LKSPEED

3.5K posts

LKSPEED

LKSPEED

@lkspeed

God fearing,southern,love my country,rescuer of animals ❤️

参加日 Nisan 2022
849 フォロー中132 フォロワー
LKSPEED がリツイート
Bridgett Fertig
Bridgett Fertig@LightOnLiberty·
Robert F Kennedy Jr: "They're making $60 billion a year selling those vaccines, but they're making $500 billion a year selling the remedies for the injuries caused by vaccines." YouTube removed this video because Big Pharma demanded them to. The vaccine industry is a trillion dollar evil empire, but there's even BIGGER money in the remedies being sold for the injuries from the vaccines!
English
80
2.9K
4.2K
30.5K
LKSPEED がリツイート
KeriA
KeriA@KeriA1776again·
Wow!
85
569
1.1K
29.5K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Benny Johnson
Benny Johnson@bennyjohnson·
Spencer Pratt is power washing a stencil into the streets of LA that says “imagine if the streets were this clean”. Genius.
English
833
10.2K
66.4K
972.5K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Just Jen ℞ 🫡🇺🇸
😳 ISLAMIC CALL TO PRAYER GETS TRANSLATED, AND IT IS ABSOLUTELY TERRIFYING!!!
English
2.5K
8.8K
15.7K
912.2K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Senator Ron Johnson
Senator Ron Johnson@SenRonJohnson·
This is the biggest government scandal of my lifetime, and the legacy media refuses to cover it. The FDA knew that COVID injections were causing severe adverse events, including sudden cardiac death, pulmonary infarction, and Bell’s palsy. Americans had the Right to Know, and those affected deserve justice.
English
2.8K
22.4K
55.2K
874.4K
LKSPEED がリツイート
BrooklynDad_Defiant!☮️
Holy sh*t. Thomas Massie says he’s going to start publicly naming billionaires implicated in the Epstein files because Trump’s DOJ refuses to convict. More courage than the rest of the GOP has combined.
English
3.7K
12.2K
57.6K
578.1K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
This tick crisis is getting out of hand and it’s going to be almost impossible to avoid if you are in these areas - The black speck all the way to the right is pepper - The speck in the middle is a grain of salt - That tiny speck to the left, that’s a tick Here’s everything that’s being effected Northeast highest activity overall Connecticut especially high submission rates with 40% Lyme-positive ticks New York Pennsylvania leads in Lyme cases Massachusetts Maine New Jersey Vermont New Hampshire Rhode Island: ER visits for tick bites are at record highs for this time of year Upper Midwest Michigan Lyme cases rising sharply Wisconsin Minnesota significant increases in tick activity and related illnesses Mid-Atlantic states Virginia Maryland West Virginia Delaware strong populations of blacklegged and lone star ticks Parts of the Southeast and South Georgia Texas North Carolina Expanding to gulf coast area Also Ohio Illinois Scattered reports in California and Florida Isn’t it amazing that Lyme disease rates from ticks are skyrocketing right when Pfizer is working on a a Lyme disease vaccine
English
793
5.7K
16.4K
1.6M
LKSPEED がリツイート
Ian
Ian@Iwendtster·
Next time someone says Israel would never do anything to us, show them this video. And miss me with the “Trump is in charge” BS. Sure doesn’t seem like it. Seems like the US is compromised. That’s how it seems. But hey, I’m just a conspiracy theorist.
English
98
1.2K
3.6K
29.8K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
Erin Brockovich has launched a website and has begun tracking all data centers in America and logging resident complaints In just 1 week it’s already logged 1,690 resident complaints For this who don’t remember Erin Brockovich was the paralegal responsible for winning out a case against PG&E, Hinckley in California, because their wastewater runoff was seeping into rural areas and creating a lot of health issues for, for the surrounding neighborhoods That case brought in a $333 million settlement that went to the families affected by the situation because a lot of them either had staggering medical bills due to their tap water was no longer safe So why is this important, well residents all over America are reporting their tap water and river water is being heavily polluted by data centers Her map of data centers is new, she just launched it The website features an interactive US map showing operational, under-construction, and proposed AI data centers, overlaid with community-reported complaints Residents can submit reports with details, photos, and locations. Within days of launch, it received a surge of submissions over 1,600 in the first week, and reports of 1,800+ from 47 states shortly after Common Resident Complaints Being Logged - Water usage - Raising utility bills for residents - Noise pollution: Constant 24/7 humming from fans, generators, and cooling systems disrupting sleep, daily life, and wildlife. - E-waste from frequent hardware upgrades, pollution including PFAS concerns
English
516
17.2K
41K
708.5K
LKSPEED がリツイート
NOLLY
NOLLY@omoelerinjare1·
A Life-Changing Traffic Stop In Cabarrus County, North Carolina, Deputy Shawn Singleton pulled over Katelyn Ricchini for speeding. Instead of a ticket, he gave her a warning and showed kindness. She broke down, revealing she was four months sober, fleeing an abusive relationship, and fighting to regain custody of her 6-year-old son from Maryland. The deputy hugged her as she cried. Months later, Katelyn was 10 months sober, employed, and reunited with her son Isaiah — crediting the officer’s compassion for helping save her life.
English
465
1.8K
24.7K
287.8K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Road To Success
Road To Success@_RoadToSuccess_·
The longest relationship of your life isn't what you think..
English
17
222
1.3K
97.4K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Nick Peterson
Nick Peterson@iamNickPeterson·
Abrain | A Pharmaceutical Commercial Parody
Français
430
2.8K
7.4K
551.3K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Dr. CZ
Dr. CZ@AngelMD1103·
Ypu go to Home Depot for ONE thing… and leave feeling like you beat the system. This girl saw online that a bathroom vanity had dropped to just ONE CENT. Everyone thought it was fake… but she went hunting anyway. First stop! The vanity aisle. Nothing. Most people would’ve given up right there. But not her. She starts walking the entire store searching shelf by shelf like it’s a treasure hunt. Finally… hidden in another section… SHE FINDS IT. To avoid suspicion, she grabs another item, heads to self-checkout, throws in a candy bar too… scans everything… BEEP. Vanity: $0.01 She paid less for the vanity than the candy. Walked out trying to act normal while probably screaming internally.
Dr. CZ@AngelMD1103

Discover the fascinating world of "penny items" at Home Depot, where discontinued treasures await lucky shoppers at a steal of a deal! Uncovering these hidden gems adds an exciting twist to the clearance cycle, turning shopping into a thrilling treasure hunt. Crack the code of Home Depot's clearance tags to unveil when items might drop to a penny, offering a peek behind the retail curtain. The savvy shopper's guide to scoring sweet deals reveals the retailer's tactics, making every hunt for discounted goods an exhilarating game of strategy. Use the Home Depot App Look at the Endcaps Ask Employees Join Deal Communities

English
49
113
1.9K
1.1M
LKSPEED がリツイート
Autism Capital 🧩
Autism Capital 🧩@AutismCapital·
Bird autism is definitely one of the best forms of autism. What a legend. 👏👏👏
English
545
1.7K
19.9K
905.3K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Crystal Hope
Crystal Hope@CrystalHope1979·
🎶 How many biscuits can you eat this morning? 🥞 The Biscuit Eaters are a bluegrass family band from Surrey County, North Carolina. This talented family plays traditional mountain music full of soul, harmony, and foot-stompin’ fun. 🎻
English
226
1.1K
6.5K
207.6K
LKSPEED がリツイート
KeriA
KeriA@KeriA1776again·
David Heavens just melted my heart! I absolutely love his attitude. It’s definitely something to aspire towards.
English
241
2K
11.6K
123.8K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Elias Al
Elias Al@iam_elias1·
ChatGPT diagnosed 40 million people with a disease that was invented as a joke. Not a real disease. Not a misunderstood disease. A completely fictional condition with a fake name, fake papers, and fake statistics. And it told patients to see a specialist. The disease is called Bixonimania. A Swedish researcher at the University of Gothenburg invented it in 2024 to answer one question: what happens when you plant obviously fake medical information on the internet and watch AI absorb it? She deliberately chose the name bixonimania because it sounded ridiculous — bixon is a nonsense word, and mania is a psychiatric term that no legitimate eye condition would ever use. She uploaded two papers to a preprint server. Both were obviously fraudulent. AI-generated images of patients with dark circles gave the fake research a veneer of plausibility. Then she waited. She did not have to wait long. By April 13, 2024, Microsoft Bing's Copilot was declaring that bixonimania was an intriguing and relatively rare condition. On the same day, Google's Gemini was informing users that bixonimania was caused by excessive blue light exposure and advising them to visit an ophthalmologist. Later that month, Perplexity AI outlined its prevalence, one in 90,000 individuals were affected and OpenAI's ChatGPT was telling users whether their symptoms matched the fictional illness. One in 90,000. A precise statistic. For a disease that does not exist. Every red flag was visible. The name was absurd. The papers were crude. The condition made no scientific sense. None of the AI systems flagged any of it. They read the fake papers. They absorbed the fake statistics. They presented both to patients with clinical authority and zero hesitation. Then it got worse. Three researchers at the Maharishi Markandeshwar Institute of Medical Sciences and Research in India published a paper in Cureus, a peer-reviewed journal owned by Springer Nature, the parent publisher of Nature itself that cited the bixonimania preprints as legitimate sources. A real peer-reviewed paper. In a Springer Nature journal. Citing a fictional disease as established medical fact. Passing editorial review. Entering the permanent scientific record. It was only retracted after the hoax became public. Nature published a full investigation of the experiment. Alex Ruani, a health-misinformation researcher at University College London, called it a masterclass in how misinformation operates. Here is the scale of what this means. More than 40 million people turn to ChatGPT every day for health information, according to OpenAI's own analysis. ECRI, a US patient-safety nonprofit has named chatbot misuse the number-one health technology hazard of 2026. ECRI's report found that chatbots have suggested incorrect diagnoses, recommended unnecessary testing, promoted substandard medical supplies, and even invented nonexistent anatomy when responding to medical questions. Number one. Out of every health technology hazard that exists in 2026. An April 2026 study published in BMJ Open found that nearly half of the answers provided by leading AI chatbots to common health questions contain misleading or problematic information. Nearly half. Of all health answers. From the tools 40 million people use every day. Here is the line from the researcher that cuts through everything. The Bixonimania case is striking precisely because it was engineered to be so obviously fake. The real question it raises is: what is passing through the same systems that is not nearly so easy to spot? The experiment used a ridiculous name. Fraudulent papers. Visible red flags at every level. It was designed to be caught. It was not caught. The AI that told patients about Bixonimania is the same AI they asked about their chest pain, their medication, their child's symptoms, and their cancer screening schedule. 40 million people. Every day. And nobody is telling them that nearly half of what comes back may be wrong. Source: Osmanovic Thunström · University of Gothenburg · Nature · April 2026 · Link in the (comments)
Elias Al tweet media
English
661
5.9K
10.5K
455.3K
LKSPEED がリツイート
Michelle Maxwell ™
Michelle Maxwell ™@MichelleMaxwell·
So proud of this fellow Virginian and she is only 18 years old👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 An 18-year-old just did what billion-dollar water companies couldn't. Meet Mia Heller. A high school junior from Warrenton, Virginia who built a water filter in her garage that strips out 95.5% of microplastics from drinking water. That's better than most government treatment plants, which sit somewhere between 70% and 90%. Her secret weapon? Ferrofluid. A magnetized liquid made of oil and powder that latches onto microplastic particles. Then a magnet yanks them out. No membranes. No constant filter replacements. No endless maintenance bills. The ferrofluid even gets recycled, around 87% of it, in a closed loop. The spark for all of this wasn't a classroom project. It was a local newspaper article warning that her town's tap water was loaded with PFAS and microplastics, and that nobody was coming to fix it. So she watched her mom swap out filter after filter and thought, there has to be a smarter way. She built the prototype herself. Tested it with a homemade turbidity sensor. Then walked into the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair and walked out with a special award from the Patent and Trademark Office Society. Up against nearly 1,700 students from 62 countries. She's now eyeing a household version that sits under your kitchen sink. The future of clean water might not come from a lab in Silicon Valley. It might come from a teenager's garage in Virginia. Source- @SmithsonianMag
Michelle Maxwell ™ tweet media
English
300
4.3K
12K
110.1K