Milos

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Milos

@Mike54official

Katılım Haziran 2009
61 Takip Edilen73 Takipçiler
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Milos
Milos@Mike54official·
With Anastacia lately. 💜
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Milos
Milos@Mike54official·
This era of anti-intellectualism is getting really tiring.
Variety@Variety

#Halsey says she "actually got so shy" when Julianne Moore walked onto the carpet at Kering’s #WomenInMotion Dinner: When asked to reveal her favorite Moore performance, Halsey said, "That's really hard. I'm actually scared to answer, because if I answer wrong, the internet's going to flame me."

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François Fleuret
François Fleuret@francoisfleuret·
I have always been pro-ukraine and reasonably optimistic about the situation, but I would have never imagined in my wildest dreams that (1) Ukraine would be that good on all axis, and (2) that Russia would suck so much. It's amazing.
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Milos@Mike54official·
@gabrielmahalem I recently saw her almost running down the stairs in shopping mall…day before she was carried around on the stage lol
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Milos
Milos@Mike54official·
@Zhane_Star It’s mostly white people though, one way or another
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💫AstralWingz💫
💫AstralWingz💫@Zhane_Star·
I don’t trust people who make their race their entire identity
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ً@artfuIchaos·
Intelligent people are harder to impress. They read intentions, not gestures.
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Hillary Clinton
Hillary Clinton@HillaryClinton·
Here are the facts: People have always had and will always have abortions in all 50 states. Abortion pills are safe, effective, and have been used by millions of people. No court or politician can change either of those realities.
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Pop Tingz
Pop Tingz@PopTingz·
King Charles III has announced a ban on LGBTQIA+ conversion therapy and classified the practice as abusive.
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Milos
Milos@Mike54official·
@DEADLINE There is not such a thing as ”instant cult classic”. Todays american film critics 🤡
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Deadline
Deadline@DEADLINE·
‘Teenage Sex And Death At Camp Miasma’ Review: Jane Schoenbrun’s Psychedelic Slasher Is An Instant Cult Classic – Cannes Film Festival deadline.com/2026/05/teenag…
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Milos
Milos@Mike54official·
@NaimLeoBesiri Eno pre neki dan neki momci od 20ak godina u redu u Madridu psuju i je*u im mamu jer kako oni nas Srbe tretiraju i gledaju. 🤡🤡🤡 Ne vredi ovde bilo kome objasnjavati.
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Naim Leo BEŠIRI
Naim Leo BEŠIRI@NaimLeoBesiri·
Putnici iz Srbije koji narednih meseci budu ulazili u EU i Šengen treba da se pripreme za novu realnost zbog uvođenja EES sistema, odnosno elektronske evidencije ulazaka i izlazaka iz EU. To u praksi znači dodatne provere na granicama, fotografisanje, uzimanje otisaka prstiju i duža zadržavanja, posebno u letnjim mesecima primene dok se sistem ne uigra. Naoružajte se strpljenjem, dođite znatno ranije na aerodrom ili granični prelaz i računajte da čekanje može trajati od nekoliko minuta do više sati, zavisno od destinacije, dana i opterećenosti prelaza. Praktično, proverite da li vam pasoš važi najmanje tri do šest meseci, imajte rezervacije hotela, povratne karte i putno osiguranje pri ruci, napunite telefon i ponesite vodu, lekove i osnovne stvari ako putujete automobilom ili autobusom. Ako prvi put ulazite nakon aktivacije EES-a, očekujte da procedura traje duže jer se biometrijski podaci prvi put unose u sistem. Posebno je važno da ljudi ne ulaze u rasprave sa policijom i carinicima. Ti ljudi nisu donosili političke odluke niti kreirali sistem, već rade posao koji treba da omogući bezbednije i kontrolisanije kretanje stotine miliona putnika kroz Evropu. Za ovo se znalo godinama. Još pre sedam godina bilo je jasno da EU priprema novi režim kontrole granica, a poslednje četiri godine trajale su intenzivne tehničke i političke pripreme za EES. Sve je moglo biti prevenirano da je Srbija danas punopravna članica EU, a ne zemlja koja stoji u čekaonici bez jasnog pravca. Umesto slobodnog prolaza kakav imaju građani država članica, građani Srbije će prolaziti dodatne kontrole i čekanja. Na tome treba da zahvalimo politici Aleksandra Vučića koja je od Srbije napravila evropsko slepo crevo, zaglavljeno između propagande o Evropi i suštinskog udaljavanja od nje. Srećan put ❤️
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Milos
Milos@Mike54official·
@SpaghettiKozak Wizzard of Kremlin and Heated Rivalry have nothing to do with Hollywood production though.
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SK Media
SK Media@SpaghettiKozak·
Fam, I need some help. I'm looking for examples of Hollywood slobbering over russians since 2022. Anora and Heated Rivalry are already noted, as is Wizard of the Kremlin. Thanks in advance.
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Milos
Milos@Mike54official·
@euromaximal Porugal>>>>>>>>>Japan. Also my train was late in Japan and nobody gave a fuck lol
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EuroMaximalist 🇪🇺
EuroMaximalist 🇪🇺@euromaximal·
In Portugal the trains are always late and if you complain they laugh in your face. I’ve never been on a train that arrived on time. If they are 10 minutes late I consider that a victory. Joke of a country.
BSAT Properties@BSAT_Properties

I was on a train in Tokyo. We stopped between stations. Announcement in Japanese, then in English: "We apologize for the delay. We will resume shortly." The delay was maybe 3 minutes. Not a big deal. When the train started moving again, another announcement: "We sincerely apologize for the delay. We were stopped for 3 minutes and 20 seconds. This is unacceptable. Thank you for your patience." Three minutes and twenty seconds. They measured it exactly. And called it unacceptable. When I got off at my stop, there were station staff on the platform bowing and handing out delay certificates. I took one out of curiosity. It was an official document stating that the train had been delayed by 3 minutes and 20 seconds, signed and stamped. The staff member said in English "for your employer. So they know the delay was not your fault." I said I'm a tourist, I don't need it. He looked confused. "But the delay affected you. You deserve an apology." Three minutes. They were treating a three-minute delay like a major incident. Later I mentioned this to a Japanese friend. They said "oh yes, delay certificates are normal. Trains are supposed to be exactly on time. If they are late, they must apologize." I said three minutes isn't late, it's nothing. My friend said "in Japan, three minutes is late. On time means on time. Not approximately on time." They said the train company probably investigated why there was a 3-minute delay. "They will find the cause and fix it so it doesn't happen again." I kept the certificate. It's framed in my apartment now. A reminder that somewhere in the world, people care about three minutes. © 6IX.

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Milos
Milos@Mike54official·
@BSAT_Properties I was on a train in Japan (NEX express NRT to Tokyo) and it took 2 hours instead of 50 minutes and nobody gave a fuck, kissed our feet or killed themselves lol
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BSAT Properties
BSAT Properties@BSAT_Properties·
I was on a train in Tokyo. We stopped between stations. Announcement in Japanese, then in English: "We apologize for the delay. We will resume shortly." The delay was maybe 3 minutes. Not a big deal. When the train started moving again, another announcement: "We sincerely apologize for the delay. We were stopped for 3 minutes and 20 seconds. This is unacceptable. Thank you for your patience." Three minutes and twenty seconds. They measured it exactly. And called it unacceptable. When I got off at my stop, there were station staff on the platform bowing and handing out delay certificates. I took one out of curiosity. It was an official document stating that the train had been delayed by 3 minutes and 20 seconds, signed and stamped. The staff member said in English "for your employer. So they know the delay was not your fault." I said I'm a tourist, I don't need it. He looked confused. "But the delay affected you. You deserve an apology." Three minutes. They were treating a three-minute delay like a major incident. Later I mentioned this to a Japanese friend. They said "oh yes, delay certificates are normal. Trains are supposed to be exactly on time. If they are late, they must apologize." I said three minutes isn't late, it's nothing. My friend said "in Japan, three minutes is late. On time means on time. Not approximately on time." They said the train company probably investigated why there was a 3-minute delay. "They will find the cause and fix it so it doesn't happen again." I kept the certificate. It's framed in my apartment now. A reminder that somewhere in the world, people care about three minutes. © 6IX.
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Milos
Milos@Mike54official·
I was on a train in Japan (NEX express NRT to Tokyo) and it took 2 hours instead of 50 minutes and nobody gave a fuck, kissed our feet or killed themselves lol
BSAT Properties@BSAT_Properties

I was on a train in Tokyo. We stopped between stations. Announcement in Japanese, then in English: "We apologize for the delay. We will resume shortly." The delay was maybe 3 minutes. Not a big deal. When the train started moving again, another announcement: "We sincerely apologize for the delay. We were stopped for 3 minutes and 20 seconds. This is unacceptable. Thank you for your patience." Three minutes and twenty seconds. They measured it exactly. And called it unacceptable. When I got off at my stop, there were station staff on the platform bowing and handing out delay certificates. I took one out of curiosity. It was an official document stating that the train had been delayed by 3 minutes and 20 seconds, signed and stamped. The staff member said in English "for your employer. So they know the delay was not your fault." I said I'm a tourist, I don't need it. He looked confused. "But the delay affected you. You deserve an apology." Three minutes. They were treating a three-minute delay like a major incident. Later I mentioned this to a Japanese friend. They said "oh yes, delay certificates are normal. Trains are supposed to be exactly on time. If they are late, they must apologize." I said three minutes isn't late, it's nothing. My friend said "in Japan, three minutes is late. On time means on time. Not approximately on time." They said the train company probably investigated why there was a 3-minute delay. "They will find the cause and fix it so it doesn't happen again." I kept the certificate. It's framed in my apartment now. A reminder that somewhere in the world, people care about three minutes. © 6IX.

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Milos
Milos@Mike54official·
Moldova ate Greece I’m affraid #Eurovisión
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Milos@Mike54official·
@Bornakang I stay in hotels often and like 90% of them let you check in earlier as soon as room is ready anyway.
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Lancesico 🇱🇨
Lancesico 🇱🇨@Bornakang·
Hotels have to do something about this
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NXT EU
NXT EU@NXT4EU·
The EU is working on a unified Pan-European train ticket system. It would require operators to end their monopoly on sales, and make an open-market similar to airplane tickets. Passengers would also get increased rights for delays.
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𝗟𝗘𝗞
𝗟𝗘𝗞@Lek_ANCAP·
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