. Jewell (2 L’s) Loyd (1 L). A’ja (lowercase j!). Caitlin (no y or k). NaLyssa, DeWanna (notice the caps!). Azurá (accent!) 1/2
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Master Gee
Master Gee@TyeGee06·
@sixfivelando Dallas Wing University has graduated some ballers...Lish, Satou & VB. Throw in Marina & KT. Hmmm I wonder why they never achieved anything with all that talent 🤔 Who was holding them back?
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Landon Thomas
Landon Thomas@sixfivelando·
I’ll never forget how shocked I was when Wings chose Sevgi Uzun and Jaelyn Brown over VB for the final roster. I saw the talent first hand since she was drafted. Game manager and elite defender, now a bucket on offense too. One of the top guards around.
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DinoCon@DinoConUK·
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
The 22M+ people who saw this tweet are missing the real story here. This research is from 2019. Dr. Eva Ramón Gallegos at Mexico’s National Polytechnic Institute published these results six years ago. It went viral then too. Salma Hayek posted about it on Instagram. ABC News ran a fact check. It resurfaced in January 2025 across Mexican media. And now it’s recycling through your feed again as “BREAKING” with 22 million views, because an engagement account slapped a siren emoji on six-year-old science. The actual study treated 29 women in Mexico City using photodynamic therapy, a technique where you apply a light-sensitive chemical to the cervix, wait four hours, then hit it with a laser. HPV cleared in 100% of patients who had the virus without lesions. In patients with both HPV and premalignant lesions, it cleared in 64.3%. Those numbers are real and published in peer-reviewed journals. Here’s what 22 million people aren’t asking: why hasn’t this scaled in six years? Three reasons. First, the sample size. Twenty-nine women is a pilot study. The FDA requires thousands of patients across multiple sites before approving a therapy. Gallegos ran earlier studies on 420 women in Oaxaca and Veracruz with similar clearance rates, but nobody has funded the Phase III trials needed to move this toward approval. Second, PDT has a physics limitation. The light that activates the drug can only penetrate about one centimeter of tissue. That means it works on surface-level cervical HPV, but the virus also hides deeper in tissue and in other parts of the body. The National Cancer Institute flagged this exact constraint years ago. You can clear what you can see. You can’t guarantee you’ve cleared what you can’t. Third, 50% of high-risk HPV infections clear on their own within one to two years without any treatment. A 100% clearance rate in 29 patients with no lesions, measured at six months, sits in a window where spontaneous clearance is already happening. Without a proper control group, which this study lacked, you can’t isolate how much the therapy did versus what the immune system would have done anyway. A separate Chinese study in 2024 randomized 60 patients and found PDT hit 100% HPV clearance at six months versus conventional treatment. That’s more rigorous. Multiple research groups worldwide are now publishing PDT results for cervical HPV. The science is real and progressing. The gap between “promising pilot results in 29 women” and “successfully eliminates HPV” is about a decade of clinical trials and a few hundred million dollars in funding. Gallegos has been doing this work for 20 years. The bottleneck was never the science. It’s that nobody writes the check for Phase III trials on a non-patentable therapy that competes with a multibillion-dollar vaccine market. That’s the actual story worth 22 million views.
✦✦✦ 𝙿𝚊𝚖𝚙𝚑𝚕𝚎𝚝𝚜 ✦✦✦@PamphletsY

🚨🇲🇽 BREAKING — Mexican Scientist Successfully Eliminates HPV.

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ᗰᗩƳᖇᗩ
ᗰᗩƳᖇᗩ@LePapillonBlu2·
Did you know that Bad Bunny has a nonprofit foundation called Good Bunny that empowers underserved children and youth in PR through music, arts, and sports? Cause now you do! Talented and kind? The real deal. 🐰 goodbunnyfoundation.org
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SubRosa )✿( Magick @subrosamagick.bsky.social
Google is so powerful that it "hides" other search systems from us. We just don't know the existence of most of them. Meanwhile, there are still a huge number of excellent searchers in the world who specialize in books, science, other smart information. Here's a list of sites you may have never heard of! refseek.com - Academic Resource Search. More than a billion sources: encyclopedia, monographies, magazines. worldcat.org - a search for the contents of 20 thousand worldwide libraries. Find out where lies the nearest rare book you need. link.springer.com - access to more than 10 million scientific documents: books, articles, research protocols. bioline.org.br is a library of scientific bioscience journals published in developing countries. repec.org - volunteers from 102 countries have collected almost 4 million publications on economics and related science. science.gov is an American state search engine on 2200+ scientific sites. More than 200 million articles are indexed. base-search.net is one of the most powerful researches on academic studies texts. More than 100 million scientific documents, 70% of them are free ecosia.org Ecosia is a not-for-profit tech company that plants and protects trees. By dedicating 100% of its profits to the planet, Ecosia has planted over 214,229,374 million trees since its founding in December 2009 Yandex.com Yandex is a technology company that builds intelligent products and services powered by machine learning. Our goal is to help consumers and businesses better navigate the online and offline world. Since 1997, we have delivered world-class, locally relevant search and information services. Gutenberg.org Project Gutenberg is a library of over 75,000 free eBooks Duckduckgo.com “Protection. Privacy. Peace of mind. Get our browser on all your devices. Search and browse with the DuckDuckGo browser for more protection. Unlike Chrome and other browsers, we don't track you.” Presearch.io Presearch is a community-powered, decentralized search engine that provides better results while protecting your privacy and rewarding you when you search. Ebscohost.com Reliable information for all kinds of research Startpage.com Startpage is a global privacy technology company built around the principle of always putting privacy first. Our suite of easy-to-use privacy products helps anyone around the world to protect their personal data online. from Christopher Seymore
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Scott MacFarlane
Scott MacFarlane@MacFarlaneNews·
Gov. Wes Moore (D-MD) says he was uninvited from a bipartisan White House dinner for governors "As the nation’s only Black governor, I can’t ignore that being singled out for exclusion from this bipartisan tradition carries an added weight — whether that was the intent or not"
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Kekius Maximus
Kekius Maximus@Kekius_Sage·
🚨BREAKING: 6 cancer cure claims suddenly went viral after the U.S. left the WHO. Feb 1-4, 2026: Pancreatic Cancer 🇪🇸 Feb 3-5, 2026: Colon Cancer🇰🇷 Feb 3-7, 2026: Colorectal / Lung Metastases 🇨🇳 Feb 6-7, 2026: HPV (Related Cancers)🇲🇽 Feb 7-8, 2026: Blood Cancer / Leukemia🇻🇳 Feb 4-8, 2026: Russia Cancer Vaccine (Various Types)🇷🇺
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Jeff
Jeff@NotJShocks7·
Remember when the Falcons drafted a player from Brad Kelly's Notre Dame team and he had a rape accusation that lead to the victim's suicide and they only cut him because he killed a dog?
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hot girl zo
hot girl zo@zxsmithh·
I hope Bad Bunny doesn’t speak a lick of English tomorrow. Not one word!
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sure is a hot one
sure is a hot one@playpigeonss·
Meet Michael Rubin. He's the reason all of your team's merchandise is cheaply made trash. He's the reason every league's jerseys are pure shit. He's the reason everything you buy lasts 4 washes. A true inspiration.
Yossi Farro@FarroYossi

Meet Michael Rubin He turned $2,500 in Bar Mitzvah money into Fanatics, a $30 Billion sports powerhouse. Born in 1972 to a Jewish family in Lafayette Hill, Pennsylvania, Rubin showed entrepreneurial drive early. • At 12, he started a ski-tuning shop in his parents’ basement. • At 14, using his $2,500 Bar Mitzvah money as seed capital (and a lease signed by his father), he opened Mike’s Ski and Sport in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania. By 16, he was $120,000 in debt. He settled with creditors using a $37,000 loan from his father—on the condition he attend college. He briefly attended Villanova University but dropped out after a smart deal: borrowing $17,000 to buy $200,000 worth of overstock equipment at a discount, then reselling it for $75,000. He sold his ski shops and launched KPR Sports (named after his parents’ initials), a closeout company for overstock athletic gear. • By age 21 (1993), KPR hit $1 million in sales. • By 1995, it reached $50 million. In 1998, Rubin founded Global Sports Incorporated, which became GSI Commerce—a major e-commerce and logistics player. In 2011, at age 38, he sold GSI to eBay for $2.4 billion! eBay kept the fulfillment business; Rubin bought back the consumer brands at a bargain, including Fanatics (licensed sports merchandise), Rue La La, and ShopRunner. He became CEO of Fanatics and focused on scaling it aggressively: • Secured major partnerships with Nike, NFL, MLB, and over 900 leagues/teams. • During COVID-19 (2020), repurposed an MLB uniform plant to produce hospital gowns and PPE. • Raised big funding rounds: $350M (2020, valuation $6.2B), more in 2021, then $1.5B + $700M (2022, valuation hit $31 billion). • Expanded into trading cards (acquired Topps for $500M in 2022) and betting/gaming (launched 2023). From a teenage ski shop to a global leader in sports merchandise, trading cards, and more, Michael Rubin’s journey is a classic American Jewish entrepreneurial success story built on hustle, smart deals, and Values.

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FalseCatalyst
FalseCatalyst@FalseCatalyst·
@SomaKazima2 Can I just run a noon to midnight schedule every day of the month?
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