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@Rossjat
Jos Breed ❤️ Biromboy❤️ Veterinarian👨⚕️🐴🐶 Singer🎵Songwriter, Guitarist. Semi-Protestant Christian
Jos, Nigeria Katılım Kasım 2011
2K Takip Edilen545 Takipçiler

@GloriousLFC @Mobyhaque1 Exactly. He should have been gone since November
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@Mobyhaque1 Arne slot should’ve gone MONTHS AGO even the battering to PSV was too late, absolute fucking joke he’s still here, no point in even watching the games against PSG
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@FabrizioRomano Slot being "heavily involved" just means he’s spent the morning circling every Eredivisie player’s name in a catalog. Get ready for "Feyenoord 2.0" while the rest of the league is buying world-class talent. The Dutch invasion continues
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@osesokoigun @Amb_Honesty I Know how it feels. Our spiritual leaders probably don't. Because this fight is more Political than anything. Imagine having to fight both Jihadists and soldiers at the same time.
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@Rossjat @Amb_Honesty If there is one, even if I don't come, my money would gol, do you think I like the killings, do you know how much pain it brings to me, that my fellow Nigerians are killed, because of one jihadist theology, and nothing is done.
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@Rossjat @mirakuruh @AnythingLFC_ How could he leave for free last summer if he still had a contract ? 😂
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In medieval Ireland, a woman, six months pregnant, walks past a neighbor's garden and catches the scent of fresh apples hanging heavy on the branch. Her mouth waters. Her body demands it. Not a polite want, a physical need that grips her from the inside.
So she takes one.
In most societies, this would be theft. Punishment. Shame. But in early Ireland, governed by the ancient Brehon Laws, something remarkable happened instead: the law said she had every right to do it.
These weren't just any legal codes. The Brehon Laws ruled Ireland for more than a millennium, long before English conquest rewrote the rules. They were astonishingly intricate, covering everything from cattle trespass to physician fees, and they reflected a worldview that valued balance over brutality.
Pregnancy, in this system, wasn't treated as a private burden. It was a communal concern. The law recognized that cravings weren't frivolous or indulgent, they were biological signals tied directly to the survival of mother and child. Texts like the Bretha Étgid even included specific provisions: if a pregnant woman experienced a craving, she could take small amounts of food, even from someone else's property, without it being considered a crime.
The catch? The portion had to be modest, and the craving had to be genuine. But here's the stunning part: the law didn't punish the woman. It waived the criminal penalty entirely. While some civil discussion of restitution might occur, the community recognized this as necessity, not theft.
The Brehon Laws operated on a philosophy that prioritized social harmony and restitution over retribution. Rather than locking people up or exacting revenge, the system sought to restore balance. A pregnant woman taking an apple wasn't a criminal, she was a vessel for the next generation, and her well-being was more valuable than any single piece of property.
It's a legal framework that feels almost alien today, where we criminalize desperation and protect property above people. But in early Ireland, the community bore the responsibility. They understood that supporting a mother wasn't just moral, it was survival. The child she carried would one day tend the fields, defend the clan, continue the line.
So the next time someone dismisses a pregnant craving as silly or overblown, remember: there was once a society wise enough to write it into law.
The Brehon Laws were so detailed they included provisions for everything from bee trespass to the proper compensation for different types of wounds. Judges, called Brehons, had to memorize vast amounts of legal verse and were considered a separate class in society, often traveling between territories to settle disputes.
Interestingly, women under Brehon Law had far more rights than in most medieval European societies. They could own property independently, divorce their husbands for specific reasons (including obesity, impotence, or infidelity), and retain their belongings after separation. A woman's legal standing in court was remarkably high, though it varied based on her marital status and social rank.
The laws recognized different types of fasting as a form of legal protest. If someone was wronged and couldn't get justice, they could fast on the doorstep of the offender. If the wrongdoer didn't address the grievance and the faster died, it was considered murder.
#drthehistories

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@mirakuruh @AnythingLFC_ Yeah he wanted to go and be first choice or he would have left for free last summer still.
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@AnythingLFC_ Whoever sold Kelleher should be very ashamed of themselves.
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In 2020 archaeologists excavated an intact thermopolium in Pompeii, the first of its kind to be fully uncovered in its entirety. What they found inside stopped everyone in their tracks. The remains of duck, goat, pig, fish and snails were found in earthen pots embedded in the stone counter, sometimes combined in the same dish. The storekeeper lowered the pots of hot food into circular holes in the counter. Two thousand-year-old lunch, preserved by volcanic ash, still sits in the containers it was served from.
Pompeii had 80 of these fast food restaurants because poor Roman families could not afford to have kitchens in their homes. And in an inversion of contemporary society, the wealthy did not go out for expensive meals. Instead, they had enslaved workers prepare feasts at home in richly decorated banquet halls. The thermopolium was a working-class institution. Going out for lunch was not a luxury. It was a necessity. Romans ate out every single day because they had nowhere to cook. One Roman expert described the thermopolium as a cross between a Burger King and a British pub or a Spanish tapas bar.
The details get better the deeper you go. One of the best preserved thermopolia ever found still had 1,385 coins inside a jar at the time of discovery, today on display in the Archaeological Museum of Naples. Another had its amphorae still in place, a funnel on the counter, and a phallic-shaped lamp that was believed to keep the evil eye away. Scratched into the frame surrounding a painting of a dog on the wall of the 2020 excavation was the inscription NICIA CINAEDE CACATOR, literally "Nicias, Shameless Shitter," probably left by a prankster mocking the owner. Two thousand years later and we are still reading the graffiti someone carved into a fast food restaurant wall. Some things do not change.
Emperor Claudius once commanded that the establishments be closed to cut down on crime. Criminals and heavy drinkers often hung out there. The Romans had rowdy fast food joints that the government tried to shut down. The Romans had painted menu boards on the walls showing what was on offer. The Romans had regulars, and vandals, and probably someone who always ordered the same thing and tipped badly.
© Eats History
#archaeohistories

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The Roman army had its own version of Gatorade (with a lot less sugar). It was vinegar mixed with water, and they called it Posca. And some historians believe it was this exact drink on the sponge offered to Christ at the crucifixion.
Posca was the daily ration drink of the Roman legions for centuries. Two tablespoons of red wine vinegar diluted in a cup of cold water, sometimes with a pinch of salt or herbs added. That is the entire recipe. It sounds terrible, and yet it made complete practical sense. The vinegar killed bacteria in water that would otherwise make soldiers sick, the acidity provided a genuine energy hit on the march, and it was cheap enough to produce at scale for an army of hundreds of thousands. Roman soldiers carried it the way modern athletes carry electrolyte drinks, and the effect on endurance and hydration was not entirely different.
The crucifixion connection comes directly from the Gospel of John, chapter 19, where a sponge soaked in what the text calls "oxos" in the original Greek is lifted to Jesus on a reed as he is dying. Oxos is the Greek word for sour wine or vinegar wine, the same term used in Roman sources to describe posca.
Whether this was an act of mercy, mockery, or simply a soldier sharing what he had on hand, the drink being offered was almost certainly the standard ration drink of the Roman soldiers present at the execution. A detail that had been in the text all along, and most people have never noticed.
#archaeohistories

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“Her father said: marry him, and you lose the family fortune. She married him anyway. Thirty‑seven years later, they moved into the White House.”
In 1916, Mamie Doud stood at the edge of a choice that would define her life. She was nineteen, the daughter of a wealthy meatpacking executive in Denver, raised with servants and the expectation of a comfortable future. The man she loved, a young Army lieutenant named Dwight Eisenhower, had nothing to offer but a modest salary and a life of uncertainty. Her father warned her bluntly: marry him, and she would walk away from the family fortune forever. There would be no financial safety net, no return to the luxury she had always known. She chose him anyway.
Their story had begun eight months earlier, at a party in Fort Sam Houston, Texas. Mamie spotted a handsome lieutenant across the lawn; he noticed her, too, and neither looked away. Dwight was persistent—when she went out with other men, he waited on her parents’ porch until she came home, patient and determined. Eventually, she chose him. On Valentine’s Day 1916, he gave her the only ring he could afford: a small replica of his West Point class ring. It was modest, but Mamie treasured it so much that she later celebrated both Valentine’s Day and St. Patrick’s Day as engagement anniversaries.
The wedding on July 1, 1916, was small and intimate, held in her parents’ elegant home on Lafayette Street. No grand ballroom, no lavish display. Dwight wore his dress uniform; Mamie wore a simple gown. Her father’s warning still echoed, but she stepped forward without hesitation. After the ceremony, they moved into Dwight’s modest quarters at Fort Sam Houston—a far cry from the home she had grown up in. She never complained. They called it “Club Eisenhower,” a place filled with warmth, laughter, and hospitality, no matter where the Army sent them.
For thirty‑seven years, Mamie built homes out of temporary Army housing, learned to cook on a budget, and formed friendships that would last across continents. She bore the weight of Dwight’s long absences, the grief of losing their first son to scarlet fever at age three, and the quiet sacrifices of military life. Through it all, she never regretted her choice. She had invested in a future she believed in, not one she was handed. In 1953, when Dwight Eisenhower became President of the United States, the woman who had left a fortune behind walked into the White House as First Lady.
“She didn’t marry a future president. She married a man with nothing but ambition—and together, they built a legacy that no fortune could have bought.” Mamie Eisenhower’s story reminds us that real partnership isn’t about what you start with, but what you build together. She chose love over comfort, commitment over security, and in doing so, she helped shape a life that would touch history. Sometimes the richest investment isn’t in money—it’s in the person you believe in.
© Reddit
#archaeohistories

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@osesokoigun @Amb_Honesty Easy to type. How about come and do what you're saying.
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@Amb_Honesty He just said the truth no matter your defense, get a Christian army and fight back. No scriptural justification for this, even God has soldiers protecting his throne
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@Esca_Fini7 @Amb_Honesty Idoma people wey Fulani still dey disturb?
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@Amb_Honesty Make them continue de turn the other cheek but go tell them. Na why I like my idoma people, we no de wait for government. We fit de run into them,and cry the loudest still. That way govt won't get Involved
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@Rossjat @Row_Haastrup The wickedness of the wicked will never go unpunished...how I wish it's possible to have personal gun cos wetin dey my heart like this enh.....
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Security Alert 🚨
This man is lying.
This man is spreading false information. This man is aiding the terrorists by spreading false information. This is FALSE. HE IS LYING. I REPEAT, HE IS LYING OOO.
ADD A COMMUNITY NOTE.
HE IS LYING. THIS IS FALSE INFORMATION. BEWARE!
Mallam Abdulsalam Ahmad@Abdul_Ahmad_
Security Alert 🚨 The Christian’s community in Anguwan Rukuba Plateau State are currently shooting the Muslims in their neighborhood All Muslims in the city center should stay alert.
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@olajumokeokenla @currentiyke @WendyEnendu If you live in the middle belt you'd understand this tweet better.
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@currentiyke @WendyEnendu It's about Christian, no one is safe at this point
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@majesty_md Toh. I'm not married but a married man said sometimes "Sorry" is not enough. And I usually see quarrelling couples still do things for themselves despite not being in good terms. 🙃
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Nope
If he's at fault... he has to apologize and reconcile with you before the day is over... even the Bible says we shouldn't let the daylight of the next day shine on our anger
Dunno why some men are comfortable keeping malice with their better half
Miriam Ogbonna@miriamogb
So even when I’m angry with my husband, I still have to feed him and perform conjugal duties? 😩😩😩😩😩
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