Paul - 🇺🇦😷 ⚜️ ⚜️ ⚜️

11.1K posts

Paul - 🇺🇦😷 ⚜️ ⚜️ ⚜️ banner
Paul - 🇺🇦😷 ⚜️ ⚜️ ⚜️

Paul - 🇺🇦😷 ⚜️ ⚜️ ⚜️

@Ing30m

Gars random aux intérêts divers. RT=signets Anti-haine, sauf pour les castors. Random dude with random interests. RTs=bookmarks. Anti-hate.

Canada Katılım Mart 2013
1.4K Takip Edilen392 Takipçiler
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Paul - 🇺🇦😷 ⚜️ ⚜️ ⚜️
Gotta wonder if monkeypox isn't taking advantage of covid-induced immune weakening of some kind to spread in a way it never could before when faced mostly with intact immune systems.
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Paul - 🇺🇦😷 ⚜️ ⚜️ ⚜️
@_JordanDecker The team just gave a mid-second rounder to get him, so I guess you should get used to seeing him out there until the end of next season, though I hope he'll be kept to a defensive 4th line role when next season's lineup is set up.
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Jordan Decker
Jordan Decker@_JordanDecker·
@Ing30m I don’t care to watch Danault play another game in a Habs jersey if we’re being honest lol. He’s good for faceoffs, but that’s about it.
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Jordan Decker
Jordan Decker@_JordanDecker·
Signing Texier to an extension and trading for Danault has created a log jam of forwards. We got Hage coming real soon, and guys in Laval looking to graduate to the big club next season(Beck, F.Xhekaj)… Body’s are gonna need to be moved out this summer, and not just Patty Laine.
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RIP the playoffs 2014-2025🥀
RIP the playoffs 2014-2025🥀@ncsplayoffs2026·
@_JordanDecker @Ing30m Nobody is taking Josh or Brendan’s contract this teams window doesn’t open until 2027 I don’t understand why people don’t realize that. This and next season are just fun while we wait to be a legit contender unless Kent can pull some wizardry
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Jordan Decker
Jordan Decker@_JordanDecker·
@Ing30m I know, but we shouldn’t wait that long to move some of those guys out if we got the option. I’d be looking at trying to get someone to take Danault this summer for sure.
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Marcus Rubius
Marcus Rubius@MarcusRubiusPAX·
@OJoelsen For now. He just needed to shift the Overton windown. Now greenland is on the table.
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Orla Joelsen
Orla Joelsen@OJoelsen·
A sincere thank you to all countries that have supported the Kingdom of Denmark militarily, thereby helping to prevent a military takeover of Greenland by the President of the United States. Sincerely, Greenland 🇬🇱
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Paul - 🇺🇦😷 ⚜️ ⚜️ ⚜️
@gator_gum I'm speechless that so many are surprised that the "defense exercises" that many European countries used as an excuse to have soldiers in Greenland weren't seen as the transparent excuse they were. Seemed clear to me it was to stop the US from just grabbing Greenland unopposed.
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Gator⚡Gum
Gator⚡Gum@gator_gum·
I'm absolutely speechless.
Orla Joelsen@OJoelsen

Denmark prepared for a possible U.S. attack: Flew blood supplies to Greenland and planned to blow up runways Key sources in Denmark and Europe are now revealing for the first time what happened during the most critical days, when Donald Trump threatened to take Greenland “the hard way.” When Danish soldiers were rapidly deployed to Greenland in January this year, they brought explosives with them. The plan was to destroy runways in Nuuk and Kangerlussuaq to prevent American military aircraft from landing troops on the island, should the U.S. president ultimately decide to seize Greenland by force. They also transported blood supplies from Danish blood banks so wounded personnel could be treated in case of combat. This is reported by DR, which over the past year has spoken with central sources in the Danish government, top military officers, and high-ranking officials and intelligence sources in Denmark, France, and Germany. All sources have played—and continue to play—key roles in the international crisis triggered by the United States’ demand for control over Greenland. Together, the sources describe an unprecedented year marked by sleepless nights. None of them had concrete intelligence of specific American attack plans against Greenland. Still, many feared in January that the historically important ally, the United States, could attack at any moment. At the same time, Denmark reached out to its European allies, leading to closer cooperation. “With the Greenland crisis, Europe realized once and for all that we must be able to handle our own security,” said a French senior official involved in the intense period. A rapid-response force consisting of Danish, French, German, Norwegian, and Swedish soldiers was first deployed to Nuuk and Kangerlussuaq. Shortly after, a main force followed, including: -Soldiers from the Danish Dragoon Regiment in Holstebro -Elite troops from the Jaeger Corps -French alpine troops trained for cold and mountainous warfare At the same time, Danish fighter jets and a French naval vessel were sent to the North Atlantic. According to several sources, the goal of having multinational troops on the ground was to ensure that any U.S. attempt to take Greenland would require a large-scale hostile action—thereby deterring such an attempt. “We have not been in such a situation since April 1940,” said a Danish defense source, referring to the days before Denmark’s occupation during World War II. Unlike in 1940, when Denmark chose not to resist militarily, the government and defense leadership this time decided—after extensive confidential discussions—to take the opposite approach: If the U.S. attempted an attack, Danish forces would be armed and ready to fight. Danish F-35 fighter jets deployed north were also fully armed. All this despite the understanding that Denmark could not realistically withstand a U.S. military attack. “The cost for the U.S. had to be raised. The U.S. would have to carry out a hostile act to take Greenland,” said a senior Danish defense source. Source: DR

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NdyRoo
NdyRoo@ndyRoo2·
@Microinteracti1 @davidfrum Trump didn’t ask because the US needs help; He asked to offer Europe a seat at the table when Iran’s new government is established.
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David Frum
David Frum@davidfrum·
If you wonder why Europeans flinch from helping US in Gulf - in January, NATO allies were seriously preparing for a US sneak attack on Greenland, planning to blow up runways to prevent a Trump re-enactment of Putin's failed strike on Kyiv.
Orla Joelsen@OJoelsen

Denmark prepared for a possible U.S. attack: Flew blood supplies to Greenland and planned to blow up runways Key sources in Denmark and Europe are now revealing for the first time what happened during the most critical days, when Donald Trump threatened to take Greenland “the hard way.” When Danish soldiers were rapidly deployed to Greenland in January this year, they brought explosives with them. The plan was to destroy runways in Nuuk and Kangerlussuaq to prevent American military aircraft from landing troops on the island, should the U.S. president ultimately decide to seize Greenland by force. They also transported blood supplies from Danish blood banks so wounded personnel could be treated in case of combat. This is reported by DR, which over the past year has spoken with central sources in the Danish government, top military officers, and high-ranking officials and intelligence sources in Denmark, France, and Germany. All sources have played—and continue to play—key roles in the international crisis triggered by the United States’ demand for control over Greenland. Together, the sources describe an unprecedented year marked by sleepless nights. None of them had concrete intelligence of specific American attack plans against Greenland. Still, many feared in January that the historically important ally, the United States, could attack at any moment. At the same time, Denmark reached out to its European allies, leading to closer cooperation. “With the Greenland crisis, Europe realized once and for all that we must be able to handle our own security,” said a French senior official involved in the intense period. A rapid-response force consisting of Danish, French, German, Norwegian, and Swedish soldiers was first deployed to Nuuk and Kangerlussuaq. Shortly after, a main force followed, including: -Soldiers from the Danish Dragoon Regiment in Holstebro -Elite troops from the Jaeger Corps -French alpine troops trained for cold and mountainous warfare At the same time, Danish fighter jets and a French naval vessel were sent to the North Atlantic. According to several sources, the goal of having multinational troops on the ground was to ensure that any U.S. attempt to take Greenland would require a large-scale hostile action—thereby deterring such an attempt. “We have not been in such a situation since April 1940,” said a Danish defense source, referring to the days before Denmark’s occupation during World War II. Unlike in 1940, when Denmark chose not to resist militarily, the government and defense leadership this time decided—after extensive confidential discussions—to take the opposite approach: If the U.S. attempted an attack, Danish forces would be armed and ready to fight. Danish F-35 fighter jets deployed north were also fully armed. All this despite the understanding that Denmark could not realistically withstand a U.S. military attack. “The cost for the U.S. had to be raised. The U.S. would have to carry out a hostile act to take Greenland,” said a senior Danish defense source. Source: DR

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Kathy
Kathy@gallymeroreboot·
@CJ_Casselman I get that part complicates things, but can’t help feel bad for him
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Kathy
Kathy@gallymeroreboot·
Patrik Laine is not being treated fairly right now in my opinion I do not care if he’s not the best defensively, he not only helped the team get into the playoffs last season, but he’s helped the youth as described by Reinbacher a few months ago #GoHabsGo
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KnowledgeShark
KnowledgeShark@knowledge_shark·
@Marcute22 It's this just a scalability issue? You have only so much screen real-estate and eye-ball time to see your feed, and if you are following 1000's, something has to aggregate. Thus the "algorithm". It had to be done to scale.
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Terry Marc
Terry Marc@Marcute22·
Longtime users are frustrated with X because it no longer works the way it used to. Back in the early days of Twitter, your reach was simple and direct. If you had 5,000 or 10,000,20,000 followers, your posts were delivered to them in real time. It was a true chronological feed—your tweets showed up in the order you posted them, and your audience actually saw your content. The “old” Twitter (pre-2016) was built around that real-time experience. Your voice reached the people who chose to follow you, without interference. Today, that’s no longer the case. X relies on an algorithm-driven, engagement-based feed, meaning even your own followers may never see your posts unless the system decides to prioritize them. That shift—from a guaranteed audience to an unpredictable algorithm—is why so many longtime users feel frustrated and disconnected.
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vas
vas@vasuman·
As someone who worked at Reality Labs: the Metaverse had real legs but was obliterated by middle management completely out of touch with how young people actually use technology. I built a V1 tool that game developers genuinely needed, and the moment it was done, it got shipped to a team in London (to die), and I was reassigned to a "higher-priority project" that zero developers asked for. Multiply that by every team, and you'll understand why this never took off yet cost 80 billion.
Polymarket@Polymarket

JUST IN: Meta announces they'll be shutting down the Metaverse, after pouring $80,000,000,000.00 into the project.

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HerculePoirot
HerculePoirot@LauraLynn1960·
@SatoshEh @OJoelsen No one with an IQ over 50 would think that Trump was going to attack Greenland. Good Lord…. TDS is a mental illness.
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Orla Joelsen
Orla Joelsen@OJoelsen·
Denmark prepared for a possible U.S. attack: Flew blood supplies to Greenland and planned to blow up runways Key sources in Denmark and Europe are now revealing for the first time what happened during the most critical days, when Donald Trump threatened to take Greenland “the hard way.” When Danish soldiers were rapidly deployed to Greenland in January this year, they brought explosives with them. The plan was to destroy runways in Nuuk and Kangerlussuaq to prevent American military aircraft from landing troops on the island, should the U.S. president ultimately decide to seize Greenland by force. They also transported blood supplies from Danish blood banks so wounded personnel could be treated in case of combat. This is reported by DR, which over the past year has spoken with central sources in the Danish government, top military officers, and high-ranking officials and intelligence sources in Denmark, France, and Germany. All sources have played—and continue to play—key roles in the international crisis triggered by the United States’ demand for control over Greenland. Together, the sources describe an unprecedented year marked by sleepless nights. None of them had concrete intelligence of specific American attack plans against Greenland. Still, many feared in January that the historically important ally, the United States, could attack at any moment. At the same time, Denmark reached out to its European allies, leading to closer cooperation. “With the Greenland crisis, Europe realized once and for all that we must be able to handle our own security,” said a French senior official involved in the intense period. A rapid-response force consisting of Danish, French, German, Norwegian, and Swedish soldiers was first deployed to Nuuk and Kangerlussuaq. Shortly after, a main force followed, including: -Soldiers from the Danish Dragoon Regiment in Holstebro -Elite troops from the Jaeger Corps -French alpine troops trained for cold and mountainous warfare At the same time, Danish fighter jets and a French naval vessel were sent to the North Atlantic. According to several sources, the goal of having multinational troops on the ground was to ensure that any U.S. attempt to take Greenland would require a large-scale hostile action—thereby deterring such an attempt. “We have not been in such a situation since April 1940,” said a Danish defense source, referring to the days before Denmark’s occupation during World War II. Unlike in 1940, when Denmark chose not to resist militarily, the government and defense leadership this time decided—after extensive confidential discussions—to take the opposite approach: If the U.S. attempted an attack, Danish forces would be armed and ready to fight. Danish F-35 fighter jets deployed north were also fully armed. All this despite the understanding that Denmark could not realistically withstand a U.S. military attack. “The cost for the U.S. had to be raised. The U.S. would have to carry out a hostile act to take Greenland,” said a senior Danish defense source. Source: DR
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Paul - 🇺🇦😷 ⚜️ ⚜️ ⚜️
@StuCowan1 Are there players who know they were on the trading block, and maybe even heard they were part of the last-minute aborted deal? I figure within the room, people know things, even if none of it is quotable or on the record in any way. Does this affect their morale and play?
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Stu Cowan
Stu Cowan@StuCowan1·
GOT A QUESTION ABOUT THE HABS? If you have a question about the Canadiens you'd like me to answer in my weekly #Habs Mailbag this weekend you can post it below or send an email to montrealcanadiens@postmedia.com.
Stu Cowan tweet media
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Nico Reznick 🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍⚧️🇪🇺🌍
@1goodtern There are so many community dramas/schisms, you may've caught a block because of a Twitter controversy you knew nothing about and were only peripherally involved in, if at all. Several CC accounts have blocked me, even though we seem aligned in values because of such squabbles.
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tern
tern@1goodtern·
If anyone can explain to me why this person has blocked me and yet is sharing my threads enthusiastically, then I'm all ears. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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Mitch Gallo
Mitch Gallo@MitchyGallo·
Here are my three takeaways from tonight’s 3-2 Montreal Canadiens win over the Boston Bruins, brought to you by Snap Bar Sportif in Rigaud. 1 – Anderson plays big Josh Anderson always seems to come to life when space on the ice has to be earned and there’s extra emotion in the building. At this point with Montreal, he’s more of a role player, with most of his work coming on the penalty kill, and any offense he provides is a bonus. But he still brings a ton of value and is the type of player you circle heading into the playoffs. Anderson might not be impactful night in and night out over an 82-game season, but he shows his worth when it matters most. One of the truest things ever said by former Canadiens GM Marc Bergevin was, “Some players get you to the playoffs, and some players get you through the playoffs.” There might not be a better example of that on this team than Anderson. 2 – Dobes does the job… what next? Jakub Dobes had another really strong performance, and it’s setting up a legitimate battle in goal for Montreal down the stretch. Dobes and Jacob Fowler play very different styles and took very different paths to the NHL, which makes the decision even more interesting. This was Dobes’ first career start against Boston, and he was more than up to the task. He made several key saves on high-danger chances, finishing with 3.06 goals saved above expected. Now the question becomes: what’s next? You’d think Fowler gets the start Thursday against the Detroit Red Wings he’s not here to sit on the bench. But at the same time, it would be tempting to go right back to Dobes given how well he played tonight. 3 – Montreal is clearly superior to Boston Montreal is the deeper, more talented, and better team than Boston and nights like this reinforce it. Yet somehow, the Bruins have managed to hang around all season. Jeremy Swayman has had a strong bounce-back year and could get Vezina consideration. Charlie McAvoy will likely receive some Norris Trophy votes, and David Pastrnak remains one of the league’s elite players. But beyond that, there just isn’t enough there. It’s hard to figure out exactly what Boston’s plan is moving forward, as they seem stuck in the middle. That said, in today’s NHL, it doesn’t take much to turn things around quickly. @tsn690
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Paul - 🇺🇦😷 ⚜️ ⚜️ ⚜️
@geoverzee You don't get to decide if another pandemic is going to start, or if Covid returns in full strength. You just get to decide how you react. Not reacting to the world changing doesn't change what's actually happening. Putting your head in the sand never works.
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💡Reactive🔨
💡Reactive🔨@Reactively·
@tiredguineapig On one hand, correct. On the other, very likely one reason people won't mask at all is because they're pretending it's over when they fear it's forever (including forever masking) and restaurants contribute to forever.
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Bev 🇨🇦
Bev 🇨🇦@Garnet_2203·
According to Health Canada:    •   Over 96% of MAID recipients had a reasonably foreseeable natural death    •   Most had cancer, advanced organ failure, or severe degenerative diseases    •   The average age is over 75 This is not a system targeting the vulnerable it’s one used primarily by elderly Canadians facing unbearable suffering. As for safeguards:    •   MAID requires independent assessments by two clinicians    •   Patients must give informed consent    •   There are mandatory waiting periods (unless death is imminent)    •   Cases are federally tracked Anecdotal cases don’t override data. Framing MAID as reckless or out of control ignores why it exists: ➡️ To give people dignity and autonomy at the end of life ➡️ To relieve suffering when medicine can no longer help An “honest conversation” means including the full facts not just fear-based narratives.
Dr. Leslyn Lewis@LeslynLewis

In less than a decade since the legalization of Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID), Canada is on track to surpass 100,000 assisted deaths. When this policy was introduced, Canadians were told it would be a last resort, reserved for those nearing the end of life, with strict safeguards in place. Families are now speaking out about cases where assessments appeared rushed, loved ones were not informed of final decisions, and safeguards did not seem to function as intended. Canada must be able to have an honest conversation about MAID, and how we support and protect vulnerable Canadians. nationalpost.com/news/families-…

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@66___Parisienne
@66___Parisienne@66__Pontiac·
@RayJJJFFF @mark_slapinski These fucking retards that think the US doesn't protect Canada by its very existence and proximity to us....... If you put an ocean where the United States is, it wouldn't be long before either Russia or China or India took us over....
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Mark Slapinski
Mark Slapinski@mark_slapinski·
Canada helped America in Afghanistan after 9/11. Trump repaid Canada by starting a trade war, disrespecting our veterans, and threatening our sovereignty. For Trump, loyalty is a ONE WAY STREET. Learn more: youtube.com/shorts/I7jtenb…
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