we.are.all.Creators

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we.are.all.Creators

we.are.all.Creators

@BCPenguin315

I was raised a warrior. I choose battles I believe to be just.

NY Katılım Ocak 2024
209 Takip Edilen56 Takipçiler
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Jeremy White 🚂
Jeremy White 🚂@JeremyWGR·
The power play meeting: “what should we do?” Someone: “I don’t know. Fucking Benson and Doan?”
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Nate Geary
Nate Geary@NateGearySports·
That’s horrible
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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
Arnold Schwarzenegger’s rule on complaining:
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INDIA STATISTICS
INDIA STATISTICS@indi_statistics·
15 Fascinating Facts Inspired by a 3,000-Year-Old Egyptian Limestone Statue Head. 1. Made ~3,000 years ago during Egypt’s New Kingdom era. 2. Carved from limestone, a common ancient building stone. 3. Likely represents elite or royal women of that time. 4. Discovered artifacts like this are often funerary in nature. 5. Preserved in Field Museum of Natural History, USA. 6. New Kingdom period was Egypt’s most powerful imperial phase. 7. Sculptures aimed for idealized beauty, not realism. 8. Many statues were painted originally—colors faded over time. 9. Limestone was easier to carve than granite or basalt. 10. Facial symmetry was linked to divinity and status. 11. Such heads were often part of larger statues or tombs. 12. Ancient artisans used copper tools and abrasives. 13. Damage often occurred during tomb robberies or erosion. 14. Hair styles in sculptures reflect social rank and fashion. 15. These artifacts help decode ancient Egyptian society, politics, and aesthetics.
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Historic Vids
Historic Vids@historyinmemes·
3,000-year-old Egyptian statue head of a woman, New Kingdom, limestone, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago.
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Science girl
Science girl@sciencegirl·
Talent may make people notice you, But kindness makes you unforgettable
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Victoria Byrne
Victoria Byrne@Thevictoria76·
This one’s special ❤️ Take 60 seconds and just listen. You might feel lighter after it.
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Morbid Knowledge
Morbid Knowledge@MorbidKnowledge·
Photo of Travis the chimp holding a baby. Travis eventually went on to horrifically maul his owner's friend. On February 16, 2009, 911 dispatchers in Stamford, Connecticut received a call so shocking it took them several minutes to even understand what was happening. Sandra Herold frantically screamed into the phone that her friend Charla Nash was being viciously attacked and eaten alive by her pet chimpanzee Travis. Herold begged the dispatcher to send police immediately and said they needed to bring guns to sh*ot the mad chimp. Throughout the entire horrifying call, dispatchers could hear Travis' enraged screams in the background as the attack continued. Finally, emergency services arrived at Herold's home and found Charla Nash completely covered in bl*od on the ground, her face all but ripped off and her fingers strewn about the ground around her. Nash required hours of surgery after the attack, and after her jaw was reattached she later flew to Ohio for an experimental facial transplant.
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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
What are you all currently reading?
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we.are.all.Creators
we.are.all.Creators@BCPenguin315·
@iam__Jezreel The Adam and Eve story as you understand it is false. Look up Enki and Enlil and the Anunnaki.
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MJ👑
MJ👑@iam__Jezreel·
Satan got Adam and Eve to focus on one fruit when God had given them a whole garden. That's how he works. He gets you to focus on that one thing you don't have. Instead of all the blessings you do have. Trust that God knows what you need, and will supply it when you need it.
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Historic Vids
Historic Vids@historyinmemes·
Just 39 year old Jerry Seinfeld and his 17 year old girlfriend around 1993
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Barefoot Pregnant
Barefoot Pregnant@usuallypregnant·
Get yourself a husband who loves providing for your every need.
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
“It’s a girl” ... And just like that, the joy could turn into disappointment. In Renaissance Europe, daughters were often seen as a burden because they could not inherit wealth or take over family businesses, and instead came with the heavy expectation of a dowry, money and property that had to be saved from the moment they were born just to marry them off. Girls were not educated like boys, they were kept at home or sent to convents, taught obedience, modesty, and silence, because their bodies were seen as something that had to be controlled at all costs, especially with the constant fear of pregnancy and the lack of any real medical protection from the dangers of childbirth. And what is truly shocking is how “science” at the time justified this. Many Renaissance doctors believed women were physically and intellectually inferior because of the theory of the four humours, where men were considered hot and dry, strong and active, while women were cold and damp, passive and weak, and some even followed the idea that a female body existed simply because it lacked the necessary heat to become male. Yes… they genuinely believed women were incomplete men. Others argued that women had no “shaping force” in reproduction at all, that life came entirely from the man, while the woman’s body was just a passive vessel. And then religion reinforced it all. Eve was blamed for the fall of mankind, and women were said to carry that guilt in their bodies, through pain in menstruation and childbirth, with one 16th century text even claiming women had no truth, no loyalty, no sincerity, and were the cause of all harm and misery. So what was the solution? Keep them inside, keep them busy, keep them quiet. Girls were encouraged to spin, sew, serve, cook, clean, raise children, and avoid even looking out of windows or speaking too much, because idleness and freedom were seen as dangerous. And yet… reality tells a very different story. Women worked everywhere, in textile production, in households, in fields, and even in businesses, with records showing female blacksmiths, merchants, bankers, and traders, proving they were just as capable, even while living in a world that constantly denied it. And some women went even further. Some dressed as men to escape, to work, to love, or simply to live freely, like the woman in Verona who dressed as a man to run away with her lover, or Catalina de Erauso who left a convent and lived as a man for twenty years, fighting, travelling, and building a life that would have been impossible for her as a woman. But not everyone was allowed that freedom. One tragic case tells of a servant who lived as a woman, only to be exposed and publicly humiliated, paraded through the streets, and ultimately executed, because society believed the body, not identity, was the final truth. And still, despite all of this… something began to shift. By the sixteenth century, some families started educating their daughters, and writers like Moderata Fonte began to argue that women were not inferior in nature, only denied opportunity, insisting that if girls were raised and educated the same as boys, they would show the same courage, wisdom, and ability. So maybe the real question was never whether women were capable…but what they could have been, if they had been allowed to be. © How to be a Renaissance Woman by Jill Burke #archaeohistories
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Sal Capaccio 🏈
Sal Capaccio 🏈@SalSports·
Doing a mock draft right now for Raider Nation Radio @RNR920AM. I have the Bills pick at 26 and here is how the available board looks. Who would you take (no trades)?
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