Peter Bee 🐝

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Peter Bee 🐝

Peter Bee 🐝

@MrPBee

Just me..and a dog named Mali..and my trusty Nikon.A full heart and clear eyes. Look around you and notice the beauty. It's there. ✌️✌️

Cape Town Beigetreten Ocak 2013
3.7K Folgt4.2K Follower
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Peter Bee 🐝
Peter Bee 🐝@MrPBee·
It is with the most unimaginable sorrow that I have to say...Mali has passed away...peacefully. He was my friend...who taught me about love. He taught me about strength...truth and peace. He gave me 15 years of everything. For that I am truly blessed. Go in peace Mali 😢
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CJ (Esq.)
CJ (Esq.)@Buoyand_man·
As a grandad, this very small little guy has us worried. He needs to see a paediatric cardiologist. He has two holes in his heart. He almost never cries and if he does, he breathes heavily and turns bluish. He’s constantly in our prayers.
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Gabrielle Boyle
Gabrielle Boyle@gabyb1·
RIP mischief ! I’m so distraught ! Found her dead in the road and now her babies will die too as I have no idea where her nest was 😭😭😭😭😭😭
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Jacques de Goede
Jacques de Goede@JDEGOEDE·
I know April's fool is stupid, but I really enjoyed this video. Especially the third one is very funny. Cheers. 🤪🤪😁😁🍷🍷
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Gabrielle Boyle
Gabrielle Boyle@gabyb1·
This is monster ! Belongs to neighbour and comes for his ‘d’ rugs fix 😂
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Peter Bee 🐝
Peter Bee 🐝@MrPBee·
Tomorrow...six years ago..is the day April fools lost significance. It was 2020 and we were wearing masks. From then on...it's been nothing but fools...😂
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AnneM.
AnneM.@AnneM56748·
I'd take a night like this.....🌙
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Andre Vlok
Andre Vlok@vlok_andre·
"Liberation Day", one year on
Gandalv@Microinteracti1

One Year On: The Greatest Economic Own Goal in Living Memory A year ago, Donald Trump stood in the Rose Garden, surrounded by charts nobody understood, and declared war on mathematics. He called it Liberation Day. The Financial Times, along with every economist who has read more than a bus ticket, is marking the anniversary with a verdict that should be carved into marble: it failed. On every single front. Spectacularly. Completely. Embarrassingly. Let us be precise about this. Measured against Trump’s own three stated goals, making foreigners pay for doing business with America, narrowing the trade deficit, and punishing China, the tariffs have clearly failed.  Not partially failed. Not failed with asterisks. Failed the way a man fails when he drives a Reliant Robin onto a motorway and acts surprised when it rolls. And everyone said so. Economists said so. Trading partners said so. His own party said so. The entire field of international trade theory, developed over roughly two centuries by people who actually read things, screamed it from the rooftops. But Donald Trump, a man whose relationship with economics appears to consist entirely of gut feeling and cable television and 6 casino bankruptcies knew better. The average American household paid an extra $1,700 due to tariffs. Over 65 percent of Americans reported that everyday goods became significantly less affordable.  This is what happens when you run the world’s largest economy on instinct and vibes. One year after the Rose Garden ceremony, factory jobs are down and inflation is up.  The precise opposite of what was promised. With extraordinary confidence. Then the lawyers arrived. The Supreme Court found that Trump had exceeded his authority, ruling that the declared emergency bore no rational connection to the trade measures imposed.  In other words, the legal foundation was nonsense. The government had collected $166 billion in tariffs from over 330,000 businesses on grounds the Supreme Court found unconstitutional. The refund process is now underway.  One hundred and sixty-six billion dollars. Collected illegally. From American businesses. The financial markets, bless them, responded with the only appropriate tool available: mockery. The meme “Trump Always Chickens Out” refuses to go away, and the TACO index is now actively used by analysts to price in the president’s chronic habit of retreating.  Every serious voice warned this would happen. Trade economists. Former Treasury secretaries. The IMF. The WTO. The EU. Canada. Japan. Basically anyone who had spent more than forty minutes studying how global trade actually works. The man who ignored all of them had previously run a casino into bankruptcy and considered that a learning experience. He was not, it turns out, a fast learner. One year. Zero of three goals achieved. One Supreme Court ruling. One $170 billion refund. One economy paying more for everything and making less of it. Liberation Day. What a name for it. Gandalv / @Microinteracti1

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Andrew
Andrew@apratt_pratt·
@MrPBee 😂… true story !
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F1 Jayy
F1 Jayy@F1JayyUK·
@MrPBee Haha. Many a races I rigged by tweaking my car and brushes 🤣🤣
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Skywalker
Skywalker@AndreAMisrole·
I'm the biggest fuckup I know... I will succeed in life not because of my delusional, pig-headed determination, but purely because of the grace of God... 🙏🏼
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Peter Bee 🐝 retweetet
PolePositionist
PolePositionist@PolePositionist·
I’ve NEVER seen F1 release a pole lap onboard and then switch to off board shots of the car mid-lap. They’re doing absolutely everything to not show the bad super-clipping and derating into 130R and the Casio Triangle. It’s EMBARRASSING.
Formula 1@F1

Kimi Antonelli secures the @pirellisport Pole Position Lap in Japan! 😮‍💨 Let's ride onboard with the Mercedes driver for his lap of the iconic Suzuka 🤩👇 #F1 #JapaneseGP

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Peter Bee 🐝
Peter Bee 🐝@MrPBee·
Just a...walk in the park..
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Peter Bee 🐝
Peter Bee 🐝@MrPBee·
Next time...show some respect yeah! 😒😀
The Husky@Mr_Husky1

We are called "the elderly." But that quiet label hides something most people rarely stop to consider. We are the last living witnesses of a world that no longer exists. Look at us and you might see gray hair, slower steps, and the patience that time teaches. But listen to our story — really listen — and you'll realize something extraordinary. We are the only generation in human history to have lived a fully analog childhood and a fully digital adulthood. That's not a small thing. That's one of the most breathtaking journeys a human being has ever been asked to make. We were born in the 1940s, 50s, and early 60s, into a world still rebuilding from the rubble of World War II. Our toys were marbles and hopscotch and card games at kitchen tables. When the streetlights flickered on, that was it — childhood adventures were over, and it was time to go home. No smartphones. No streaming. No endless scroll. We built our memories in the real world. With scraped knees and laughter echoing down streets and friendships formed face to face. In 1969, we sat in living rooms staring at black-and-white televisions as Neil Armstrong took humanity's first steps on the Moon. Hundreds of thousands of us stood in muddy fields at Woodstock believing — really believing — that music and community could reshape the future. We fell in love to vinyl records spinning on turntables. We waited days, sometimes weeks, for handwritten letters to arrive. We learned patience because information didn't come instantly. Mistakes were fixed with erasers — not a delete button. Then the world transformed. Machines that once filled entire rooms shrank to devices lighter than a paperback. We went from rotary phones and party lines to seeing the face of someone we love on the other side of the ocean — instantly, on something that fits in a pocket. We watched the birth of the personal computer. The arrival of the internet. The smartphone. Artificial intelligence. And through every single shift — we adapted. Not because it was easy. Because that's what our generation does. We also carry the weight of history in our bodies. We grew up afraid of polio and tuberculosis. We watched science defeat them. We witnessed the discovery of the structure of DNA, the decoding of the human genome, the transformation of medicine itself. We survived pandemics across decades — and kept going. Few generations have been asked to absorb so much change in a single lifetime. And through all of it, certain things never changed. We still know the joy of a cold glass of lemonade on a hot afternoon. The taste of vegetables picked straight from a garden. The value of a long conversation that unfolds slowly, without a screen interrupting it. We have celebrated births and mourned losses. Carried the stories of friends who are gone. Watched the world become something our younger selves couldn't have imagined — and found ways to belong in it anyway. We are not relics. We are living bridges between two entirely different worlds. Our memory carries something the modern world needs — proof that progress doesn't have to erase wisdom. That speed doesn't have to replace patience, kindness, or reflection. So when someone calls us elderly, we can smile. Because behind that word is something remarkable. We crossed two centuries. Witnessed eight decades of transformation. Walked from handwritten letters to artificial intelligence — and never lost our sense of what actually matters.

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M Just M
M Just M@M_Just_M_2020·
33 Years Ago today we did a thing. I’m thankful to @Sensei5_2026 for keeping me! Happy Anniversary to my one. ❤️
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