lin pema
5.6K posts

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而且,她們,在同一個帳戶里以第一人稱感覺發的照片並不是同一個人。
我以前沒在意,覺得網絡本來就真真假假。
現在發現這應該是刻意的,因為不方便做出真實假帳戶。
lin pema@LinPema
就像,她一個柔柔軟軟的女孩為什麼要用個鋼鐵直男的頭像,這種情況我遇到的蠻多。。。 會不會,他人從我這鏈接過去看到的,和我看到的帳戶也完全不同呢?
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就像,她一個柔柔軟軟的女孩為什麼要用個鋼鐵直男的頭像,這種情況我遇到的蠻多。。。
會不會,他人從我這鏈接過去看到的,和我看到的帳戶也完全不同呢?
lin pema@LinPema
評論是我在Soul里遇到的,少有的能和我日常持續聊天的人,是個女孩。 可能會出人意料的,我的世界里,並沒有熱聊者,就是AI也別想和我多說會話就會被迫下線。 我以前覺得遇到這女孩算是可愛的小確幸,現在覺得可能沒有那麼簡單,
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lin pema retweeté


@SydneyDaddy1 别油腻了,全世界没几个人认为美以在这个协议上取胜了伊朗,只有你还搁那洗地,这种做派和小粉红有什么区别
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伊朗政权覆灭倒计时⑦①:川普认输,赔偿伊朗3000亿美元求放过,输得比在委内瑞拉还要惨
#伊朗神棍政权覆灭倒计时
#滴答滴答滴答滴答
youtube.com/live/xcnqWAW9s…

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lin pema retweeté

🤣
哈哈哈,值回成本💰,怎麼辦?我喜歡🇺🇸也喜歡🇮🇱,喜歡川普也喜歡Bibi,用奶油蛋糕打架嗎?
张平@pingzhang632
以色列国防军开始大规模轰炸黎巴嫩恐怖组织真主党。 打得好! 我的看法:这次伊朗如果再敢向以色列发射导弹,以色列不要怕得罪川普,全面开打,特别是摧毁伊朗的油气设施和资源,让伊朗即使签成协议也没油可卖。 既然你反正要得罪川普,就放开手得罪,不要束手束脚,至少把得罪的代价值回来。
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lin pema retweeté

He Disappeared into the Jungle in 1969. The United States Acted Like He Never Existed.....
In April 1969, a U.S. Army Special Forces soldier walked into the jungle on a mission so secret that if he was captured, his own government would deny he was ever there. No rescue would come. No explanation would be offered. His name would be sealed behind classified files.
Then he vanished.
His radio went silent.
And so did the country.
That soldier was Jerry Shriver. Among the men who served with him, he was known as Mad Dog. Not because he was reckless. Because once he took a mission, he did not quit.
Jerry Shriver was a Green Beret during the Vietnam War, operating with units most Americans never knew existed. He volunteered for deep reconnaissance and cross-border missions run by MACV-SOG, a covert command responsible for operations the Pentagon officially denied.
These missions crossed into Laos and Cambodia, countries the U.S. publicly claimed it was not fighting in. The men who went were told the rules clearly. If you were captured, you were on your own. The government would deny your presence. Your mission would never be acknowledged.
Shriver understood the bargain.
He accepted it anyway.
Shriver led small teams far beyond American lines, deep into triple-canopy jungle where visibility was measured in feet and silence was survival. Their job was to find North Vietnamese troop movements, supply routes, and hidden bases. They did not stay long. They struck quickly, gathered intelligence, and disappeared. They moved without air support they could openly claim. Without recognition. Without assurance that help would arrive if things went wrong.
The enemy knew him. They feared him. The men under his command trusted him because he never asked them to do anything he would not do first.
On April 24, 1969, Shriver’s team made contact with enemy forces deep inside Laos. A firefight erupted. Shriver radioed in. His voice was calm. Professional. Then the transmission cut out. No further contact was ever made. There was no body recovered. No confirmed death. No remains. Just a man swallowed by jungle and silence.
There was no rescue mission that the public ever learned about.
No announcement explaining where he had been sent.
No acknowledgment of what he had been doing.
Shriver was officially listed as Missing in Action. His files were classified. His missions remained secret.
Years passed. Then decades.
His family waited. They were given no answers, only paperwork and silence. There was no funeral. No headstone. No grave to visit. Only a name suspended in uncertainty.
Jerry Shriver fought in parts of the Vietnam War most Americans never knew existed. On maps that were never printed. In operations that could not be admitted. While protests filled streets and politicians debated policy, men like Shriver were already deep in enemy territory, fighting wars that would never make headlines.
And when they disappeared, the system moved on.
Some soldiers come home to parades. Some are buried with honor. Some are erased because acknowledging them would reveal uncomfortable truths.
Shriver belonged to the last group.
Jerry Shriver did not vanish because he failed. He vanished because he volunteered to fight in a place the United States officially pretended did not exist.
His disappearance exposes something uncomfortable about war. Not just its violence, but its secrecy. The way governments can ask for total sacrifice and then deny the person who made it.
Recognition came slowly, decades later, as classified programs were partially revealed and historians pieced together what units like MACV-SOG had actually done.
But even now, Jerry Shriver has no grave.
© Reddit
#archaeohistories

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