Boca Decreto Positivo

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Boca Decreto Positivo

Boca Decreto Positivo

@BocaSpiritual7

Uso el poder de las palabras para ayudar al club de mis amores. Tricampeón del Mundo. De las cuentas más queridas del mundo Boca! ❤️🔥🌊

Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Es Katılım Kasım 2023
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Boca Decreto Positivo
Boca Decreto Positivo@BocaSpiritual7·
@ClaudiFormosa @ElEternauta_arg La lógica de los militares "desaparecemos a todas las personas que piensan y que les gusta leer y mejoramos el país" la cantidad de genios y genias que nos privaron de disfrutar, sabes cuántos cortázar había ahí? Cuántas minujin? Cuantos Spinetta? NI OLVIDO NI PERDÓN
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lucas
lucas@cuticoge·
EL SERVICIO METEOROLÓGICO CERRÓ ASI QUE PASO A INFORMARLES EL PRONÓSTICO DEL TIEMPO EXTENDIDO PARA LA SEMANA ENTRANTE LUNES: LLORA RIVER ☔😭 MARTES: LLORA RIVER ☔😭 MIÉRCOLES: LLORA RIVER ☔😭 JUEVES: LLORA RIVER ☔😭 VIERNES: LLORA RIVER ☔😭 SÁBADO: LLORA RIVER ☔😭
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Boca Juniors
Boca Juniors@BocaJrsOficial·
¡𝗚𝗔𝗡𝗢𝗢𝗢𝗢𝗢𝗢𝗢𝗢𝗢́ 𝗕𝗢𝗢𝗢𝗖𝗔𝗔𝗔! 💪💙💛💙
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Mago
Mago@JulioPavoni·
UBEDA EL DT GANADOR CENANDO CON SU FAMILIA LUEGO DEL SIFONAZO
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Liam Ramirez
Liam Ramirez@Erumatha7·
@JulioPavoni No vaya ser cosa que nos cierre el traste a todos.... Nooooo????
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Virrey
Virrey@Virrey__·
Hoy a la tarde tiraron pirotecnia, mi perro se asustó y salió corriendo. Desde ese momento no sabemos nada de él. Es muy importante para mí y para toda mi familia. Seguramente está asustado y desorientado. 📍 Zona: Nuñes 🐶 Nombre: Anibal 📞 Contacto: 1135774034
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Boca Decreto Positivo
Boca Decreto Positivo@BocaSpiritual7·
@AstroSimple21 Chupame un huevo pelotudo, boca le va re contra ganar al Barcelona
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Boca Decreto Positivo
Boca Decreto Positivo@BocaSpiritual7·
@DudespostingWs Otro dato no común de la foto es que en esa época no se usaba mucho pullover y Billy The Kid lo usaba con un estilo muy inusual combinado a esa galera
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Dudes Posting Their W’s
Dudes Posting Their W’s@DudespostingWs·
In 2010, a guy named Randy Guijarro was driving home to Fresno when he stopped at an antique shop and bought three old photos for $2. One of them stood out because he thought the guy in it looked familiar. He had it looked at, and experts eventually confirmed it was Billy the Kid. The photo is believed to have been taken in 1878 and shows Billy the Kid casually playing croquet with members of the Regulators. Years later, after it was authenticated, the photo was estimated to be worth around $5 million. One of the craziest antique shop finds ever.
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Boca Decreto Positivo
Boca Decreto Positivo@BocaSpiritual7·
@George_Wines @DudespostingWs Si, se hizo un estudio exhaustivo de alta tecnología para comparar la simetría de la cara con la única foto que se conocía de Billy. Además se encontró el lugar donde se realizó la foto, y es en el lugar donde el trabajaba y efectivamente jugaban criquet
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Real Time
Real Time@RealTimeRating·
🗣️ POR LA MAÑANA CAFÉ, POR LA TARDE ORACIÓN, POR LA NOCHE DIOS, CON SU PROTECCIÓN
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Dr. Lemma
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma·
In 1986, a five-year-old boy in India fell asleep on a bench at a train station while waiting for his older brother to come back. His brother never returned. The boy wandered onto an empty train carriage, thinking his brother might be inside. He fell asleep again. When he woke up, the doors were locked and the train was moving. It didn’t stop for nearly two days. When it finally did, he was in Kolkata, nearly 1,500 kilometres from home. He was too young to know his surname, couldn’t read, and had no idea what his hometown was called. He survived alone on the streets for weeks, sleeping under station benches and scavenging scraps of food, before eventually being taken to an orphanage and declared a lost child. No one could trace where he came from. He was adopted by a couple from Tasmania, Australia, who gave him a loving home and a new life. His name became Saroo Brierley. He grew up on the other side of the world. But he never forgot. He held onto fragments: the image of a bridge near a train station, a water tower, a neighbourhood layout, the faces of his family. In his mid-twenties, he discovered Google Earth. He calculated the rough distance the train could have covered based on how long he remembered being on it, drew a circle on a map around Kolkata, and began searching along every railway line within that radius. Some weeks he spent 30 hours scanning satellite images of towns across central India, looking for landmarks that matched his childhood memories. His family in Australia didn’t even know. They thought he was just browsing the internet. In 2011, after years of searching, he found it. A water tower. A bridge. A ravine past a station. It was a neighbourhood called Ganesh Talai in the city of Khandwa. He zoomed in and recognised the streets he had walked as a small boy. He flew to India and walked through the town until he found his family’s home. The door was chained shut and he feared the worst. Then people came out. One of them led him to a woman down the road. It was his mother. She had never stopped looking for him. After 25 years, they were standing in front of each other. What he didn’t know until that moment was that his brother Guddu, the one he’d been waiting for at the station that night, had been struck and killed by a train. His mother had spent 25 years searching for both sons. She learned what happened to one. She never stopped praying for the other. His story became the book “A Long Way Home” and was adapted into the film “Lion,” which received six Academy Award nominations.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Part 5. Right now, there are people who could not move their legs for a decade, walking again. Not in a science fiction movie. In 2026. Because surgeons are putting chips in their brains and their spines and letting the two talk to each other. The first one is a Dutch guy named Gert-Jan Oskam. In 2011, he crashed his motorcycle in China and broke his neck. He was paralyzed from the hips down for 12 years. In 2023, a team in Switzerland put electrodes in his skull and in his spinal cord, then connected them through a small computer he wears in a backpack. When he thinks about walking, the brain electrode picks up the signal. A computer in the backpack decodes it. The spine electrode zaps his leg muscles in the right order. He walks. He can go up stairs. He can stand at a bar and order a drink. Last year he painted a wall in his own house because nobody was around to help. That story is from a direct quote in Nature. The craziest part is that after enough training, he can take a few steps even when the device is switched off. The team thinks his nerves are actually starting to heal. Then in January 2025, a team at Fudan University in China did it with fewer wires. They put two electrodes the size of a grain of rice inside a man’s motor cortex and a small stimulator in his spine. His name is Lin. He fell down a four meter staircase two years earlier and had lost the ability to move his legs completely. By day three after surgery, he was moving both legs with his mind. By day 15, he walked more than 5 meters with a walking frame. In his own words, “I used to cry every day. Now I can walk again.” Two other paralyzed people had the same surgery a few weeks later. Both regained leg movement within hours. And then in the US, Neuralink has its own version. An American named Noland Arbaugh broke his neck in a swimming accident in 2016. In January 2024, he got the first Neuralink brain chip. He cannot walk yet, but he plays online chess and video games with his thoughts. He controls his computer and phone without moving a muscle. In April 2025, a fifth American patient got one at the University of Miami. There are about 20 million people on this planet living with spinal cord injuries. Most have been told their whole life that nothing can be done. In the last 36 months, three different teams in three different countries have now shown that something can be done. I keep thinking about how boring the news made this sound. “Chinese university demonstrates new BCI technology.” No. A man who had not walked in 12 years walked up a flight of stairs. A man who used to cry every day for two years is taking steps with a walking frame. We are watching the beginning of a cure for paralysis.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Part 2. A hospital in India can take someone who has been blind for years and give them their sight back in six minutes. It costs less than a pizza. And they have done it 6.8 million times. The hospital is called Aravind. It was started in 1976 by a man named Govindappa Venkataswamy, known as Dr. V. He was 58, had just been forced to retire, and his hands were crippled by arthritis so bad he could barely hold a pen. He had scalpels custom-made for his twisted fingers and still performed over 100,000 eye surgeries in his life. Two years before he retired, Dr. V walked into a McDonald’s for the first time. He looked at the menu, looked at the assembly line in the back, and came out with an odd idea. He would sell cataract surgeries the way McDonald’s sold burgers. So he mortgaged his house. His brothers and sisters pooled their life savings. He opened an 11-bed clinic in Madurai. Then he flew to Chicago and enrolled in Hamburger University, the actual McDonald’s training program, to learn how the assembly line worked. At Aravind, cataract surgery is broken into small steps. Nurses prep one patient while the surgeon operates on another. Each surgeon switches between two tables. The operation itself takes about six minutes. So far Aravind has seen 55 million patients and done 6.8 million surgeries. More than half of those patients paid nothing. Not a rupee. The ones who can pay subsidize the ones who cannot. A surgery at Aravind costs between $40 and $125 depending on the lens. In the US, Medicare pays about $1,766 for the same operation. Aravind also has better results. Their complication rate is 1.5%, and serious eye infections happen in about 2 out of every 10,000 surgeries. Most American hospitals are not that good. They built their own lens factory too, called Aurolab. Imported lenses were costing hundreds of dollars each, so Aurolab makes them for around ten. Today Aurolab produces roughly 10% of the world’s eye lenses and ships to 160 countries. Every year, Aravind sends doctors and nurses out to rural villages for 2,500 eye camps. They screen people who have been blind for years, bus them to the hospital, operate on them, and bus them back home seeing. Dr. V died in 2006. His family still runs Aravind. Harvard Business School has been teaching the story as a case study since 1993. I still do not see it in my feed. A 58-year-old with crippled hands walked into a McDonald’s. Fifty years later, 6.8 million blind people can see.
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la ultima siesta
la ultima siesta@laultimasiesta·
ÚBEDA ES EL ELEGIDO: TEORÍA Abro hilo explicando la conexión que hay entre Anakin y Ubeda, y por que como Anakin fue el Elegido de la Fuerza, Úbeda es el Elegido de la Septima.
la ultima siesta tweet mediala ultima siesta tweet media
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PIBE BOSTERO 🇸🇪
PIBE BOSTERO 🇸🇪@pibebostero_·
Mis aplausos para quien hizo este video magnífico. Mañana les rompemos bien el orto.
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