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Kuhlen (ኩሕለን)
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Kuhlen (ኩሕለን) retweetledi

@Esau_Matsiko Nigerian English Be Like
Jesus=G source
Husband =Ozzband
South Africa =Sort Of free car
Concern=Conson
Mother=More Door
Money =More Nee
Shut up =shotop
Brother=Broader
Uncle =Oncle
Look at it =Lokatit
Arsenal =Asso Nal
0831831183=Zero aids tree won aids tree won won aids tree
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@TrustWallet Like deciding where to go, what to eat ,how to eat . 100 percent control as your body.
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Last call 👀
$1000 up for grabs. 10 best replies. 10 winners.
Simply explain self custody on the tweet below.
Winners announced in 24 hours.
Trust Wallet@TrustWallet
What is self-custody? Explain it like you’re talking to your grandma. No jargon. No fluff. Just vibes. 10 winners split $1,000. Best replies take the prize! 💰 Good luck! To Enter: 1️⃣ Simplify Self-Custody 2️⃣ Tag a friend 3️⃣ Repost this tweet
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@Upwork Why you dont help us while we are tryna do the job instead of posting memes
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@Upwork Why is the support system not helping us with blocked account
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@Upwork Fix our account baby we got blocked for no reason we suppose to work as well 😁😁
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@Upwork How to access blocked account just try to dm me pls the support didnt work for me accidentally i got blocked
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@Upwork How to fix blocked account 🙄 literally even i didnt start anything
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@Upwork Yo stop posting nothing here answer our question tell ur admin to pick up their phone
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@Upwork There is no way i can ask in this link since it keep ask me to log in into my account.
I already put my social and automatically get banned for nothing 😁😁
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@Kuhlen111 Hi there! Please reach out to our support team for assistance at spr.ly/6005f6j0b.
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@Kuhlen111 @elonmusk The image-to-video feature in the Grok app is available to all users without a subscription. Download it for free on iOS or Android to turn your photos into short videos. For the integrated version in the X app, X Premium+ is required.
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And the @Grok app can turn any images on your phone into a video.
This is by far the biggest use for most people. Show friends how to do it!
Elon Musk@elonmusk
Long tap on any image and turn it into a video in ~17 seconds
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Vision & voice of @Grok work like magic!
Download Grok now & try it for free:
apps.apple.com/us/app/grok/id…
tetsuo@tetsuoai
Download Grok4 from the Apple App Store it has video and voice mode!
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I’ve always found introducing myself to new people a bit tricky, especially when I intentionally dodge the question of where I’m from. It’s like, the second I meet someone, they hit me with, "So, where are you originally from?" Broh 😫 that question, it’s a mixed bag. Sometimes it feels like heaven, when I have the time and space to explain my story. Other times, huh, man—it’s pure hell, especially when it’s not a good time to dive into the details.
See, I’m from Tigray, and that simple answer often sparks a follow-up: "Where’s Tigray?" I used to get a kick out of flipping it back on them, like, "What, you don’t know Tigray?" Then I’d quickly add, "It’s in Africa," before they could respond.😊 Some people would whip out their phones and Google it right in front of me, and bam 🙉—Tigray pops up as part of Ethiopia. That’s when I’d shake my head and say, "Nope, not anymore." I’d tell them it used to be of Ethiopia, but not now.
When I had the chance, I’d go deeper. I’d explain why I refuse to call myself Ethiopian anymore. Sometimes, I’d pull out my phone and show them videos—graphic ones, with a warning, of course—and ask, "Would you claim to be part of a country that did this to your people?" The Tigray War, the siege, the atrocities committed by Ethiopian, Eritrean, and Amhara forces—it’s personal. My family’s whereabouts were unknown during that time. The pain was raw. If the people who killed us no longer see us as part of their nation, why should I claim it?
Reactions varied. Some folks brushed it off, like, "Oh, it’s Africa, that stuff happens," which honestly made my stomach churn. Others got it—they really listened and understood the weight of what I was saying.
I remember this one time at a cultural exchange event. People were sharing what makes their country unique, and a classmate from Africa proudly declared, "Ethiopia, the only uncolonized country in Africa!" All eyes turned to me, and I could feel my chest tighten. I wasn’t about to let that slide. "Yeah, yeah," I said, "We defeated the Italians Gurae Gundet, and finally at Adwa, Tigray, near Axum, y’know, by the way the Ark of the Covenant is in Axum, Tigray." I’m not sure if I added the Da'amat thing too 🤣. I just threw in extra details to steer the conversation away from Ethiopia. My trick? Pile on so much information that people get lost in it. It works like a charm 😋. But honestly, hearing "Ethiopia" in that moment stung. It brought the pain of what my people were going through!
My strategy has always been to distance myself from the whole Ethiopia thing. I used to speak Tigrigna to any Amharic speaker, and I spoke Amharic to Eritreans. Any of those conversations? One minute felt like an hour.
The worst is when Ethiopians say stuff like, "በጣም ያሳዝናል፣ ግን እኮ ህወሓትም ልክ አላደረገም" ("It's so sad, but TPLF wasn’t innocent either”)😟. That line makes my blood boil. Going door to door, killing civilians—that’s not something you justify. Ever. When people bring up the TPLF thing, I either want to fight or run. To me, it feels like they’re using it as a shield to downplay the atrocities. It’s not just politics; it’s personal.
Today, I see Tigrayans who survived #TigrayGenocide—the horrors of the Evil Triple Axis (Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Amhara) being sabotaged, harmed, even killed by their fellow Tegaru. I see division among us, driven by power-hungry individuals. I see abnormal things becoming the new normal. Isn't painful?
Back when I was in school, I had to introduce myself all the time—monthly presentations, group projects, you name it. I was fiery, passionate about rejecting Ethiopia at every turn. But now? I wonder if I’d still have that same fire. Life’s different outside the classroom. The question of where I’m from doesn’t come up as often, but when it does, will I still feel that same urge to push back? I don’t know. The pain remains, even deeper, when those meant to heal us inflict wounds worse than the enemy's!
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