🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper

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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper

🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper

@Teresacooper

Amateur Photographer. World news. Published Author Trust No One.

Essex Beigetreten Mart 2009
12.1K Folgt11K Follower
🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper retweetet
Norman Brennan
Norman Brennan@NormanBrennan·
BREAKING NEWS; Marauding Madness & utter Chaos at Marks & Spencer in Clapham; had the 3 MET Officers not been on scene I bet the entire stock would have been stolen; LAWLESS LONDON on just about every level of crime & ASB 👇🤷‍♂️🙄
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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper
🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper@Teresacooper·
@DEBMillbank Puss Puss tolerates him yet he sees Socks and he chases her all around the garden. He wont tolerate any other cats apart from him & a black cat thats identical to Puss Puss
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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper
🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper@Teresacooper·
That pussy cat got in but he cant get out. He is sat on my kitchen doorstep singing at the top of his voice. Noisy boy.
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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper@Teresacooper·
@DEBMillbank He is lol Today he walked in my front door much to my surprise and done roly polys with lots of verbal.. Puss Puss sat and watched him eat all his dinner. Now Puss Puss is sulking bc he gets jealous but they dont fight.
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Lily Jones
Lily Jones@joneslily65·
@Teresacooper It does sound as though it exploits puppies even though they say it’s governed by strict regulations
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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper
🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper@Teresacooper·
@joneslily65 Do those who use puppies charge for it? I doubt they do it for free? I strongly believe its harmful to the pups. Humans find any excuse to dabble with nature to suit their own agendas & it always ends badly. It should be banned. Nutters
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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper
🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper@Teresacooper·
@joneslily65 My neighbour bred dogs and they never let anyone touch them until they were over 8 weeks old minimum to prevent stress in the pups and the mother.
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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper
🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper@Teresacooper·
One of the negligent consultants disappeared and another one suddenly rose to the top and got his own team & machine he wanted. Thats bc he was besties with Seniors. #WhatsApp. Keeping him on side. That is how it works. Liver and let liver.
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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper
🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper@Teresacooper·
Its stops being an accident when the list grows to that alarming level. How many serious failures can one hospital make without setting off the alarm bells? One too many now & questions are on now on the table. ENT was the final straw & still no follow up appointment. Negligence
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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper
🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper@Teresacooper·
An Atypical pharyngeal pouch. Princess Alexandra Hospital NHS Harlow ENT didnt know what one was in the radiology report due to poor English & skills. His new senior ENT consultant in the room also didnt know what one was. Also a lack of English & knowledge. Dangerous #legalcase
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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper
🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper@Teresacooper·
We can confirm it IS an Atypical pharyngeal pouch & its not a tiny one. Princess Alexandra Hospital NHS Harlow have decided their major Epic whopping big blunder should be ignored & pretend im dead & blatantly ignoring me. Weeks now. Lawyers are now on it.
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🌸 🙀 Teresa Cooper retweetet
Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
A poacher has illegally killed one of Yellowstone National Park's most prominent and beloved wolves, dealing a serious setback to conservation efforts and the scientific monitoring of the region's iconic wolf population. The victim was Wolf 1478F, a young female gray wolf born in 2022 into the renowned Junction Butte pack—widely regarded as the most viewed and photographed wolf pack in the world, thanks to its visibility from major park roads and long-term study since the 1995 reintroduction program. According to Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks (FWP), the wolf was shot around 10 p.m. on Christmas Day 2025 (December 25) near the Jardine area in Montana's Wolf Management Unit 313, just outside the park's northern boundary. The unit had already met its quota of three wolves and closed to legal hunting on November 16, 2025, making the kill outright illegal. Investigators received a mortality signal from her tracking collar, but upon arrival, they discovered the collar had been deliberately cut off and tossed into a tree in an apparent effort to conceal the crime. The carcass itself was not recovered, complicating the case. Wolf 1478F was celebrated by wildlife trackers, photographers, visitors, and advocates as a "rising star" with exceptional hunting skills and a distinctive presence. She was seen as a potential future alpha female (matriarch) for the Junction Butte pack, whose stability and dynamics have been closely observed for decades. Her loss disrupts the pack's social structure—already strained by prior incidents—and represents a blow to ongoing research on wolf behavior, ecology, and the broader Rocky Mountain ecosystem. Wildlife groups, including Wolves of the Rockies, are mourning the incident and urging justice, with FWP offering an increased reward (up to $31,000 as of recent updates) for information leading to the poacher's arrest. This case highlights persistent tensions over wolf hunting near park borders and the vulnerability of collared study animals. The story has drawn widespread coverage from outlets like ABC News, USA Today, SFGATE, and People, underscoring the emotional and ecological impact on one of conservation's flagship success stories. [Jacobo, J. (2026). Poacher illegally kills prominent wolf from Yellowstone's most viewed pack: Officials. ABC News]
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Francesco 🇮🇹
Francesco 🇮🇹@SaP011·
Her name was Alice Neri. She was 32, an Italian mother. On November 18, 2022, she was sitting in her car, smoking a cigarette, as she often did. An African immigrant, Mohamed Gaaloul, approached her and made sexual advances. She refused. He then attempted to rape her. She fought back with all her strengt, signs of a violent struggle were later found on her body. He stabbed her seven times, placed her in the trunk, and set the car on fire. Her body was burned beyond recognition. Due to the condition of the remains, it was impossible to determine whether the rape was completed. Her mother believes it was. The Tunisian man fled to Germany but was arrested by police. While in custody, he told his wife to delete all the chats on his phone. He was extradited to Italy, where he faced charges including murder, destruction and concealment of a corpse, extortion against another woman, and sexual violence. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison.
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G R I F T Y
G R I F T Y@GriftReport·
Guinea migrant who strangled and repeatedly punched his ex-girlfriend at taxpayer-funded hotel is spared jail 28-year-old Guinea asylum seeker Mamadou Alion Diallo strangled his ex until she stopped breathing for five seconds, then punched her repeatedly in the head at a luxury taxpayer-funded 4-star hotel in Hounslow. He went back weeks later and beat her again while she was still living there on public money. Convicted of intentional strangulation and assault by beating. Judge spared him jail, 21 months suspended for 18 months, citing his PTSD.
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Fascinating
Fascinating@fasc1nate·
During World War I, the average lifespan of a soldier in the trenches was alarmingly short—approximately six weeks. In that brief time, many soldiers faced death by artillery fire, bayonet wounds, or the horrific effects of mustard gas, which could cause severe respiratory damage. The brutal conditions of trench warfare drove many soldiers to extreme measures in their desperation to escape the front lines. Self-inflicted injuries were one of the more direct methods soldiers used to avoid combat. However, such actions were risky, as they could result in severe disciplinary measures, including court-martial. To circumvent these dangers, some soldiers resorted to a more insidious and desperate tactic: deliberately contracting syphilis. This sexually transmitted infection, particularly in its severe form, required treatment with mercury, a process that could render a soldier unfit for duty and provide at least thirty days away from the front lines. In some cases, the infection could even result in a permanent discharge from military service. This strategy offered a form of “plausible deniability,” as venereal diseases were common in the unsanitary conditions of wartime brothels. Unlike self-inflicted wounds, which were easily identified and punished, contracting syphilis could be more easily explained as an unfortunate consequence of interactions with infected prostitutes. However, the decision to contract syphilis was not without serious consequences. The disease carried a significant social stigma and posed severe health risks, including infertility, neurological deterioration, and eventual death if left untreated. Yet, for some soldiers, the temporary reprieve from the horrors of trench warfare outweighed these long-term consequences. In this desperate barter with fate, soldiers traded their future health and well-being for a few more weeks of life away from the battlefield. Some prostitutes, aware of the soldiers' intentions, even charged higher fees, capitalizing on the soldiers' willingness to pay for a brief respite from the war. Learn more: bit.ly/4q6n8fL
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The Bee Guy
The Bee Guy@the_beeguy·
It’s that time of year - folks asking us about #bumblebees - WHY THEY’RE SEEING THEM ON THE GROUND - so here’s a thread to explain. Please #retweet! Every queen that survives means a new colony that gets to exist & produce queen #bees for next year! So important to #share! 1/9
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