Grackle, Escaped. 20 inch wingspan. 🐦

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Grackle, Escaped. 20 inch wingspan. 🐦 banner
Grackle, Escaped. 20 inch wingspan. 🐦

Grackle, Escaped. 20 inch wingspan. 🐦

@GracklePhD

I was hatched from a witch's egg. Born to fly free.

USA, Canada (Breeding Season) Katılım Mart 2017
78 Takip Edilen101 Takipçiler
Grackle, Escaped. 20 inch wingspan. 🐦
@H2Wealth365 @BTCDontCare And guess what? Someone in the community with $5B gets a million times more votes on whether to fork than someone with $5K. They aren't going to fork if all the little guys get screwed. If the whales get hurt to the little guy's advantage, that's when you'll see a fork again.
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Study Bitcoin
Study Bitcoin@BTCDontCare·
Did you know? In 2010, a bug briefly created 184 billion BTC in one block. Satoshi Nakamoto and developers fixed it within five hours via a soft fork. It remains the only major inflation bug in #Bitcoin history. The 21M cap still stands. $BTC
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vegastar
vegastar@vegastarr·
This Won’t Make Sense To Everyone… Only To Those Who Know 👁️✨
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Dean Scott 💜= יהוה
@FlatEarthZone Your are BREAKING your OWN FE rules about CGI fakery, which this Blender 3D simulation is. Says so right there on the FULL, UNCROPPED YouTube video. Sheesh. 🤦‍♂️
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Flat Earth Zone
Flat Earth Zone@FlatEarthZone·
We were taught what it is… but have we ever really questioned what we’re seeing? Not everything we were told lines up with what we can actually observe.
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Nwoji AlgoTrader ₿
Nwoji AlgoTrader ₿@H2Wealth365·
@BTCDontCare The "immutability" of a ledger is only as strong as the community's willingness to fork away from a bug. The fact that the bug was fixed without eroding the trust that the growing community had in Bitcoin is a massive strength. And yet the 21 million supply cap remains intact.
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Ted Logan
Ted Logan@TedLogan1010·
People were being threatened with jail for teaching the heliocentric model in 1900! But I was told that the Greeks figured it out thousands of years ago and flat earth is just a C👁️A psyop!?
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Mikey Mikes
Mikey Mikes@Michael98940721·
@TrevorL415 Buddy boy, I can literally just look up at the sky on a full moon and see it'd a rock. Just with my bare fucking eyes.
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Trevor Long
Trevor Long@TrevorL415·
The sensor never literally captured this shot. The camera superimposed it from Deep Fake lunar data. Even cameras lie to fake craters to get you to believe it's a rock that can be landed upon. You can't land on a lie 🤥!
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T@wiguy45·
@TrevorL415 The craters are also visible through the eye piece of a telescope.
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The Hooded Walrus
The Hooded Walrus@Hoodedwalrus·
@oelma__ As a civilian you probably want something simpler in my view. Better to have an easy to use firearm for defence.
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Elma
Elma@oelma__·
🤔
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Groopert
Groopert@Groopert1·
And, why would this be present at the top of an ancient building?
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Grackle, Escaped. 20 inch wingspan. 🐦
@AAStack @saylor My grandfather's prime working years were the 60s-90s. He had a good white collar job, worked hard, and went bankrupt a couple times. He lives on social security. I made $1M and am ready to retire in 7 years of working with an average real return of 20% per year.
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AA ⚡️
AA ⚡️@AAStack·
Our grandfathers had it simple: Work. Save. Retire. Then inflation broke it. Today, 4% means working ~50 years to hit $1M. At 10–11%? ~27–30 years. That’s 20+ years of your life. Yield isn’t about getting rich. It’s about getting your time back. STRC brings back what was lost: Real yield. Steady income. No gambling. Work. Save. Retire. Like it was meant to be.
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Jason
Jason@foley2k2·
@GracklePhD @vibeonX69 Yeah, but that's just the kernel. There are thousands of applications as well. That's when a single command is useful. rsync works fine.
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kritika
kritika@vibeonX69·
If Linux disappears tomorrow, what will you do? -Switch to Mac -Back to Windows -Build my own OS
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Randall Carlson
Randall Carlson@randallwcarlson·
The explanation that the pyramids were built by lifting stones weighing hundreds of thousands of pounds with sticks has, Shawn Ryan suggests, run its course. Few people with any serious engagement with the evidence are still buying it - and yet it persists in educational systems as though the question were settled. Shawn finds that persistence almost more puzzling than the construction mystery itself. The scale of the problem becomes clear when you stop treating each site as an isolated anomaly. Randall draws on his own experience moving heavy weights in construction - noting that even a single ton beam requires cranes and front end loaders today - and applies that practical knowledge directly to the ancient record. The ancient world was moving stones of 100, 200 tons and beyond, not once at a single location but repeatedly, across every inhabited continent, in cultures with no documented contact with one another. Stonehenge, Easter Island, Machu Picchu, and the pyramids are not separate puzzles with separate solutions. They are the same question asked in different languages - and the answer, Randall argues, is one that the stick and ramp theory was never equipped to provide.
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Jason
Jason@foley2k2·
@GracklePhD @vibeonX69 There is an rsync command. I probably don't need much before version 2.4, but may as well grab the whole thing.
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marty douglas
marty douglas@martydouglas14·
@TedLogan1010 And they used to think that a hundred miles an hour was impossible! Wait till we launch rockets for everyday people!
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Grackle, Escaped. 20 inch wingspan. 🐦
@FELibrary_ If water is always level, how is it that at one part of the day, it's high tide in one place and low tide in another, then later in that day, it's low tide in the first place and high tide in the other?
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