Had an interesting meeting this morning.
More detail will follow, but to give you a taster.
This is what i am told.
Children are kept prisoner in american military bases across america
they are being "harvested" for adrenachrome - right now, and its been going on for a long time.
Right under amercian noses and right inside Amercian thier own military bases.
The "product" is then being shipped globally using military codes to bypass any customs inspections from the recipient countries.
A named Epstein family member actually owns a company that manufactures the specialized thermal bags they transport it in.
You either know or you dont, you either believe it or you dont - it changes nothing.
A lot of heads will roll soon is my hope, and for those evil puppet rats invovled in the UK government this side of the water let me tell you - you know we know who you are.
Resigning wont fucking save you.
The truth is coming for you.
This is absolutely insane!
How the hell did we even get to this point?
A grandmother was thrown out of a public meeting because she read lines from a book that are in school libraries.
The words were too graphic for adults, but perfectly OK for kids? Wtf
Not a stupid question at all. Here's the problem with that map.
The oil isn't in Saudi Arabia's west coast. It's in the east.
Aramco's terminals, UAE's ports, Kuwait's fields, Qatar's LNG facilities. All of them sit on the Persian Gulf side, which means every single barrel has to exit through Hormuz first before it can even reach the Red Sea route.
There's no pipeline capacity large enough to move that volume overland to Jeddah.
So the Red Sea isn't an alternative exit. It's a completely different entrance. The oil can't get there without already clearing the blockade.
That's why one 21-mile chokepoint controls 20% of the world's oil supply.
This is probably a stupid question but can someone explain it to me like I’m 5.
If Iran blocks off the Persian Gulf/Strait of Hormuz, why can’t countries must move their oil through The Red Sea/Gulf of Aden?
He saw the car coming fast. No time to think. He ran, grabbed her, and pulled her out of the way just before impact. The whole thing was caught on video.
Instead of gratitude, a lawsuit followed—claiming sexual harassment.
Stories like this make people pause. Not because they don’t want to help… but because they start wondering what helping might cost them.
When doing the right thing starts to feel legally risky, some folks hesitate. And hesitation, in moments like that, can be the difference between life and tragedy.
Do situations like this make people less willing to step in? Or do we still believe most people would act first and sort it out later?
Check out "Harmonic Spirals: The Fibonacci Sequence in Music and Mathematical Design" - a free, downloadable book from the new book generator website BrightLearn. books.brightlearn.ai/Harmonic-Spira…
📊 #TOTAL3 2W Stoch RSI Update!
SRSI deep below 20 = momentum exhaustion
Altcoins don’t recover on price, they recover on momentum.
No 2W SRSI cross up = rallies stay fragile.
This is the key lever left for alts.
Do you expect a momentum reversal here, yes or no? 👇
#Altcoins2026#Crypto
What happens when you drop 2,200 lbs of dry ice into the ocean?
• Dropping 2,200 lbs of dry ice into water triggers a dramatic physical reaction.
• Rapid sublimation: Dry ice (solid CO2 at -108°F) instantly sublimates upon contact with water, producing ~8,981,849.78 quarts of CO2 gas and dense fog from condensed water vapor
• Violent bubbling: The rapid gas release creates intense bubbling and turbulence, potentially splashing water and ice fragments
• Temperature drop: Water near the dry ice freezes, forming ice or slush around the reaction zone
• Acidity increase: Dissolved CO2 forms carbonic acid, temporarily lowering ph locally