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S.O.S DONACIÓNES VENEZUELA
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S.O.S DONACIÓNES VENEZUELA
@SOSDonaciones
Misión: Ayudar en la búsqueda de Medicinas para salvar vidas en Venezuela! Mission: Help in the search for medicines that will help save lives in Venezuela!
Venezuela Katılım Haziran 2014
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La marginalidad en su máxima expresión… No está mal equivocarse pero si está muy mal la falta de empatía con las personas que se sienten vulneradas como el caso citado por la Sra. #NoALaIntolerancia #Empatia

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S.O.S DONACIÓNES VENEZUELA retweetledi

This house was built with something called “GAB LOCK”, which is basically 20 pound blocks that stack together like giant Legos.. they’re filled with insulation,there’s no cutting, no sawdust, and apparently the whole thing can be put together in about five days. You can take it apart when you move and reassemble it, you can also add on if you decide you want another floor . On the surface it looks interesting, but I’m not sure what I really think about it..
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#CocuyoChequea Vivir dos años en EEUU no garantiza la residencia: la estafa viral de abogados hechos con Inteligencia Artificial bit.ly/4vUNIvX
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A lion can stand three feet from your face on a safari and not even register that you exist. To its brain, you and the jeep are the same animal. One big weird shape that doesn't smell like food. Stand up though, and you go from invisible to dinner in under a second.
For the lion, you and the other tourists never register as separate people. The whole jeep looks like one giant creature made of metal and fabric and humans all smushed together. That shape has no scent of any prey animal, and it moves nothing like one. The brain searches its mental file of every animal it's ever hunted, finds no match, and moves on.
Lions learn this from their mothers. In places like the Serengeti or Maasai Mara, they see more than 100 of these jeeps a day. Cubs grow up watching mom ignore every truck. They copy what mom does. After a few generations, an entire population of lions has decided that safari vehicles are boring background noise, no different from trees or rocks.
Hunting is expensive. A lion that picks the wrong target won't have enough energy left to catch the right one tomorrow. So when the brain sees a weird shape that doesn't fit anything in its hunting memory, it just skips it.
But the whole truce hangs on one rule. The shape has to stay the same. The second someone stands up or leans out the window, the big creature breaks apart. Suddenly there's a person-sized snack standing where a big boring shape used to be. The lion's brain registers the change in under a second.
In June 2015, a 29-year-old American filmmaker rolled down her window at a park near Johannesburg to take a photo. A lioness was already a meter from the truck, just watching. It lunged through the open window and bit her in the neck. She died at the scene.
Ten years later, in September 2025, a zookeeper at Safari World in Bangkok stepped out of his vehicle in the lion section. One lion charged. The rest of the pride joined within seconds. The park had run these tours for over 40 years and nobody had ever died like that.
Craig Packer has spent over 40 years studying lions and started the world's first lion research center back in 1986. He's said it plainly more than once. Lions don't have much patience for humans acting weird. Sit still and you're part of the furniture; move suddenly and you're a target.
The truce works because every lion in those parks grew up watching its mom ignore the trucks. Break the pattern, and the whole thing falls apart in about as long as it takes to stand up.
Nurse@MaysaBolelli
Afrika'da hayvanlar safari araçlarına neden saldırmaz?
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@cristiancrespoj @Jakstalker Estos dos impresentables también hicieron lo suyo pero pasaron con menos gloria.
Hagámoslo posible entonces !

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Your tattoo isn’t just decorative ink: it’s a permanent trigger that keeps your immune system locked in a lifelong cycle of chronic inflammation.
As soon as the ink is injected into your skin, your body recognizes the pigment particles as foreign invaders. Immune cells called macrophages immediately swarm the area and attempt to swallow them up. But because they can’t actually break down the ink, the macrophages eventually die, releasing the pigment back into the surrounding tissue — only for a new wave of macrophages to arrive and repeat the process.
This endless cycle is what keeps the tattoo permanently visible, while also maintaining a state of ongoing, low-level inflammation in the skin.
Over time, some of these ink particles migrate through the lymphatic system and accumulate in the lymph nodes, placing constant stress on the body’s defense mechanisms. Emerging research suggests this internal ink buildup may interfere with normal immune function, potentially reducing the effectiveness of certain vaccines, including mRNA types. Additionally, many tattoo inks contain heavy metals like nickel and cobalt. Combined with the chronic inflammation, this has been linked to a modestly elevated risk of lymphoma and skin cancer.
While tattoos remain a powerful form of self-expression, they represent a complex, decades-long biological conflict between your immune system and foreign substances embedded in your skin.
[Nielsen, C., Jerkeman, M., & Jöud, A. S. (2024). Tattoos as a risk factor for systemic lymphoma: A population-based case-control study. eClinicalMedicine]

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