0kultra.🅱️sky.social 🦋
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0kultra.🅱️sky.social 🦋
@0K_ultra
new @RealPeerReview admin. The οkaye$t #CIA project.Immortal cyborg warmachine born to mere human parents. Cutest Strogg PR unit. Revenant Machine God priestess

Homelander literally crushes the President's skull in the Oval Office, makes Ashley the new POTUS on the spot... and America just goes 'okay'? No riots, no media meltdown, no military response? 😂

Homelander literally crushes the President's skull in the Oval Office, makes Ashley the new POTUS on the spot... and America just goes 'okay'? No riots, no media meltdown, no military response? 😂


@cafreiman It's literally just "Nu Uh"

Even supercomputers won’t solve the problems inherent to central planning. But that doesn’t mean we don’t need to replace capitalism with something better: jacobin.com/2026/05/centra…






explain why Poland should be independent without resorting to idealism or moralism

What Is Bill C-22? Bill C-22, officially called the Lawful Access Act, is the government’s proposal to give police and CSIS more tools to investigate crime online. Officials argue that Canada is lagging behind other G-7 countries when it comes to lawful-access laws. There are some serious concerns about the bill. It has two main parts. The first would make it easier for law enforcement to access your personal information without needing a full warrant. The second, known as the Supporting Authorized Access to Information Act (SAAIA), would force many electronic service providers to change their systems so the government can monitor them. The term "electronic service provider" is defined very broadly. It covers much more than just Facebook or Gmail. It includes messaging apps, cloud services, online stores, mental health platforms, financial companies, and booking apps, basically any business that operates online in Canada. If your data goes through it, the government wants access.














