MODI Alphonse

1.1K posts

MODI Alphonse banner
MODI Alphonse

MODI Alphonse

@alkmodi

WATER IS GOLD

South Sudan Katılım Ağustos 2010
922 Takip Edilen139 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
MODI Alphonse
MODI Alphonse@alkmodi·
A man is poor because he has no service and no product, a man is rich because he has service and product.
English
0
0
3
0
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Science girl
Science girl@sciencegirl·
Crown shyness is a phenomenon where the top branches of neighboring trees avoid touching to stay safe, leaving visible jigsaw like gaps between their crowns.
English
202
3.7K
22.7K
1M
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Paul White Gold Eagle
Paul White Gold Eagle@PaulGoldEagle·
A gardener manages to protect his crops from bugs and even double the yield just by tapping into the universe.
English
20
694
2.3K
67.8K
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Nandi 🤍💜🤍
Nandi 🤍💜🤍@pallnandi·
The number of unmarried beautiful women worldwide should tell you one thing: beauty isn’t the prize anymore. Men aren’t struggling to find looks… they’re struggling to find peace, common sense, and character. Stop bleaching. Start building substance.
English
127
1.4K
5.2K
66K
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Fan Post NASA Lies
Fan Post NASA Lies@PostNASA·
This is why they don't let cameras in the cockpit.
English
74
313
1.5K
86K
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Bekar Sebatindila 🇺🇬
Bekar Sebatindila 🇺🇬@BekarSebat51443·
Sharinga video etuuke kwabo abalina omusimbi ogutotomoka abasobola okola kino Hajji Bakaluba kyalaze nga ali Accra mu Ghana.
Filipino
7
44
338
25.7K
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
How to fold a paper airplane that loops back to you — fun for kids to play with.
English
118
7.9K
29.9K
1.6M
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Arcfunmi
Arcfunmi@Arcfunmi·
Is this how you solve this problem?
English
55
476
5.4K
914.8K
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Lawrence Kitema
Lawrence Kitema@lawrencekitema·
Stealing the village drum is easy but finding a place to beat it peacefully is the problem!
English
63
1.4K
5.9K
156.5K
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Àgbà John Doe
Àgbà John Doe@jon_d_doe·
As a parent, I think this video has taught me something useful. I recommend that you should try it on your kids, too. I have also shared it with my wife. Credit: joe_drummer_boy on IG.
English
729
19.8K
77.9K
3M
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Vala Afshar
Vala Afshar@ValaAfshar·
data → info → knowledge → insight → wisdom → impact ⇆ repeat
Vala Afshar tweet media
English
8
44
178
32.2K
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Charles Onyango-Obbo
Charles Onyango-Obbo@cobbo3·
Egypt, Ethiopia and the Dam: What If The Real Fight Is Over Soil, Not Water? Nearly everyone says Egypt and Ethiopia are fighting over water from the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), which Addis Ababa officially inaugurated on September 9 to great fanfare. That’s the polite version. The real story could be muddier — literally. The big picture people are insisting that what Egypt fears losing isn’t just water, but the soil that the Nile carried from the Ethiopian highlands for thousands of years, laying down a fresh carpet of rich earth across the Nile Valley and Delta. Pharaohs and peasants alike depended on that rhythm: the water came, the soil came, and the desert bloomed. The Nile has two parents. The White Nile rises from Lake Victoria, flowing out of Jinja, Uganda, drifting lazily through South Sudan, spreading wide and slow, as if unsure of its purpose. Along the way, it loses most of its soil in vast swamps like the Sudd. The Blue Nile, by contrast, is all energy and anger — tumbling down from Ethiopia’s steep highlands, gouging hillsides and scooping up an astonishing 120 million tonnes of fertile soil every year. Contrary to what most people think, the GERD built on this Blue Nile, almost 900Km away from the main trunk of the Nile at Khartoum that flows onward to Egypt (look carefully at the maps). But here’s the rub. More than 90% cent of the Nile’s total sediment comes from these Ethiopian Highlands — mainly through the Blue Nile and the Atbara rivers. The Blue Nile alone contributes about 70 to 75% of it. The White Nile, despite its fame, contributes less than 3%, because most of its sediment is trapped in wetlands. When the Blue Nile meets the White Nile at Khartoum, the river turns deep brown — Africa’s longest artery now thick with Ethiopia’s soil, flowing north to Egypt. That silt built Egypt. Before modern dams, the Nile carried roughly 120 to 160 million tonnes of sediment into Egypt each year. The annual floods dropped a new layer of rich earth across the Nile Valley and Delta. That was Egypt’s natural fertiliser, replenishing its land for free. The Nile didn’t just bring water; it brought life in liquid soil form. Then came the dams. The Aswan High Dam gave Egypt control of the floods, but it was also disastrous – it stopped almost all that silt. The river still flowed, but its magic was gone. The Delta began to shrink, and the coastline erode. Saltwater crept inland. Egyptian farmers had to replace nature’s gift with chemical fertilisers. Now Ethiopia’s GERD, the largest dam in Africa, stands on the Blue Nile ready to trap even more of that ancient cargo of soil. Studies suggest it could hold back over 90%!!! of the sediment that once flowed downstream. For Ethiopia, that’s good news — those same sediments have long been a curse, eroding farms and choking smaller dams. Now GERD promises to hold back both the floods and the mud, fuelling Ethiopian progress and protecting its highlands. Egypt’s unease, then, isn’t really about who gets more water. It’s about the vanishing soil — the slow fading of the river’s gift (Ethiopian soil erosion) that built its civilisation. The Nile that once gave Egypt life is now keeping Ethiopia’s soil at home. And for the first time in history, Egypt must face the desert without the brown gold that once floated faithfully down from the upstream highlands. Its natural subsidy has vanished.
Charles Onyango-Obbo tweet media
English
104
362
863
75.2K
MODI Alphonse retweetledi
Manhood Decoded
Manhood Decoded@ManhoodDecoded·
Gratitude. Grind. God. Gym. Goals. Girls.
English
14
4
35
1.5K