God hates you @RealCandaceO.
It’s why he gave Charlie to Erika and why you didn’t even get to say goodbye to him.
God hates you. Look in the mirror and internalize how much God hates you.
We all hate you. Humanity hates you. And you are irredeemable.
Expand this patriots list (top 60):
1. Thomas Massie
2. Marjorie Taylor Greene
3. Ana Kasparian
4. Candace Owens
5. Tucker Carlson
6. Dan Bilzerian
7. Jimmy Dore
8. Ro Khanna
9. Cenk Uygur
10. Hasan Piker
11. SENAKO
12. Joe Kent
13. JP Sears
14. Jake Shields
15. John Cusack
16. Harrison H. Smith
17. Glenn Greenwald
18. Stew Peters
19. Kim Iverson
20. Aaron Maté
21. Hodge Twins
22. Ryan Grim
23. Health Ranger
24. Scott Horton
25. Norman Finkelstein
26. John Mearsheimer
27. Theo Von
28. Max Blumenthal
29. Jeffrey Sachs
30. Dr. Jill Stein
31. Ian Carroll
32. Kim Dotcom
33. Carrie Prejean Boller
34. Chris Martenson
35. Ben Meiselas
36. Abby Martin
37. Mark Ruffalo
38. Krystal Ball
39. Dave Smith
40. Ryan Matta
41. Judge Napolitano
42. Ilhan Omar
43. Myron Gaines
44. Ron Paul
45. Christopher Helali
46. Saagar Enjeti
47. Scott Ritter
48. Marcia Cross
49. Douglas Macgregor
50. Owen Shroyer
51. Ethan Levins
52. Alastair Crooke
53. Tim Dillon
54. Erik Warsaw
55. Ryan Dawson
56. Patrick Henningsen
57. Bernie Sanders
58. Alex Jones
59. Jackson Hinkle
60. Nick Fuentes
@AtRealBen I saw a YT-Video about these incredible fish. They are one of the few self conscious animals, they can recognize themselves in the mirror.
Something a Nigger Baby can't do until they are 18 months or so.
This is a striking example of “awake brain surgery,” where the patient is kept conscious not for drama, but precision. By having him play music during the operation, surgeons can continuously monitor real-time brain function, especially areas tied to movement, coordination, and sometimes language, which don’t always map neatly on scans.
The brain doesn’t have a simple layout like a diagram — functions can sit very close to tumor tissue. So the patient’s active participation becomes a live feedback system, helping doctors remove as much of the tumor as possible while avoiding damage to essential networks.
It’s one of those rare moments where medicine turns the patient into part of the instrumentation — not just being treated, but actively helping guide the surgery.
A patient played a song while doctors removed his brain tumor. The surgeons asked him to keep playing throughout the operation so they could monitor critical functions and make sure they didn't damage the areas responsible for movement and language 🥺