Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts
19.6K posts

Humanities Facts
@HumanitiesFacts
Bookworm unraveling life's wonders, finding meaning in pages & sharing what I've found interesting. No DM https://t.co/SRps2oN8rO
Katılım Nisan 2024
1.7K Takip Edilen1.8K Takipçiler
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi

Rwandan migrant Emmanuel Abayisenga had his asylum application to France rejected multiple times since submitting it in 2012. Despite orders for deportation, he remained in the country illegally.
The priests trusted him with the cathedral keys, putting him in charge of locking up and caretaking. After he set the building on fire, destroying the organ and organ loft, Father Maire took him in, offering him shelter in his own home while awaiting trial.
He then murdered Father Maire.
Europe in a nutshell.
English
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi

U.S. President Donald Trump:
"Iran has to open up the Strait of Trump - I mean Hormuz."
Contributed by @AZ_Intel_.
English
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi

Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi

The Dutch: Tallest nation on Earth. Average male height: 6'0". Average female height: 5'7".
What do they eat? Dairy. More dairy per capita than any nation. Cheese, milk, butter, yogurt. Plus meat, fish, eggs.
1860s Dutch: Among shortest Europeans. Average male 5'6".
What changed? Not genetics. Economic development. Access to dairy and meat increased.
150 years later: 6 inches taller. Same genetic population. Different nutrition.
The Japanese: 1900 average male height: 5'2". Diet: Rice, fish, minimal dairy, some meat.
Post-WWII: American occupation introduces dairy and increased meat consumption.
Modern Japanese average male height: 5'7". Five inches taller in three generations.
Genetic changes don't happen that fast. Nutritional changes do.
South Korea: 1950s average male height: 5'5". Diet: Rice-based, minimal animal products.
Modern South Korea: Wealthy nation. Increased meat and dairy consumption.
Current average male height: 5'9". Four inches in two generations.
North Korea: Same genetic population as South Korea. Separated in 1950s.
Modern North Korean height: 5'5". No increase. Still eating rice-based diet with minimal animal products due to poverty and food scarcity.
Identical genetics. Different nutrition. Four-inch height difference.
China: Northern Chinese eat more wheat and meat. Southern Chinese eat more rice and less meat.
Northern Chinese average: 5'9". Southern Chinese average: 5'7". Same nation, different regional diets, two-inch height difference.
The pattern is global: Height correlates with dairy and meat consumption, not genetics.
Wealthy nations with high animal product consumption: Tall.
Poor nations with grain-based diets: Short.
When poor nations become wealthy and increase meat/dairy intake: Height increases within generations.
Modern height differences reflect meat access across the last century, not genetics across millennia.
English
Humanities Facts retweetledi

Dr. Andrew Huberman just confirmed a “wild conspiracy theory” about incandescent lights and LED bulbs.
The long wavelengths found in incandescents increase your metabolism and “charge your mitochondria.”
Conversely, the LED bulbs that most of you have in your house are “causing disruptions in mitochondrial function.”
DR. ANDREW HUBERMAN: “Your mitochondria function better, you increase ATP production, your metabolism increases in the presence of red light, long wavelength light to the skin.”
“Shine long wavelength light on somebody, watch blood glucose levels in a blood glucose test, and it’s blunted.”
“Now, the LED lights that are commonly used now… that short wavelength light, in the absence of long wavelength light, has been shown to damage the mitochondria.”
“This used to be considered crazy. This was like chemtrail crazy, right?”
“But now we’re starting to see from animal studies and human studies, from Glenn Jeffreys and others, that people’s vision gets better when they get in front of an incandescent bulb once a day.”
“If they get sunlight, which also has long-wavelength light, your vision improves because of improvements in mitochondria.”
The Biden administration quietly pushed incandescents out of the market through aggressive energy regulations.
But you can still find them online today if you look hard enough.
If that health insight stood out to you, there’s a lot more where that came from. (See post below)
This page finds the moments they don’t want going viral, with captions that tell you exactly why they matter before you even hit play.
See why 2 million already follow: @VigilantFox
The Vigilant Fox 🦊@VigilantFox
Internationally recognized neuroscientist Dr. Andrew Huberman reveals a surprising trick to help you fall back asleep when you wake up in the middle of the night. “I can’t promise, but I’m willing to wager… that within five minutes or so, you’ll be back to sleep.”
English
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi
Humanities Facts retweetledi

Activist: "The water usage for beef is obscene. Thousands of litres per kilogram."
Farmer: "That's rainfall."
Activist: "What?"
Farmer: "The figure includes all the rain that falls on the pasture. The cows drink from the stream. The rain falls whether there's a cow here or not."
Activist: "It's still water consumption."
Farmer: "Should I stop the rain falling on my field?"
Activist: "Grow crops instead. More efficient."
Farmer: "This is a 35-degree slope in the Welsh hills. Show me the crop."
Activist: "Technology..."
Farmer: "To make tractors climb mountains?"
Activist: "There must be a solution."
Farmer: "There is. It's called a cow."
Activist: [checks phone]

English
Humanities Facts retweetledi














