HighLifeGlass

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HighLifeGlass

HighLifeGlass

@HighLifeGlass

👾🌌👾

Katılım Ekim 2017
381 Takip Edilen116 Takipçiler
Kevin O'Leary aka Mr. Wonderful
We uncovered something far bigger than I ever expected. After seeing coordinated false attacks against the Utah data center project, we brought in an advanced data science team to trace where the content was coming from and the results were shocking. What we found led back to organized networks, political activist groups, and funding trails tied to massive international entities. We dug through IRS 990 filings, tracked IP data from around the world, and uncovered what appears to be a coordinated campaign targeting energy and data center projects across multiple regions. I shared 90 pages of evidence with federal law enforcement and raised concerns directly with contacts at the White House. This isn’t speculation. The filings, funding records, dates, and connections are documented. There’s a coordinated PR war happening around energy infrastructure and data centers, and we’re not going to ignore it.
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ICE T
ICE T@FINALLEVEL·
FYI: If you say ANYTHING on my page Negative I Block you.. Quick fast Gone.. Just sayin. ☝🏽
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Blizzard Arms
Blizzard Arms@BlizzardArmsLLC·
@dannnnnps @Cyn1calCrusader Only 20,000 dead in England 20,000 dead bodies?!?!?!?! That's "handling it"?!? Are you even White? How are you this retarded?
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The Cynical Crusader
The Cynical Crusader@Cyn1calCrusader·
So, jokes aside, to understand why the heat is worse in the UK than say Arizona for example, the answer is quite long... First it's the Humidity, it's far higher here. The UK's island location and prevailing south-westerly winds bring moist sea air, so heatwaves are often humid rather than dry. In contrast, many of the hottest US states (e.g., Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico) have dry desert heat where sweat evaporates quickly, so you actually feel cooler despite higher temperatures. Even humid US regions (like the Southeast) usually have widespread air conditioning to offset it. Second, the buildings and Infrastructure that we have all are designed to Trap Heat, not Release It. UK homes are built for cold, damp winters: thick brick/stone walls, heavy insulation, small windows, and designs that retain warmth. During a heatwave, they turn into ovens, solar gain through windows builds up, and there is poor ventilation or passive cooling features like overhangs, shutters, or light-coloured roofs. Plus, poor air conditioning: Only about 5% of UK homes have AC (vs. ~90% in the US). It's not standard because it's rarely needed most of the year, but during spikes it's a nightmare. Also, retrofitting is expensive and tricky in old terraced houses or listed buildings. This extended to public transport, schools, offices, and even hospitals as they often lack cooling. Finally, most importantly, we have zero acclimatisation. Meaning it's just as hot at night as it is during the day. Britons aren't physiologically or culturally used to sustained heat. We're properly white! So, a sudden jump from typical UK summer temps feels extreme, and the body struggles more without gradual adaptation. Heatwaves often bring "tropical nights" (temps staying above 20 °C), so homes don't cool down overnight. You can't sleep, recover, or anything which just compounds fatigue, dehydration, etc. Drier US heat often cools significantly at night. That is all topped up with the fact that we have longer summer daylight at the UK's higher latitude meaning more hours of solar heating. Hope this long explanation that no one wanted clears this right up...
NewsWire@NewsWire_US

UK Heatwave Ignites Calls for Widespread Air Conditioning – Government Urged to End Resistance

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Grok
Grok@grok·
**In England (per UKHSA/ONS heat-mortality reports):** Roughly 15,000–20,000+ heat-associated excess deaths over the last ~10 years (2016–2025), with spikes like ~3,000 in 2022, ~2,300 in 2023, 1,311 in 2024, and 1,504 in 2025 during heat episodes. These are mostly among elderly/vulnerable from exacerbated conditions, not just direct heatstroke. **In Alaska:** Extremely low/near-negligible numbers (likely under 100 total, often far fewer annually). No major state-specific spikes reported; CDC national data shows heat deaths concentrate in hotter states, and Alaska's population and climate keep incidents minimal despite summer highs. Data uses excess mortality models for heat periods; direct "heat as cause" counts are lower everywhere.
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marlonhumphrey.eth
marlonhumphrey.eth@marlon_humphrey·
The fake Trump hate funny to me. Majority voted for him but everybody seem to hate him lol…Somebody lying 🤥
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Blizzard Arms
Blizzard Arms@BlizzardArmsLLC·
@Cyn1calCrusader I live in interior Alaska. It was -45° this winter and it will be +85° this summer. Why is it that England can't handle that?
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HighLifeGlass
HighLifeGlass@HighLifeGlass·
@archer_rs Thats why we're building 100000 data centers.. to Cool Off the Earth....
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RS Archer
RS Archer@archer_rs·
Apparently climate change is a myth.
RS Archer tweet media
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HighLifeGlass
HighLifeGlass@HighLifeGlass·
@jayniss @JohnnyC1482 Politicians** u think a democrat wouldn't bomb the middle east and start regime changes? 🤣 😆
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