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Buff

@Buffaloe_3

God Family Prosperity Making my own path

252 Katılım Şubat 2015
862 Takip Edilen924 Takipçiler
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S.J. Banner
S.J. Banner@TheJadedOne2021·
I went and watched this video in its full entirety. He ultimately said that he’s not attracted to the weight gain as well as her habits that are leading to said gain (she doesn’t work or exercise) + he’s not attracted to the potential future picture (her not being around for her kids because future health problems taking her out the game of life). He even suggests she go with him to the gym & she STILL deflected.
Chikky@chickyxime

Husband tells wife to lose weight 2 years after childbirth says he’s no longer attracted to her

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ReaganGRM
ReaganGRM@TheReaganGRM·
When you buy a book that teaches how to get away with fraud and it never arives.
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👑 J³ABz👑
👑 J³ABz👑@Jabz_CFC·
The-Dream once took Nivea from Lil Wayne. Then Lil Wayne took her back and made "Lollipop" and told him that shawty want a thug. Then Wayne got her pregnant and bounced with Christina Milian. Then The-Dream took Christina Milian. Then The-Dream came with "I Luv Your Girl".. that was a time to be alive..🙌😂
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Himanshu Tyagi, IFS
Himanshu Tyagi, IFS@Himanshutyg_ifs·
Unlike other predators like tigers, which kill prey with their teeth, eagles kill through compression — using their feet. An eagle's foot is its primary weapon, for both hunting and defence. A lot of physics and engineering have gone into its design. Let's understand it. Even the strongest human can grip an object at a max. of 50 PSI, but an eagle grips its prey at up to 400–750 PSI — enough pressure to pierce through thick skin or even the bones of prey like monkeys or birds. The talons are so engineered that the moment anything enters their grip, compression happens automatically. Eagles also strike at speeds of 30–50 mph, so many prey die on impact even before the crushing begins. In this image, you can see 3 forward-facing talons and 1 facing backwards — called the hallux. The hallux is the longest and most lethal talon, driving deepest into the prey on impact. The moment an attack lands, the prey is caged from 360 degrees — no room, no chance of escape. #Nature engineered this with precision. The physics is brutal and perfect.
Massimo@Rainmaker1973

You don't truly grasp the size of eagles until one is right in front of you.

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Duke Men’s Basketball
Duke Men’s Basketball@DukeMBB·
A Duke player has led the NBA in 3pt FG% each of the past 5⃣ seasons‼️🎯🎯🎯🎯🎯
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GB 🪄
GB 🪄@Gbdaniel001·
When you arrive at a lying competition but the competitor lied about the venue
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Aristotle Investments
Aristotle Investments@aristotlegrowth·
UNPOPULAR OPINION: People are NOT showing off… they’re sharing their happy moments and achievements. You’re looking at it from a jealous point of view because where you are in life isn’t where you want to be. Plain and simple.
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Buff
Buff@Buffaloe_3·
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Orcas eat great white sharks. They hunt seals, dolphins, and baby whales. They have never killed a single human in the open ocean. Not once, in all of recorded history. An orca's brain weighs up to 15 pounds. Yours weighs about 3. They have roughly double the brain cells we do in the regions that handle complex thought. A neuroscientist at Emory named Lori Marino put an orca brain in an MRI and found these animals can tell different species apart underwater. They do it by sending out clicks that bounce off everything around them and come back as a kind of 3D sound map (this is called echolocation). From 500 feet away, an orca knows you're a human and not a seal. It skips you on purpose. The answer is culture. Orcas around the world are divided into at least 10 separate populations, each with its own food rules, its own language, and its own way of hunting. All of it learned from their mothers. One population eats only fish. Another eats only marine mammals like seals and sea lions. These two populations can live in the exact same water and never swap a single meal. A baby orca learns what food is from its mother, and that list stays the same for life. In the Pacific Northwest, one population called the Southern Residents eats almost nothing but Chinook salmon. Scientists have documented them killing harbor porpoises 78 times over six decades, carrying the dead porpoises in their mouths, and never once eating them. Even when the group was starving. A 2023 study in Marine Mammal Science looked at all 78 cases and concluded it was play. These orcas would rather go hungry than eat something their culture says isn't food. Researchers studying whale behavior in 2001 found that orca cultural traditions "appear to have no parallel outside humans." Each family group has its own dialect, its own version of the language. Calves spend about two years just learning how to make all the sounds their family uses. Mothers will slow down a hunt on purpose so their young can watch. In 2005, a 12-year-old kid was swimming in Helm Bay, Alaska when an orca came at him full speed. At the very last second, the orca seemed to realize it was charging a human. It bent its entire body in half and turned back to open water. In captivity, it goes differently. SeaWorld's Tilikum killed three people during his life in a concrete tank. Research from 2016, published in the journal Animals, traced it to psychological collapse from being locked away from the family bonds orcas need to stay stable. I think calling this a "mystery" undersells the science. Orcas decide what to eat based on culture, not instinct. No orca mother has ever taught her calf to hunt humans, so no orca hunts humans. Only about 75 of those salmon-eating Southern Residents are still alive. Their pregnancy failure rate is 69% because we've destroyed their salmon runs. They won't break their food culture to survive. Whether we care enough to protect theirs is the part that actually matters.
Nature is Amazing ☘️@AMAZlNGNATURE

One of the biggest mysteries to me is how Orcas, the ocean’s most efficient predators, have never attacked humans in the wild… almost like they know something we don’t.

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Imani 🇵🇷
Imani 🇵🇷@imanii_reena·
Ya normalized prostitution now ya attempting to normalize women being pregnant in clubs, posting twerk videos while pregnant with their ass out. Ya some whores.
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Dommy
Dommy@DommyLocked·
EARLY MLB ⚾️ FREE PLAY 10-4 MLB 2026 Record. 72% WIN RATE. 🤯 Sending to Everyone who LIKES + REPLIES (must be following @DommyLocked)
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Jenni
Jenni@hashjenni·
Hot take, but influencers have literally ruined everything. Music festivals, vacation destinations, the whole of social media, stores…literally everything.
Lazzyyyyyy@em_Lazzy

Whats you Hot take???

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Rene🧚🫧
Rene🧚🫧@sheisafairyyy·
Always go to the funeral. Always go to the hospital. You don't need to know what to say. In times of profound crisis, people don't remember your words, they only remember whether you showed up for them at their lowest moment.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
The battery in your phone exists because a physicist in 1799 tried to copy a fish. That fish was the electric eel, and 80% of its body is a living power source. An electric eel is not an eel. It is a knifefish, closer to catfish than to any real eel. And its body is built backward. All the normal organs (heart, stomach, brain) are crammed into the front 20%, right behind its head. The remaining 80% is the electric organ. It has three separate electric organs, each doing a different job. Two of them produce high-voltage shocks for hunting and scaring off predators. The third one puts out weak 10-volt pulses that work like built-in sonar. The eel has awful eyesight and lives in dark, muddy Amazon rivers, so it uses those pulses to "see" by sensing how the electrical field bends around nearby objects. The cells that make all of this happen are called electrocytes, tiny disc-shaped muscle cells that gave up the ability to flex and instead learned to produce a small electrical charge. Each one makes about 0.15 volts on its own. But a full-grown eel stacks around 6,000 of these cells end to end in a single column, with roughly 35 columns running side by side on each half of its body. The voltages add up. Same principle as stacking batteries in a flashlight. Until 2019, scientists thought there was only one species of electric eel. Then a team, including researchers from the Smithsonian, found there were actually three. The strongest one, Electrophorus voltai, was measured at 860 volts. Roughly seven times what comes out of a US wall socket. Kenneth Catania, a biologist at Vanderbilt, published a paper in Science in 2014 after years of studying how eels use all that voltage. He found that the eel's high-voltage attack works almost identically to a Taser (the stun device law enforcement uses). A Taser fires 19 high-voltage pulses per second to override the nerves controlling your muscles, forcing your whole body to seize up involuntarily. The eel fires 400 pulses per second. Twenty-one times faster. It can freeze a fish solid in 3 milliseconds without even touching it. Catania also discovered the eel has a second trick: it sends paired electrical pulses that force hidden fish to twitch against their will, creating a tiny ripple that gives away their hiding spot. The connection to the battery in your phone is not a metaphor. In the late 1790s, an Italian physicist named Alessandro Volta noticed the stacked-cell structure in electric fish and tried to replicate it with alternating discs of zinc and copper separated by cardboard soaked in salt water. It worked. He built the first battery ever made in 1799 and called it an "artificial electric organ." The unit we call the "volt" is named after him. The strongest eel species, found 220 years later, was named Electrophorus voltai in his honor, closing a loop that started when a fish taught a physicist how to store electricity.
Nature is Amazing ☘️@AMAZlNGNATURE

Electric Eel power demonstration using LED's

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BHENtel
BHENtel@TheBHentel·
Bron just using this time to show us he still top 3 if he wanna be 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
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