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🎧Maii 🤍⏳

🎧Maii 🤍⏳

@Mairarin

Viendo K•C-dramas | opinando de lo que sea

EN EL OMBLIGO DE LA LUNA Katılım Ağustos 2009
674 Takip Edilen724 Takipçiler
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Global Statistics
Global Statistics@Globalstats11·
World's Top 20 Biggest Economies in 2026 1. 🇨🇳 China - $43.49 Trillion 2. 🇺🇸 United States - $31.82 Trillion 3. 🇮🇳 India - $19.14 Trillion 4. 🇷🇺 Russia - $7.34 Trillion 5. 🇯🇵 Japan - $6.92 Trillion 6. 🇩🇪 Germany - $6.32 Trillion 7. 🇮🇩 Indonesia - $5.36 Trillion 8. 🇧🇷 Brazil - $5.16 Trillion 9. 🇫🇷 France - $4.66 Trillion 10. 🇬🇧 United Kingdom - $4.59 Trillion 11. 🇹🇷 Turkey - $3.98 Trillion 12. 🇮🇹 Italy - $3.82 Trillion 13. 🇲🇽 Mexico - $3.55 Trillion 14. 🇰🇷 South Korea - $3.49 Trillion 15. 🇪🇸 Spain - $2.94 Trillion 16. 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia - $2.85 Trillion 17. 🇨🇦 Canada - $2.81 Trillion 18. 🇪🇬 Egypt - $2.53 Trillion 19. 🇳🇬 Nigeria - $2.39 Trillion 20. 🇵🇱 Poland - $2.12 Trillion Note: GDP Figures Based on PPP (Purchasing Power Parity) Source: IMF
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ESPN.com.mx
ESPN.com.mx@ESPNmx·
¡UN DÍA QUE NUNCA OLVIDARÁ! 🥹 ❤️ El momento cuando Gabriela Jaquez es selección por Chicago Sky 🏀 👏 La emoción de su familia al ver que la mexicana llega a la WNBA 🙏
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Christian Camacho
Christian Camacho@ccamacho88·
Los tuiteros venezolanos, colombianos y argentinos que viven en EE.UU. Primero los pusieron a aplaudir como focas el bloqueo del estrecho. Después a pelearse con el papá y ahora a aceptar que Trump es Dios. Los traen de mascotas. No tienen un ápice de dignidad.
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Forbes México
Forbes México@Forbes_Mexico·
✅🇲🇽 El 70% de mexicanos, siete de cada 10, aprueban la gestión de la presidenta de México, Claudia Sheinbaum, según la encuesta mensual del diario El Financiero.forbes.com.mx/el-70-de-ciuda…
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Ben Norton
Ben Norton@BenjaminNorton·
Amazing speech. Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum, one of the most popular leaders in the world, condemns the past right-wing, US-backed regimes that bailed out rich elites, privatized public infrastructure, handed over natural resources, and betrayed the working class.
Samuel 🇲🇽@resisres

🇲🇽 CLAUDIA SHEINBAUM: “Did they help the people who lost their homes or businesses? No. They helped the bankers. The big businessmen. And made those private debts of those at the very top, into public debt.”

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Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani
If corporations allow you to sign up with one click, you should be able to cancel with one click too. Subscription traps, whether from an app or gym membership, are just another way corporations take advantage of working people.  We've already put hundreds of companies on notice. This week, we proposed a rule that would make NYC a national leader in cracking down on abusive practices that nickel-and-dime New Yorkers.
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🇲🇽 Desde Olimpia MX 🇲🇽
#Voleibol 🏐 Como aficionados del voleibol, qué gusto nos ha dado ver estadios llenos durante toda la liguilla de la LVP 🇲🇽 Costó un poco durante fase regular, pero al final la gente respondió
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Informa Cosmos
Informa Cosmos@InformaCosmos·
Así de ven cientos de mariposas monarca en Michoacán, México.
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Papa León XIV
Papa León XIV@Pontifex_es·
Dios no bendice ningún conflicto. Quien es discípulo de Cristo, príncipe de la paz, nunca se pone del lado de quienes ayer empuñaban la espada y hoy lanzan bombas. No serán las acciones militares las que creen espacios de libertad o tiempos de #paz, sino solo la promoción paciente de la convivencia y del diálogo entre los pueblos.
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More Perfect Union
More Perfect Union@MorePerfectUS·
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has issued a decree to establish a Universal Health Service, saying the objective is for any citizen to be able to attend any health institution and be guaranteed full and free coverage throughout the national system.
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 Missy Ulan
 Missy Ulan@lala_raine·
There are many amazing scenes last night but this one will stay with me for a while. I love a head to head bet 2 strong women characters. A very well played and strong exchange bet Seol-ah and Chair Kim. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 #ParkMinYoung serving the looks and the lines! 🙌🏼 #SirensKiss
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Señora Católica
Señora Católica@SenoraCatolica·
Tomen nota PECADORES.
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Dios
Dios@diostuitero·
Acaban de llegar unos romanos, con cara de pocos amigos. Imagino que es porque Italia no se ha clasificado para el Mundial.
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Dios
Dios@diostuitero·
Me llevan detenido.
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ArchaeoHistories
ArchaeoHistories@histories_arch·
Tulum was a walled Maya city built on 12-meter cliffs along the Caribbean coast of Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula, serving as a major port and trade hub during the late Postclassic period. The city likely took its name from the Yucatec Maya word for fence or wall, though it may also have been known as Zama, meaning City of Dawn, owing to its east-facing position toward the sunrise. Tulum reached its peak prominence between the 13th and 15th centuries, making it one of the last great cities built and inhabited by the Maya before European contact. The first Europeans to spot Tulum were members of Juan de Grijalva's Spanish expedition in 1518, with crew member Juan Díaz recording the earliest known mention of the site. Tulum's massive defensive wall averaged 3 to 5 meters in height, stretched roughly 400 meters along the seaward side, and featured watchtowers at its southwest and northwest corners. The city was strategically positioned to take advantage of both land and sea trade routes, making it one of the most important commercial centers in the Maya world. Obsidian traded at Tulum was sourced from Ixtepeque in northern Guatemala, nearly 700 kilometers away, illustrating the remarkable reach of its trade network. Other goods passing through Tulum included copper artifacts from the Mexican highlands, ceramics, incense burners, gold objects, feathers, salt, and textiles from across Central Mexico and Central America. The site's most iconic structure, El Castillo, stands 7.5 meters tall and was built in stages atop an earlier colonnaded building, with a small shrine believed to have served as a navigational beacon for incoming trading canoes. The Temple of the Frescoes functioned as a solar observatory and features striking murals in the Mixteca-Puebla style, along with niched figurines of the Maya diving god along its facade. In 2016, underwater archaeologists exploring a cenote cave system near Tulum discovered a female skeleton estimated to be at least 9,900 years old, bearing skull injuries and signs of a bacterial disease related to syphilis. The find, known as Chan Hol 3, suggested the presence of at least two morphologically distinct population groups inhabiting the region during the transition from the Pleistocene to the Holocene. Maya inhabitants continued to occupy Tulum for about 70 years after Spanish explorers first arrived in Mexico, before the city was ultimately abandoned by the end of the 16th century. Today, Tulum is the third most-visited archaeological site in all of Mexico, drawing over 2.2 million visitors in 2017, behind only Teotihuacan and Chichen Itza. The site's whitest-sand beaches have been ranked among the finest in the world, with researchers measuring Tulum's sand just 1.4 points off the purest white shade out of more than 200 beaches studied globally. Despite its popularity, the rapid growth of tourism has raised serious environmental concerns, including a 2018 documentary called The Dark Side of Tulum that exposed the ecological damage caused by the local tourist industry. Tulum's role as a thriving Maya trade port had lasting consequences for the archaeological understanding of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, revealing just how sophisticated and far-reaching Maya commercial networks truly were, connecting coastal cities to highland civilizations across hundreds of kilometers. Its eventual abandonment following Spanish contact became one of countless examples of how European exploration disrupted and ultimately dismantled Indigenous urban life across the Americas. Today, Tulum's dual legacy as both an archaeological treasure and a booming tourist destination highlights the ongoing tension between cultural preservation and economic development, a challenge that continues to shape how ancient sites across the world are managed and protected. #archaeohistories
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ArchaeoHistories
ArchaeoHistories@histories_arch·
Teotihuacan was one of the most remarkable cities of the ancient world, located about 40km northeast of modern-day Mexico City in the Valley of Mexico. Founded around 100 BC, the city grew from scattered villages into a massive urban center covering roughly eight square miles at its peak. By the first half of the first millennium CE, Teotihuacan had become the largest city in the Americas, with a population estimated between 125,000 and 250,000 people. The city's name, given by the later Aztecs, translates roughly as "birthplace of the gods," though some scholars now believe it may have originally been called Teohuacan, meaning "City of the Sun." Its most iconic structures, the Pyramid of the Sun and the Pyramid of the Moon, were constructed during a period of explosive growth between 1-350 CE. The Pyramid of the Sun stands as the third-largest pyramid in the world, with a base measuring over 219 by 231 meters and reaching a height of 65 meters. These massive monuments were connected by the Avenue of the Dead, a grand central thoroughfare roughly 40 meters wide and 4 kilometers long. Teotihuacan was a true metropolis, housing an estimated 2,000 apartment compounds and containing workshops for potters, jewelers, and obsidian craftsmen. Obsidian was the city's primary trade commodity, and Teotihuacan held a virtual monopoly on its production and distribution across the broader Mesoamerican region. The city was strikingly multicultural, drawing migrants from Oaxaca, the Gulf Coast, and the Maya region, with distinct ethnic neighborhoods identified through archaeological and isotopic testing. Unlike contemporary civilizations, Teotihuacan left no evidence of a single ruling king, leading scholars to theorize it was governed through some form of collective leadership. The city's influence stretched hundreds of miles, with its military and cultural reach extending as far as Tikal in Guatemala and Copan in Honduras. In 378 CE, a warlord connected to Teotihuacan culture conquered Tikal, deposing its Maya ruler and installing a new dynasty loyal to Teotihuacan's power structure. Religion was central to daily life, with at least nine recognized deities, and human sacrifice practiced as a ritual offering during the construction and dedication of major buildings. At its artistic height between 450 and 650 CE, Teotihuacan's muralists produced works that some scholars have compared in quality and ambition to painters of Renaissance Florence. The city's decline began around 550 CE, likely triggered by prolonged drought connected to global climate disruptions, possibly caused by the eruption of the Ilopango volcano in El Salvador. Archaeological evidence suggests the city was not destroyed by foreign invaders but rather consumed by internal unrest, with burning concentrated on elite structures along the Avenue of the Dead. After its collapse, surrounding centers like Cholula and Xochicalco competed to fill the power vacuum, each borrowing and adapting Teotihuacan's architectural styles and iconography. In 2003, archaeologists discovered a sealed tunnel beneath the Temple of the Feathered Serpent, which yielded over 75,000 artifact fragments, including jade statues, pyrite-covered spheres, wooden masks, and miniature landscapes filled with liquid mercury. The site was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987 and remains one of Mexico's most visited archaeological destinations, welcoming over 1.3 million visitors in 2024. #archaeohistories
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Univ_Espectaculos
Univ_Espectaculos@Univ_espect·
¡Meryl Streep y Anne Hathaway en México! Así presentaron las actrices la cinta "El diablo viste a la moda 2" Video: Marlem Suárez/ EL UNIVERSAL
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Anne Hathaway Archives 👠
Anne Hathaway Archives 👠@ahathawayfiles·
Anne Hathaway and Meryl Streep at 'The Devil Wears Prada 2' press event at La Casa Azul in Mexico City earlier today. 20thcenturystudiosla | Instagram.
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Anne Hathaway Brasil 👠
Anne Hathaway Brasil 👠@annehathawaybr·
MEU DEUS!! Mais alguns vídeos de Anne Hathaway e Meryl Streep juntas no evento de O Diabo Veste Prada 2 na Cidade do México.
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