slayer crawford

108 posts

slayer crawford

slayer crawford

@SlayerCrawford

i swear alot

Katılım Aralık 2024
25 Takip Edilen3 Takipçiler
Curiosity
Curiosity@CuriosityonX·
BREAKING🚨: The Artemis II astronauts will go through the most tense moment of the mission on April 6, 2026. This is the highlight of the entire mission. The Orion will pass between 6,400 and 9,600 kilometers above the lunar surface. But there's a detail that makes this moment even more intense: as it passes over the far side of the Moon, the spacecraft will lose communication with Earth for about 30 to 50 minutes, blocked by the Moon itself. "For the 45 minutes when we'll be closest to the lunar surface, we'll also be out of contact," said Victor Glover, the mission's pilot. "I'd love for the whole world to be cheering and praying for us to reestablish the signal." During that time, the astronauts will photograph and observe regions of the Moon's far side that have never been seen by human eyes. The crew will also attempt to capture new images of the so-called Earthrise, the planet emerging over the desolate lunar surface.
Curiosity tweet mediaCuriosity tweet media
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Bruce ployart
Bruce ployart@BrucePloyart·
@TheEconomist When your choice is the world’s leading economist versus a complete buffoon then really who do you want to lead your government?
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The Economist
The Economist@TheEconomist·
Political historians cannot recall a Canadian prime minister winning a majority via a by-election in the past century. But public-opinion surveys give the Liberals a double-digit lead over the Conservatives economist.com/the-americas/2…
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National Post
National Post@nationalpost·
The number, which comes from nearly 38,000 different firearms owners, falls well short of the 136,000 weapons Public Safety Canada officials said the government had budgeted for compensation nationalpost.com/news/politics/…
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Fanatics Collect
Fanatics Collect@FanaticsCollect·
A Stanford study found that people who played Pokémon heavily as kids developed a small region of the brain that responds specifically to Pokémon characters. Researchers scanned adults who grew up playing on Game Boy and showed them images of Pokémon like Pikachu and Bulbasaur. Their brains lit up in the same exact spot, a consistent area in the visual cortex tied to recognizing specific categories of objects. The reason comes down to childhood. When you’re young, your brain is more flexible, and spending hours memorizing hundreds of similar-looking Pokémon essentially trained it to carve out space just for them. (via @Stanford)
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National Post
National Post@nationalpost·
'Suzuki is treated as a saint in Canada because he was on the CBC when the boomers were young and there were only three channels and he was the Voice of Science' nationalpost.com/opinion/david-…
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
For more than two thousand years, a single woman has carried the blame for everything that went wrong in the world... In Greek mythology, that woman is Pandora. The familiar version of the story is simple: Pandora opens a jar—later mistranslated as a box—and releases suffering into the world. Disease, grief, hardship, and misery escape, and humanity is forced to live with the consequences. Her mistake becomes one of the most famous cautionary tales in Western storytelling. But the deeper details of the myth tell a very different story. Pandora did not create the evils inside the jar. The gods did. The story begins with a rebellion. The Titan Prometheus steals fire from the gods and gives it to humanity. Fire means warmth, technology, knowledge, and power. Zeus, king of the gods, sees this as a dangerous shift in the balance between gods and mortals. Human beings are becoming too capable. So Zeus decides to retaliate—not by taking fire back, but by designing a punishment that will follow humanity forever. He orders the creation of the first woman. The gods craft Pandora deliberately, each contributing something to make her irresistible and complex. Aphrodite gives beauty. Athena gives skill. Hermes gives cleverness and persuasion. She is named Pandora—“all-gifted”—because she carries the combined offerings of the gods themselves. But alongside those gifts comes the trap. Pandora is sent to earth with a sealed jar. Inside it are all the hardships that will define human life: sickness, labor, jealousy, sorrow, aging, and pain. The gods themselves placed them there. Pandora’s only role in the story is the moment she eventually lifts the lid. When the jar opens, suffering floods into the world. In horror, Pandora quickly closes it again—but by then almost everything has escaped. Only one thing remains inside. Hope. And from that moment forward, Pandora becomes history’s scapegoat. Prometheus, the male figure who defied Zeus and stole fire, is remembered as a daring hero. His punishment—eternal torment—is portrayed as noble rebellion. Pandora, meanwhile, becomes the warning: the woman whose curiosity doomed humanity. Yet the structure of the story raises a troubling question. If the gods created the punishment… if they filled the jar… if they sent it to earth… why is Pandora the one remembered as responsible? Ancient Greek poet Hesiod, writing in the 8th century BCE, described Pandora as a “beautiful evil” sent to plague men. In his telling, the very existence of women is framed as a divine punishment for humanity. Seen through that lens, Pandora’s story becomes less about curiosity and more about cultural anxiety—about knowledge, independence, and the fear of what might happen when control slips away. And still, one detail remains quietly powerful. Hope stayed behind. For thousands of years scholars have debated what that means. Was hope preserved for humanity? Or was it trapped inside the jar, another thing withheld from the world? Either interpretation leaves us with the same haunting truth: even in a story meant to explain suffering, hope sits at the center of the human experience.. What do you think—was Pandora truly responsible, or was she simply the easiest person to blame? © She's So Cool #archaeohistories
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Rational Posts™
Rational Posts™@rationalposts·
@globalnews Let's have a moment to reflect on what demographic answers polls and consumes corporate media. A moment of silence for the death of reason.
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Globalnews.ca
Globalnews.ca@globalnews·
While 58 per cent of Canadians surveyed said they no longer view the U.S. as a reliable ally, 42 per cent went further and said America isn't an ally at all. globalnews.ca/news/11674798/…
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National Post
National Post@nationalpost·
'I first noticed this streak of Carney’s character when I reviewed Value(s), his audition piece for high office ... what was unique about Carney’s was that it was not clear in which country he wanted to be a politician' nationalpost.com/opinion/yuan-y…
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Kenneth Desjarlais
Kenneth Desjarlais@desjarlaisken61·
@nationalpost Can’t afford your healthcare in America. In Canada, we pay ours through the taxes.
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slayer crawford
slayer crawford@SlayerCrawford·
@Michael2many @archeohistories Gods even for a cool science post about a mummy some dumb cunt has to come run his mouth about politicial shit. Fuck im tired of all you stupid fucks. Quit disturbing the peace.
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Michael
Michael@Michael2many·
@archeohistories The trashy comments made here help to understand the present situation America is in with trashy and uneducated people running amok.
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
Xin Zhui (217-168 BC), also known as Lady Dai, or Marquise of Dai, was a Chinese noblewoman, and wife to Li Cang, Marquis of Dai, and Chancellor of Changsha Kingdom, during Western Han dynasty of China. Her tomb, containing her well-preserved remains and 1400 artifacts, was discovered in 1968 at Mawangdui, Changsha, Hunan, China. Her body and belongings are currently under the care of the Hunan Museum. Her body is notable as being one of most well preserved mummies ever found. In 1968, workers digging an air raid shelter for a hospital near Changsha unearthed tomb of Xin Zhui, as well as tombs of her husband and a young man who is most commonly thought to be her son. With the assistance of over 1500 local high school students, archaeologists began a large excavation of site beginning in January 1972. Xin Zhui's body was found within four rectangular pine constructs that sat inside one another which were buried beneath layers of charcoal and white clay. Corpse was wrapped in 20 layers of clothing bound with silk ribbons. In tomb of Xin Zhui, four coffins of decreasing sizes enclosed one another. First and outermost coffin is painted black, color of death and underworld. All painted images sealed inside this coffin were thus designed not for an outside viewer but for deceased and concern the themes of death and rebirth, protection in afterlife, and immortality. Second coffin has a black background but is painted with a pattern of stylized clouds and with protective deities and auspicious animals roaming an empty universe. A tiny figure, deceased woman, is emerging at bottom center of head end. Only her upper body is shown, for she is about to enter this mysterious world. Third coffin exhibits a different color scheme and iconography. It is shining red, color of immortality and decorative motifs include divine animals and a winged immortal flanking three-peaked Mount Kunlun, which is a prime symbol of eternal happiness. Inside this tomb on top of 4th and innermost coffin excavators found a painted silk banner about 2m long. Yellow and black feathers are stuck on cover board of coffin. Feathers stuck to coffin were expressing hopes that Xin Zhui would grow feathers on body and enter heavens to become immortal. Xin Zhui's body was remarkably well preserved in an unknown fluid inside coffin. Her skin was soft and moist, with muscles that still allowed for her arms and legs to flex at joints. All her organs and blood vessels were also intact, with small amounts of Type A blood being found in her veins. There was hair on her head, with a wig pinned with a hair clasp on back of her head. There was skin on her face and her eyelashes and nose hair still existed. Tympanic membrane of her left ear was intact and her finger and toe prints were distinct. This preservation allowed doctors at Hunan Provincial Medical Institute to perform an autopsy on 14 December 1972. Much of what is known about Xin Zhui's lifestyle was derived from this and other examinations. As a member of nobility, her body would have been washed with fragrant water and wine, which has antibacterial properties. Xin Zhui's body was soaked in an unknown liquid that was acidic, which may have helped preserve body by preventing bacteria from growing. Many scientists believe that fluid is water from body, rather than liquid poured into coffin. More than 1400 precious artifacts were found with Xin Zhui's body including a wardrobe containing 100 silk garments, 182 pieces of expensive lacquerware, makeup and toiletries and 162 carved wooden figurines representing servants. In Western Han Dynasty, elaborate and lavish burials were common practice; it was believed that another world or afterlife, existed for dead, and they needed food and accommodation just like living and necessities in life should be brought into grave for use in the afterlife. Importance of filial piety during that time also resulted in a lavish burial with many artifacts. #archaeohistories
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slayer crawford
slayer crawford@SlayerCrawford·
@POTUS Those seven million jobs are all peoples second jobs that they need because you fucked the economy.
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President Biden Archived
President Biden Archived@POTUS46Archive·
Since I took office, we've recovered all of the jobs lost during the pandemic. And added 7 million more. We didn't just recover – we built a foundation of stable growth for years to come.
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Rothmus 🏴
Rothmus 🏴@Rothmus·
Jake was drunk. Jake could not consent. Why isn’t Josie being charged?
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slayer crawford
slayer crawford@SlayerCrawford·
@English_blood_ Let them kill eachother. Stay the fuck out of it. It is nit anybodys business but theirs if they kill eachother.
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slayer crawford
slayer crawford@SlayerCrawford·
@oneplusone10 Because they dont view it as a take over. They view it as liberation. Perspective is everything.
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slayer crawford
slayer crawford@SlayerCrawford·
@AnnieForTruth School shooters are usually children so no death penalty. There is no capital punishment in new york so no death penalty. Quit lying.
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Annie
Annie@AnnieForTruth·
Annie tweet media
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Neil Stone
Neil Stone@DrNeilStone·
Most of you will never have had Measles Mumps Rubella Tetanus Diphtheria Polio And none of you will ever have had Smallpox Why? Because vaccines work
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