InGreedWeTrust

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InGreedWeTrust

InGreedWeTrust

@MoneyIsGreed

Under a bridge Katılım Ekim 2014
159 Takip Edilen60 Takipçiler
Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Most mammals lose the ability to digest milk after weaning, but a lucky genetic mutation allows many adult humans to keep enjoying dairy. While the vast majority of animals (and most humans historically) stop producing the enzyme lactase after infancy, certain human populations developed lactase persistence, the continued ability to digest lactose into adulthood. This trait is caused by specific mutations in a regulatory region of the MCM6 gene (which acts as a “switch” that keeps the nearby LCT gene (responsible for lactase production) active long after childhood). Without these mutations, roughly 65–70% of the world’s adult population experiences some degree of lactose intolerance. The ability to digest milk as adults emerged independently in different pastoralist groups through convergent evolution, providing a major survival advantage during times of food scarcity by turning livestock into a reliable, renewable source of nutrition. The mutations first appeared roughly 8,000–12,000 years ago in regions with early dairy farming, including Northern Europe and parts of Africa. [Ranciaro et al. (2014) — Detailed genetic study of the origins and spread of lactase persistence alleles across African pastoralist populations, confirming multiple independent mutations in the MCM6 gene]
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Pramila Jayapal
Pramila Jayapal@PramilaJayapal·
Elon Musk's net worth: $805 billion. That's more than the bottom 53% of Americans combined. His effective tax rate: 3.3%. A truck driver pays 8.4%. Tax the rich.
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InGreedWeTrust
InGreedWeTrust@MoneyIsGreed·
@FSociety_1942 What jumps out at me is every time there was a no spike, yes would spike harder. There is a pattern of this.
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The Lone Raccoon
The Lone Raccoon@FSociety_1942·
VIRGINIA OK, I am trying to organize my thoughts about yesterday's vote in Virginia. Here is my analysis from my capturing of the election night reporting data. There was an "f-curve" at 8:59pm that was actually preceded by a near f-curve at 8:43. These 2 updates wiped away what had been a decent lead for "no redistricting". Interestingly, at 9:16 there was another big jump for "yes". From my analysis, most of the votes from all 3 of these came from Fairfax County, one of Virginia's most reliable vote manufacturing hubs. My old pet peeve, totals going down rather than up, was way too frequent. 23 counties had at least one case of "negative votes", including Chesterfield's whopping 71,903 deduction at 10:45 this morning (April 22). Augusta had a 11,968 deduction at 10:18. A whopping 13 counties had deductions in the SAME REPORT at 7:41PM on the 21st (for a total of 18,476). This is not acceptable and needs explained. (Other than, "well these numbers aren't official". They are official enough to show on the news.) And, of course, the referendum was ultimately lost because of mail-in votes. About 10% of the total was mail-in, and about 73% were "yes". We have no way of knowing how many of these were real people casting a vote for themselves, but they added net 137,000 votes for "yes" and that is almost 50,000 more than the currently reported winning margin for "yes". (The same applies for the election of Commissar Spanberger) In summary, a completely preventable train wreck. I hope that the Republican leaders in Virginia are now convinced that mail-in ballots and machine counting are not our friends. I also hope they start asking the hard questions of counties like Chesterfield. It's going to be easiest to read this, shrug, and move on. Please don't. Please forward on, especially if you know people in Virginia. But the same thing will happen in every other state, eventually, if its not stopped. You can see the raw data for yesterday's election at votedatabase.com/2026 - select Virginia, unknown party, then statewide or whatever county you want to examine. I'm here if anyone has questions.
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Minor7b5
Minor7b5@Patriot_One1·
@Rainmaker1973 But I go into a gravel pit and I lose my cell phone signal. 🤦‍♂️ 15 billion mile signal my ass.
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Voyager is slowly going dark. NASA has been forced to shut down one of Voyager 1’s science instruments to keep the legendary spacecraft alive. After nearly 49 years of continuous operation, engineers have officially powered down the Low-Energy Charged Particle (LECP) sensor on Voyager 1, now located more than 15 billion miles from Earth. The move was not due to instrument failure, but rather a deliberate survival strategy. The spacecraft’s plutonium-powered generators lose about four watts of electricity every year. By deactivating this instrument, mission controllers hope to prevent a critical power shortage that could cause the entire spacecraft to shut down permanently. At this immense distance, communication is extremely challenging — it takes roughly 23 hours for a signal to travel one way between Earth and Voyager 1. Although the loss of the particle sensor ends that particular data stream, two other key science instruments remain active, continuing to send back valuable information from interstellar space. NASA is now exploring even stricter power-saving measures to extend the mission as long as possible. This latest shutdown is expected to buy Voyager 1 at least one more year of operation, allowing humanity’s farthest-reaching explorer to keep sending data from the edge of the solar system and beyond. The spacecraft may be fading, but its journey is far from over.
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Rep. Tony Gonzales
Rep. Tony Gonzales@RepTonyGonzales·
There is a season for everything and God has a plan for us all. When Congress returns tomorrow, I will file my retirement from office. It has been my privilege to serve the great people of Texas.
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The Biblical Man
The Biblical Man@Biblicalman·
some people think i’m crazy for just believing in Jesus. bro, i believe the fallen angels procreated with human women, creating giants (aka the nephilim) and now there are 13 families who run the world for Satan and their bloodlines trace right back to these nephilim. also, God made a donkey speak actual words. open.substack.com/pub/followme419
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InGreedWeTrust
InGreedWeTrust@MoneyIsGreed·
@SamaHoole Growing up in the Midwest, I can vouch for the water disappearing. Creeks and natural springs cease to flow and wells dry up. This is true, and it most definitely is from irrigation.
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InGreedWeTrust
InGreedWeTrust@MoneyIsGreed·
@SamaHoole This is horseshit, all of Nebraska, South Dakota, Kansas , Oklahoma, Texas, and parts of Wyoming, Montana, and Mexico were once covered in water much less than 6,000,000 years ago.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
The Ogallala Aquifer sits beneath approximately 174,000 square miles of the American Great Plains. Eight states. Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, South Dakota, Wyoming. It took roughly six million years to fill. A relic of the Rockies: water that fell as snow and rain during the Pleistocene and filtered slowly down through the rock until it pooled beneath the prairie in quantities so vast that early geologists had difficulty believing the measurements. It supplies roughly 30% of all groundwater used for irrigation in the United States. It feeds 27% of American irrigated land. The corn, the wheat, the sorghum, the cotton. The crops that made the High Plains the breadbasket of the world. It is being emptied at a rate approximately 100 to 1,000 times faster than it refills. The recharge rate is, in most areas, measured in fractions of an inch per year. In the southern High Plains, sections of Texas and Kansas, the recharge rate is functionally zero. The water fell as ice age snow. There is no meaningful modern input. What is there is what is there, and it is going. In parts of Kansas and Texas, the water table has already dropped more than 150 feet. Wells that ran for decades are running dry. Some farmers have already switched to dryland farming. Some have stopped farming altogether. The USDA's own modelling suggests that without significant reduction in extraction, the southern Ogallala could be 70% depleted by 2060. The corn that replaced the bison, that replaced the prairie, that replaced the deep-rooted grasses that held the water in the ground for six million years, is drinking the aquifer dry. When it is gone, it is gone. It takes six million years to make an aquifer. The corn took forty.
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
He wasn't masturbating. What actually happened to his body is significantly worse than any joke. When the fourth pyroclastic surge hit Pompeii, it arrived at 300°C. That's 572°F. The thermal human survival threshold is 200°C. This man died in a fraction of a second. His brain stopped before a single pain signal completed its circuit. What you're looking at is cadaveric spasm. It's a rare form of instant muscular stiffening that only occurs during sudden violent death by extreme heat. The 300°C surge cooked the proteins in his muscle fibers so fast that his body locked into whatever position it was in at the exact moment of impact. Arms, legs, fingers, toes all contracted simultaneously. 73% of Pompeii's victims were found frozen in "life-like" stances mid-action. Running. Crawling. Shielding children. This man was probably just lying down. The flexed limb position you're laughing at appears in nearly every Pompeii body. It's called the pugilistic attitude. Heat shrinks tendons faster than bone, curling arms and legs inward. Boxers after a fire look the same way. The position has zero connection to what the person was doing. Pure thermodynamics. For centuries, archaeologists assumed these people suffocated on ash. A 2010 study proved they were wrong. Researchers heated modern human bone samples to various temperatures, compared them to Pompeii victims, and found the color and cracking patterns matched exposure to 250-300°C. Death was instantaneous. There was "no time to suffocate." This isn't even his body. It's a plaster cast of the void he left behind. His flesh decomposed inside the hardened volcanic ash. In 1863, Giuseppe Fiorelli poured liquid plaster into the hollow cavity. What you see is the shape of absence. 9.4 million people looked at a man who was incinerated alive in a quarter-second and the main reaction was a punchline. The science of how he actually died is one of the most disturbing findings in modern archaeology.
En Júpiter@En_jupiter_

El masturbador de Pompeya, 79 d.c. La erupción del volcán Vesubio lo halló desprevenido, permaneciendo en ésta postura por la eternidad. Manera de morir 557: "La paja mortal".

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Alina Visooo
Alina Visooo@Alinavisooo·
House Speaker Mike Johnson has filed a motion with the Committee on Rules and Procedures to begin the process of restricting or removing Democrat Maxine Waters's vote. "Congresswoman Waters hasn't been in the House chamber in months," Johnson wrote, "Yet her vote is always registered. It's time to eliminate the procedural loophole that allows that to happen." Voting by proxy was a rule added by Democrats during the COVID-19 pandemic that gave them the ability to work less and fundraise more. "That rule needs to go so we don't have zombies voting from a rocking chair three thousand miles away." FULL STORY IN COMMENTS 👇👇👇
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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
In March 1921, a fifteen-year-old girl named Rose Sullivan made an incredible escape. She didn’t run through a crowd or walk out the front door. Instead, she moved through the cold, dark tunnels beneath the Boston City Hospital morgue… eight months pregnant, following a stranger who had decided to help her. Rose had been married off at just thirteen to Thomas, a man ten years older. It was a family-arranged marriage. By fifteen, close to giving birth, he had already decided her future: no going out, no visitors, no freedom. Not even the choice of what to eat or wear. But one March morning, Rose changed her destiny. She pretended to feel ill so she would be taken to the hospital. Once inside, she slipped through a door marked “Staff Only.” She went down to the basement and found herself in a maze of dark corridors. Down there, among the stretchers of the morgue, she was alone, exhausted, terrified. And she was crying. Then something happened. A fifty-year-old man, Patrick O’Brien, a morgue attendant, found her. He could have reported her. Instead, he simply said, “Follow me.” He led her through those silent tunnels, among death and cold, to a staircase. From there, they reached a door that opened onto another world: the women’s ward. Dr. Elizabeth Morrison understood everything immediately. She didn’t ask unnecessary questions. She arranged care, protection, and legal help. By the time her husband managed to find her, it was already too late. Rose was free. A month later, she gave birth to her daughter in that hospital. She obtained a divorce and raised her child on her own. Years later, that little girl would become a nurse… in that very same hospital, for over thirty years. Rose lived to be 93. And before she passed away, she left behind a sentence that still strikes the heart: “I walked through death to reach life. Every mother does when she gives birth. I just did it… a little more literally.” Patrick also wrote about that day: he said he had used “the tunnels of death to lead someone toward life.” Her story reminds us of something simple, yet powerful: Courage doesn’t always make noise. Sometimes it’s a fifteen-year-old girl, pregnant, walking in the dark… step by step, because she knows that at the end, there is freedom.
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Just A Dude {Insert flag here}
Just A Dude {Insert flag here}@SawyerJ25978·
@MarioNawfal This makes absolutely 0 sense Mario "That means you could sweep the Strait, declare it clear, send tankers through, and have one explode weeks later on a mine nobody found."
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🇮🇷🇺🇸 The invisible threat sitting on the floor of the Strait U.S. officials claim Iran has placed at least 12 advanced naval mines in Hormuz. The Maham-3 and Maham-7 don't just float and wait. They sit on the seabed using magnetic and acoustic sensors to listen for a ship's hull passing overhead, then detonate hundreds of pounds of explosives upward into the target. The Maham-3 can stay active for a full year, counts ships passing above it, and can be programmed to ignore the first 99 vessels before detonating on the 100th. That means you could sweep the Strait, declare it clear, send tankers through, and have one explode weeks later on a mine nobody found. The Maham-7 can be deployed from aircraft, parachuted from helicopters, or dropped from shore. Even if you destroy every minelaying boat, the mines keep coming from the sky. This is why the Navy says escorts are "too dangerous." Source: @Osint613
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Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

🇮🇷🇪🇺 LNG ships that were supposed to go to Europe are suddenly turning around… and heading to Asia. At least 11 tankers have changed course this month. Why? Because supply is tightening fast after the Strait of Hormuz disruption and issues at Qatar’s biggest LNG facility. So buyers are chasing higher prices… and Asia is winning. Even U.S. shipments are being rerouted mid-journey. One ship literally left for Europe and then flipped to Asia halfway through. Why this matters: Europe is losing access to energy in real time. And when supply gets tight, the highest bidder wins… not the closest ally. In today’s market, energy flows to whoever is willing to pay the most, not who needs it most. Source: @MarineTraffic

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Unite4Freedom
Unite4Freedom@Unite4Freedom·
BREAKING: Texas Candidate Screen Captures Show Early U4F Findings This is why election validity matters. A Democratic candidate in the Texas primary documented something that should never happen in a lawful election count. Screenshots from his race show: 65% reporting → 7,214 votes 71% reporting → 6,226 votes 73% reporting → 6,734 votes 73% reporting later → 6,538 votes The vote total drops… then rises… then drops again. Votes cannot legally move backwards in a cumulative election count. Unite4Freedom is non-partisan, and our focus is the validity of elections regardless of which party is affected. If the system can subtract ballots from any candidate, the system itself is broken. Election validity is not partisan. It is foundational to representative government. We have seen anomalies like this before in local elections where the same authorities responsible for the process conduct an internal review. But when official vote totals move backwards, the public deserves more than internal assurances. This deserves an independent external audit. In a free society, citizens must be able to see the evidence — not simply be told to trust the explanation. Real voters. Real votes. Real counts. Real proof. Follow us as this continues to develop! @HarmeetKDhillon @PamBondi @FBIDirectorKash
Bernie Reyna@tx10bernie

@Unite4Freedom It happened in my race! we are cooked...

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Matt Walsh
Matt Walsh@MattWalshBlog·
I can't take the gaslighting, guys. I really can't. Conservatives are now running around saying "Iran has been waging war on us for 47 years." Okay then why didn't any of you call for an attack on Iran at any point until now? Why didn't you make a case for Trump "ending the war, not starting it" until precisely the moment when Trump did it? You and I both know that you are latching onto a talking point you never used until 45 seconds ago. You and I both know that almost every conservative influencer in the business was opposed to war with Iran until just now. And now you're trying to use justifications that stretch back decades. It doesn't make any sense. If you changed your mind, fine. Say so. Explain why. You're allowed to change your mind. I've changed my mind about things. But don't try to rewrite history. Be honest about it. There's too much at stake to play these games.
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🏛 🌹PeriklestheGREAT 🌹 🏛 "Vox Populi, Vox Dei"
Your thoughts on what this former Muslim girls says below? "Tell me about the "Islamophobia". Tell that to the 7-year-old me, who was forced to wear this (photo on the left) to school every day since she was 7 years old. Tell the 8-year-old me that she was about to be molested by an adult man in a very conservative neighborhood on her way to school, and that if she didn't run fast enough and the school wasn't close enough, who knows what would happen to her. Tell me my entire childhood wasn't taken away from me. Tell me my adolescence in Iran was not filled with terror. Tell me I wasn't oppressed and abused and that I'm just a "Islamophobe.""
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James Woods
James Woods@RealJamesWoods·
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Laura Loomer
Laura Loomer@LauraLoomer·
NEW: 🚨 Wife of the Director of National Counterterrorism Center Retweets Attacks on President Trump’s Iran Strikes While US Service Members Are Overseas🚨 Joe Kent is the Director of the National Counter Terrorism Center @NCTCKent. I’d like to remind everyone that Joe Kent’s new wife, @HeatherKaiserWA Heather Kaiser, used to work for Max Blumenthal and @TheGrayzoneNews. Today, Joe Kent’s wife Heather has been spending the entire day retweeting attacks on President Trump’s strikes on Iran. This is not acceptable. Our enemies are watching closely and there needs to be more discretion. Will Tulsi Gabbard and @joekent16jan19 Joe Kent disavow this post by @MaxBlumenthal? Max Blumenthal spends all of his time attacking President Trump and accusing the Trump admin of being controlled by Israel. His father is Sidney Blumenthal, a longtime aide to Bill and Hillary Clinton. In the post below, Blumenthal is attacking @SusieWiles @marcorubio and CIA Director @CIADirector John Ratcliffe. RECEIPTS 👇🏻
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Max Blumenthal@MaxBlumenthal

Trump monitoring Operation Epstein Fury with staffers: 🇮🇱 Suzie Wiles, former paid advisor to Netanyahu’s 2020 re-election campaign 🇮🇱 Marco Rubio, pet project of Israel First billionaires Paul Singer and Sheldon Adelson 🇮🇱 John Ratcliffe, “Mossad Stenographer” groomed by AIPAC

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