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The 🚺 formerly known as 🌸

The 🚺 formerly known as 🌸

@Merisea211

Locking this account down and moving to 🦋.

Planet Earth Se unió Aralık 2015
360 Siguiendo285 Seguidores
Lissa♥️♥️
Lissa♥️♥️@lizzkelly7·
What if death sat beside you, sharing your favorite drink, and quietly whispered: “You’ve done enough. Finish your glass-it’s time to go.” What would you say?
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Maryam
Maryam@hell_line0·
Banning pain meds because they are abortion adjacent is authoritarian male brutality against all women seeking healthcare.
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Richard
Richard@ricwe123·
Remember that moment when the IDF was attacking Palestinian worshippers inside the Al Aqsa Mosque during the Ramadan prayers? Of course you don’t, because the Western mainstream media has done a damn good job making sure you stay in the dark....
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Froglet 🐸
Froglet 🐸@froglet80·
Without testing, one would not likely know their HIV status until they presented with opportunistic infections due to lymphopenia. fun fact - early/acute hiv infection often presents as a "mild flu like illness" that resolves on its own in a week or two, and symptoms such as - dry cough - fatigue - muscle or joint pain - abdominal pain, diarrhea, or other GI issues - low grade fever or night sweats - headache - rash If it sounds familiar, it might be because without testing there is no good way to distinguish between SARS-CoV-2, Measles Virus, or early HIV infection. And all three infect and damage the very immune cells needed to fight the virus. In fact, the biggest difference is we have effective antivirals for exactly one of those three. Care to guess which one?
Jessica 🏃🏼‍♀️👟👟💉😷🇨🇦🇮🇹🏳️‍🌈@jessica_pomps

@froglet80 @tryna_do_rite Exactly. Covid is, quite literally, acquired immunodeficiency. One can be HIV+, and often have NO idea until years pass & the associated illnesses begin occurring. The "Oh! A virus sooo serious I need to be TESTED to know if I have it," crap re covid testing drove me nuts.

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LongTime🤓FirstTime👨‍💻
Leaked video from inside ICE detention shows women trapped in desperate conditions—smuggled out by husband. Used panties, moldy food, broken shoes, clothes that don't fit because made for men—and a toxic mattress made of insulation. Gabriela Sousa came to U.S. legally granted humanitarian parole from Venezuela—and is married to U.S. citizen husband. Her husband helped the women smuggle out this video they made—with testimonials from several women detained together in these inhumane conditions The video was made secretly inside the Baker County ICE Detention Center in Macclenny, Florida.
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sixfootcandy
sixfootcandy@sixfootcandy·
As a Gen Xer, I can tell you boomers and even my own generation comparing their 20s to today’s 20-30 year-olds needs to stop. I paid $600 for a West Hollywood apartment at 23. Today it’s $3500. Burgers weren’t $20, they were $6 to $8 in a nice restaurant. Life is not comparable. It’s a completely different world now.
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Dr. Lemma
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma·
A railway company in Japan once ran out of money to pay a stationmaster. So they gave the job to the cat who lived outside the station. She wore a custom made hat, worked for cat food, and saved the entire line. Her name was Tama. She was a calico cat who had spent her days sitting near the entrance of Kishi Station in Wakayama Prefecture, Japan, greeting passengers anyway. When the company destaffed the station in 2006 to cut costs, the president visited to discuss what to do about the stray cats living nearby. He looked into Tama's eyes and later said they conveyed a sense of purpose as strong as any of his employees. He made her stationmaster. Within a month passenger numbers rose by seventeen percent. People began travelling from across Japan just to see her. Tourists arrived from other countries. A French documentary crew came to film her. The station was eventually rebuilt in the shape of a cat's face. In her eight years as stationmaster Tama contributed an estimated one billion yen to the local economy. She was promoted four times. She eventually held the title of Honorary President of the railway. The only female in a senior position in the entire company. When she passed away in 2015 over three thousand people attended her funeral. She was given the posthumous title Honorary Eternal Stationmaster and enshrined at a nearby Shinto shrine as a goddess. The position of stationmaster at Kishi Station is still held by a cat today.
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BladeoftheSun
BladeoftheSun@BladeoftheS·
Children as young as 10 are being raped before or IN ICE detention centers. And they are reporting the rape of children as 'underage migrants testing positive for pregnancy.' Then moving them to Texas where abortions are illegal. Nazi level abuse.
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Ford News
Ford News@FordJohnathan5·
🚨 #BREAKINGNEWS Its appears Speaker Mike Johnson caught on hot mic that The Save Act would result in 12% to 18% voter turnout. Saying that would be huge for the Republican Party. The Save Act is a voter suppression bill. Not elections security.🚨
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staxxx🦅
staxxx🦅@papiwontmiss·
So the school counselor just called me to ask if I was aware that my daughter planned and led a student protest today where 100+ students walked out of their 3rd period to hold a BLM rally on the yard bc they feel teachers treat the black students different & unfairly. She’s 12😭
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SungHoon Lee, IQ 276
SungHoon Lee, IQ 276@sungleeiq·
NOBODY KNOWS HOW FUCKED THE SITUATION IN THE PERSIAN GULF ACTUALLY IS. 3,200 ships are TRAPPED in the Persian Gulf right now. Crews are running out of drinking water. One ship called the local port authority and BEGGED for permission to dock — just to get water. They were DENIED. 💀 Let that sink in. These aren't military ships. These are commercial vessels — carrying oil, grain, electronics — with civilian crews who are now stranded with NO supplies and NO way out. – 3,200 ships STUCK ⚠️ – Crews running out of WATER 💀 – Port authorities REFUSING to let them dock ⚠️ – Multiple ships reporting the SAME situation 💀 ⚠️ For context — the Suez Canal crisis in 2021 blocked 400 ships. This is EIGHT TIMES worse. And nobody is talking about it. They're showing you missile interceptions and oil price charts. They're NOT showing you thousands of crew members slowly running out of drinking water in the middle of a war zone. If these ships start getting abandoned, the environmental disaster alone would be catastrophic. Thousands of tons of fuel, cargo, chemicals — just sitting there. This is not a shipping disruption. This is a HUMANITARIAN CRISIS unfolding in real time. Prepare accordingly. 🚨🚨🚨 X is hiding this. Follow + RT before it disappears. 🔥
SungHoon Lee, IQ 276 tweet media
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Let me explain exactly why every new subdivision in America looks like the top photo, because the math is wild. A mature tree increases a home's value by 7 to 19 percent. On a $400,000 house, that's $28,000 to $76,000. A single shade tree produces the cooling equivalent of ten room-size air conditioners running 20 hours a day. One tree on the west side of a house cuts energy bills by 12 percent within 15 years. The bottom photo is worth more, costs less to live in, and sells faster. This has been documented by the University of Washington, Clemson, Michigan State, and the USDA. The data is not in dispute. Removing those trees saves the builder roughly $5,000 per lot. Concrete trucks need twice the dripline radius of every standing tree. Utility trenches need flat ground. A bulldozer flattens 200 lots in an afternoon. Preserving trees adds weeks and thousands per home. So the developer pockets $5,000 in savings and the buyer eats $50,000 in lost value for the next two decades. The person making the decision and the person paying for it have never been in the same room. The Woodlands, Texas is the proof of what happens when they are. George Mitchell bought 28,000 acres of Houston timberland in 1974 and preserved 28% as permanent green space. He forced McDonald's to build behind the tree canopy. That McDonald's became one of the highest-volume locations in Texas. The first office building, designed to reflect the surrounding forest so you couldn't see it from the street, leased completely. The Woodlands median home price today: $615,000. Katy, a comparable Houston suburb that clear-cut: $375,000. Named #1 community to live in America two years running. Fifty years of data. The trees are worth more than removing them saves. Developers clear-cut anyway because they sell the house once and leave. You live in it for 30 years.
bitfloorsghost@bitfloorsghost

we ruined such a good thing

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Sophia ❣️
Sophia ❣️@KeruboSk·
Neurotypicals: "If you haven't used it in a year, donate it." ADHDers: I haven't used it in 7 years but I remember exactly where I was when I got it and if I give it away something bad will happen and also what if I need it.
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Eivor
Eivor@Eivor_Koy·
This trending story blowing up on Chinese social media right now shows how China's whole-process people's democracy actually feels in real life—not some abstract theory, but practical, human help for everyday people. In March 2026, a deeply introverted 21-year-old from Cangxi County, Guangyuan, Sichuan—too anxious to even call employers or face interviews—turned to the government with a raw, honest plea for job help. He posted it on Sichuan Public Voice, the open online platform where any citizen can directly message government offices with complaints, requests, or personal struggles. His message hit hard: “I’m really self-closed and get super anxious around people. Can you help find a basic local job in Cangxi?” Just hours later, the Cangxi County Human Resources and Social Security Bureau replied with heartfelt, practical support that went viral for its warmth. They selected three low-interaction jobs at stable local firms, ideal for minimal talking: - Factory shoe sewing (mostly solo hands-on work) - Packing or simple processing - Eyeglass assembly and quality checks They handled the hard parts: - Contacting companies directly - Arranging interviews via text/WeChat - Preparing short scripts - Offering staff to accompany him and assist They assured him: once he starts, any ongoing social challenges? They’d keep helping—no pressure, no deadlines, just steady backup. All he had to say was basically “yes”—no cold-calling, no awkward follow-ups, no forcing himself into uncomfortable conversations. The post blew up online because it felt so real and caring. It’s a shining real-life example of China’s “whole-process people’s democracy” at work—not grand speeches or elections, but quiet, practical responsiveness to one person’s everyday struggle.
Eivor tweet media
Eivor@Eivor_Koy

A common misperception among Westerners is that ordinary Chinese people have no right to criticize the government. Here is a thread detailing how anyone, including foreigners in China, can lodge complaints with the authorities and get answers.   Westerners who think Chinese citizens cannot criticize the government are referred to by Chinese netizens as "cyber pets" because of the fun they derive from such ridiculous remarks.   I sometimes shared such remarks on Chinese Weibo, and many people there told me they've used the "12345 hotline" or the "mayor's hotline" to communicate with the government and resolve their problems (see screenshots below).   Anyone in China, even foreign tourists, can connect to the local authorities and submit concerns through the "12345 hotline," a public service implemented nationwide for years.   The service is available 24/7, and all calls are answered within 15 seconds, with a promise that your concern, query, or complaint will be addressed within seven days. The calls are forwarded to local authorities as needed to resolve the issue.   Many different things have been asked of the government, from fixing broken heaters to collecting trash from the street and demanding that businesses pay their employees on time.   My mother used the hotline to report about a pit on the road outside our home, and she received a response within a day. After the call was made, the road was fixed promptly.   Another channel for the Chinese citizens to contact the local authorities is "领导留言板" (Message Board for Leaders), an online platform where any Chinese citizen can complain about their local governments. Ministers and members of the State Council are also reachable to the public, and they will respond to suggestions and critiques from the general public. In China, most local governments are obligated to respond to complaints made on Message Board for Leaders.   On a monthly basis, the website will provide statistics on the amount of cases resolved and the satisfaction rating for each province. It will also include details about the officials nationwide who have resolved the most people's issues. 

This system encourages governments and provinces to improve their service to the public by fostering healthy competition.
 liuyan.people.com.cn   As of July 2024, 388,055 complaints have been addressed through this channel in 2024.   And here's one example:   On June 9th, 2024, a citizen of Jilin Province complained to the government that the local library's air conditioner had broken and no one had arrived to repair it.   Three days later, the local tourism and culture officials addressed the netizen's concerns, explaining the delay in fixing the AC and confirming that the problem had been remedied.   You can even rate the government's performance and response.   liuyan.people.com.cn/threads/conten…   Democracy like this is what I seek. The nation will not progress if its citizens take pleasure in pelting the government with insults while receiving no actual help and if the government ignores its citizens' plight while promising them a fake "democracy."

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Dutch Rojas
Dutch Rojas@DutchRojas·
Your doctor went to medical school for 12 years. The person denying your claim went through a two-week training module.
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Sophia ❣️
Sophia ❣️@KeruboSk·
Millennials are the elite generation because they cranked out 12-page essays the night before they were due. No ChatGPT. No Claude. Just lo-fi beats playing in the background, Black coffee at midnight, footnotes that were somehow correct, and pure delusion. Grade was an A minus. Period.
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