AtmanCreates

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AtmanCreates

AtmanCreates

@AtmanCreates

Some people think I am far right and some people think I am far left. But I am just a lover of tea & coffee and cinema.

Sydney, New South Wales Katılım Nisan 2025
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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
History shows that political leanings go back and forth like a PENDULUM. The rise of fascism and other right-wing movements is part of a regular CYCLE. When people get SICK of one system, they push for the opposite. >The Pendulum Effect Rise of Fascism/Right Wing - It's a phase. Everything goes in a cycle. Let them have it and enjoy. This joy is temporary. It was revolted against just under a century ago. The Past: Nearly 100 years ago, the world saw a massive rise in fascism. This led to World War II and a massive pushback. The Shift: After that, left-wing and centrist ideas gained a strong foothold to rebuild society. The Present: Today, many people have grown frustrated with current systems, causing the pendulum to swing back toward the right. Every political movement tends to face the same pitfalls over time. History shows that certain actions always trigger a public backlash: Hate and bigotry: Far Right like Far Left is full of hate and has a tendency to commit crimes against other humans. Overreach: Arrogance and the denial of real problems. Control: Trying to force narratives through media ownership. The Result: These actions eventually tire the public, leading to a loss of trust. > The Human Factor Control over media and tech can shape what people see, but it cannot change human nature. Humans have a natural drive for personal freedom. When control feels too tight, people historically find ways to break free and reset the system.
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FactPost
FactPost@factpostnews·
The explosive diarrhea-causing cyclosporiasis outbreak has now spread to 31 states, with nearly 7,000 potential cases. Last year, RFK ordered the CDC's Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network to stop tracking cyclosporiasis.
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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
@dr_ericberg It's beyond me why people would think Diet Soda is 'good' - like 'not bad' - but 'GOOD' for health.
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Dr. Eric Berg DC
Dr. Eric Berg DC@dr_ericberg·
This is the #1 WORST drink for your gut. How often do you consume it? Dr. Eric Berg, DC, not MD; information only
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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
Once you see it you can't unsee it. Look at the clouds on the right. Clouds, Vivid Sydney, Australia, 5 June 2026
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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
@sidhant First start a war to cause the Strait of Hormuz to close. Then cause even more destruction to open it. Then encroach it and charge any one to use it.
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Sidhant Sibal
Sidhant Sibal@sidhant·
Trump announces "Iranian Blockade", says 20% will be charged on vessels operating through Hormuz
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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
A lot people don't realise but a lot of people are connected in the ways they can't imagine. We all have common roots.
Nick Collins@nickcollins1953

The Irish once called themselves the Tuatha de Danaan. Children of Danu. The same Danu appears in the Rig Veda as the mother goddess of the flowing waters. She is where the Danube gets its name. And the Dniester, the Dnieper, the Don and the Donau. And Denmark. And Greek Demeter. Northern Greeks called themselves Dannuni. Two hills in southwest Ireland are still known as the Paps of Danu. At Beltane, fires were lit around them and cattle driven between the flames for protection and good harvest. The same ritual is described in the Vedas. The oldest surviving Irish text, the Book of Invasions, records a tribe called Erainn, from Arya, arriving from the south by sea and making its way inland to the Hill of Tara. The Persians took the same name for themselves. Iran means the land of the Aryas. These Vedic influences arrived in pulses. The Iranian is the oldest. A landward pulse followed the river valleys of the Dniester, the Dnieper, the Donau and on into Denmark, leaving the mother goddess's name behind at each stage. The Celtic pulse came after 5,600 BC. The Celtic branch had by then separated from Italo-Celtic in the Mediterranean and continued up the Atlantic seaboard. The route is still readable on the map. Portugal. Galicia. Gaul. Pays de Galles. Cornwall. Galloway. Galway. The "gal" names trace the coast. Ireland remembered its origin. The old story of Aryan nomads riding into India from the steppe has no DNA support. Michel Danino reviewed nine large-sample genetic studies from 1999 to 2006 and found no invasion signal. The archaeological record shows no cultural break from prehistory. The outstanding character of ancient India is continuity. The trails from Iran and from Ireland both lead back to India. I set the full case out in "How Maritime Trade and the Indian Subcontinent Shaped the World."

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Daniel Mayakovski
Daniel Mayakovski@DaniMayakovski·
"A África solo se le permite cultivar sus alimentos para exportación para obligarles a comprar el grano a EEUU y Europa, si quieren un precio bajo, y poder chantajearles con el hambre. El Banco Mundial y el FMI son las organizaciones más malvadas del mundo". Michael Hudson, profesor de economía estadounidenses en la Universidad de Misuri y ex-analista de Wall Street, expone como funciona el chantaje imperialista occidental de la "deuda" con África.
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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
Shayne Coplan's Polymarket lives off "India"....these are just four of the screenshots of Polymarket's X posts..
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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
Long before Cook, before the Dutch - Indians had already reached Australia. The dingo isn’t originally Australian — it’s Indian. 4,000 years ago, Indian migrants brought their genes, new stone tools, and the dingo’s ancestors to Aboriginal Australia. Some Aboriginal genomes carry up to 11% Indian ancestry. History runs deeper than the maps admit. bbc.com/news/science-e…
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Daniel Mayakovski
Daniel Mayakovski@DaniMayakovski·
Estas imágenes no son del siglo pasado, son actuales, son miles de esclavizados de las minas de cobalto del Congo, transportando toneladas de mineral que llenarán los bolsillos a las multinacionales capitalistas a través de intermediarios. Toda esta barbarie para que Apple saque 4 modelos de móvil cada año para nutrir el consumismo capitalista y para que Occidente pueda posar de éticamente responsables con sus "baterías verdes". Europa pasó 500 años utilizando mano de obra esclava de las colonias para construir su riqueza, luego pasó a esclavizarla a distancia en el neocolonialismo... pero de alguna manera los racistas occidentales aún creen que su nivel de vida es el resultado de un intelecto superior y no de una violencia inhumana.
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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
Indians..
Ananth Rupanagudi@AnanthOnTrack

An Indian scientist at Harvard discovered ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate). Then he helped create the first chemotherapy drug and the first tetracycline antibiotic. Harvard still refused him tenure. A bowling alley would not let him bowl. He died at 53, without an obituary. His medicines save tens of millions of lives every year. Most American doctors who prescribe them have no idea what his name was. His name was Yellapragada Subbarow (Subba Rao). He was born in 1895 in Bhimavaram, India. His father was a Sanskrit scholar who died from tropical sprue. Tropical sprue is an acquired malabsorptive disorder found in tropical regions, characterized by chronic diarrhea, weight loss, and severe nutritional deficiencies. It is most commonly associated with deficiencies in vitamin B12 and folic acid, resulting in anemia, fatigue, and glossitis. The same disease killed two of his brothers. As a child, Subbarow watched them fade away and decided he would spend his life fighting disease. He failed his school exams twice. Passed on the third attempt. His future father-in-law paid for his medical school books. Subbarow married his daughter and repaid the debt. In October 1922, he arrived in Boston with borrowed money and broken English. He was 27. He entered Harvard Medical School and joined the biochemistry PhD program. He began working under a senior researcher named Cyrus Fiske. Long hours. Little pay. But he was at Harvard, and he did not care. In 1925, they developed the Fiske-SubbaRow assay, a method for measuring phosphorus in body fluids. It is still used today in kidney failure testing, vitamin D testing, and prostate cancer work. It became one of the most cited methods in biochemistry history. Then they found something even bigger in 1926 - ATP - Adenosine triphosphate. The energy molecule that powers every cell in every living thing on Earth. That discovery changed biochemistry. It also proved that the 1922 Nobel laureate had been wrong about how muscles worked. Muscles did not run on glycogen. They ran on ATP. Subbarow earned his PhD in 1930. He stayed at Harvard for another decade. Paper after paper. Discovery after discovery. And every year, Harvard refused to promote him. The biochemistry department had never given tenure to a foreigner. They were not going to begin with an Indian. His colleagues took him fishing. Played tennis with him. Came to dinner at his home. Then voted against him year after year. Outside the laboratory, he met the same wall. He bought an airplane and learned to fly because he loved flying. Once, he tried to go bowling. The local alley refused him entry. The sign said it was “open only to the Caucasian race.” Then Fiske turned against him. The senior researcher began blocking Subbarow’s discoveries out of jealousy. Some of Subbarow’s work had to be rediscovered years later by other scientists because Fiske kept his findings hidden. May 1940. Harvard denied him tenure for the last time. After 17 years of groundbreaking work, he walked away. Lederle Laboratories in New York hired him as Associate Director of Research. By the end of the year, he was Director. In the next eight years, he changed medicine. He developed diethylcarbamazine, an oral medicine that killed the tropical worms crippling American soldiers in the Pacific. The World Health Organization still uses it. He isolated folic acid from liver and worked out how to produce it on a large scale. Today, folic acid in pregnancy prevents birth defects in tens of millions of pregnancies every year. The same family of diseases that killed his father and brothers became preventable because of him. Then Dr. Sidney Farber called from Boston with an idea: maybe a drug that blocked folic acid in cancer cells could kill childhood leukemia. Subbarow’s team created the drug. They called it Aminopterin. In December 1947, Farber gave it to an eight-year-old boy dying from leukemia. Within weeks, the cancer cells began to disappear. It was the first chemotherapy drug in history. The first time anyone had put cancer into remission using a pill. Subbarow’s team later refined it into Amethopterin, now known as methotrexate. It became a gold standard treatment for leukemia, lymphoma, breast cancer, and lung cancer. Then rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, and Crohn’s disease. The World Health Organization lists it as an essential medicine. Tens of millions of people use it every year. In 1948, his lab produced Aureomycin. The first tetracycline antibiotic - a broad-spectrum one that killed typhus, cholera, pneumonia, and many bacteria that penicillin could not touch. It opened the door to the whole tetracycline family: doxycycline, minocycline, and drugs still used today against plague, malaria, anthrax, and drug-resistant infections. He was 53 years old. He had created medicines that would save tens of millions of lives. August 8, 1948. Yellapragada Subbarow suffered a heart attack at his home in New York and died. No American newspaper gave him a front-page obituary. No university held a memorial. The Nobel Committee never honoured him. His own colleague George Hitchings later won a 1988 Nobel Prize for work built directly on Subbarow’s foundation. Subbarow was not even nominated. In 1950, Argosy magazine published a feature about him titled “Miracle Man of the Miracle Drugs.” It began with a line that still hits hard. “You’ve probably never heard of Dr. Yellapragada Subbarow. Yet because he lived, you may be alive and are well today. Because he lived, you may live longer.” Most Americans had not heard of him in 1950. Most still have not. Harvard has never officially honoured him. American medical schools mostly do not teach his name. The Nobel Committee that honoured Hitchings for work built on his foundation never corrected the record. Every methotrexate prescription written today remains silent about the man behind it. India remembers. The government issued a postage stamp for his 100th birthday. His childhood home became a museum. Indian medical schools teach his name. But the country that denied him tenure, refused to let him bowl, and allowed him to die unknown - the same country that uses his drugs every day - still mostly does not know him. Here is the truth. If someone you know has ever taken methotrexate for cancer or an autoimmune disease. If someone you love has taken folic acid during pregnancy. If you have ever been prescribed doxycycline for an infection. That was him. Yellapragada Subbarow. Born 1895. Died 1948. Saved tens of millions of lives, while a country he loved barely knows what it owes him. Please remember his name and let your near and dear know about this little-known scientific legend born on this soil but never got the true recognition that he deserved. A story you need to know. A story all of us need to know. #Medicine #Unknownlegends @centerofright @KiranKS

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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
@jota_snchez So aging is inevitable because you can only slow it down. You can't avoid it.
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Jota
Jota@jota_snchez·
David Sinclair es el biólogo de Harvard que demostró que el envejecimiento no es inevitable y que es una enfermedad que puede ralentizarse. Reveló 6 hábitos que haces a diario y que están acelerando tu envejecimiento sin que lo sepas. 1) Comer 3 veces al día
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Cornelius Brand
Cornelius Brand@Shadow_ofHannay·
@AtmanCreates You're a "creator" who can't even spell. It's "low lifes" not low lives. Compound noun. If you're going to attempt oneupmanship at least make sure you're literate.
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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
I am being proven right - in the responses to my post.
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates

@AlboMP @narendramodi Indians are hardworking and smart. They are productive and their children focus on education and careers. Indians succeed wherever they venture. They don't even impose their religion on others. No wonder low lives get insecure seeing others doing well.

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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
How many bison were wiped out by Europeans after they colonised the Americas? @grok
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AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
@AshPolitik Or may be she (PH) doesn't want to go back to kitchen (days).
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Ash
Ash@AshPolitik·
The ABC doesn't pay, of course Pauline refused. She may have refused due the kitchen being void of a fryer, but Pauline surely would have provided the "slow" "cooker".
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AtmanCreates retweetledi
AtmanCreates
AtmanCreates@AtmanCreates·
I asked Grok - which country is the biggest creator of porn and which country is the biggest consumer of porn? What does it tell about civilization? Answer is not surprising.
AtmanCreates tweet media
Grok@grok

US leads in both. **Creator:** United States dominates production (major studios, ~40% of global online adult content per industry analyses). Japan is a strong #2 in volume and unique output. **Consumer:** United States tops traffic to Pornhub and similar platforms by a wide margin (2025 data: #1, ahead of Mexico, Philippines, Brazil). It shows open markets + internet access drive visible supply and measured demand. Private interest appears strong even in restrictive societies. Not a clean proxy for "civilization."

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