Elisa Mell

319 posts

Elisa Mell

Elisa Mell

@andreueli1

Katılım Ağustos 2024
16 Takip Edilen4 Takipçiler
Elisa Mell
Elisa Mell@andreueli1·
@BLKThugreport Throw the thugs into jail!!!!! Awesome job and great patience I would’ve mailed them
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Elisa Mell
Elisa Mell@andreueli1·
@AdameMedia Genius!!! Trump is a Genius and you sir are a moron
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ADAM
ADAM@AdameMedia·
The world is burning. We are on the brink of financial ruin. And the clown is dancing.
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Fox News
Fox News@FoxNews·
VP VANCE: "When I talk about the American dream... I want you to have a good job that pays you a good wage, that allows you to put food on the table, but also take a couple of nice vacations every year." "What I also mean is that we need to get the people who are making our cities less safe the hell out of our country and focus on American citizens first."
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
In 1900, Clara Immerwahr accomplished something no German woman had ever done before. At the University of Breslau, she earned a doctorate in chemistry with highest honors, becoming the first woman in Germany to reach that milestone. In a scientific world dominated almost entirely by men, her achievement was extraordinary. Colleagues described her as brilliant, disciplined, and fiercely committed to the idea that science should improve human life. Yet the career she had worked so hard to build slowly slipped out of her reach. After marrying fellow chemist Fritz Haber, Immerwahr found herself pushed into the traditional role expected of wives at the time. Haber’s career skyrocketed—his research would later earn him a Nobel Prize in Chemistry—while Clara’s own scientific ambitions were largely set aside. She translated her husband’s papers, hosted his academic colleagues, and struggled to remain connected to a field that rarely allowed women equal footing. Then came the moral crisis that would define her legacy. During World War I, Haber became the leading architect of Germany’s chemical weapons program. In April 1915, he oversaw the first large-scale chlorine gas attack at the Second Battle of Ypres, unleashing a weapon that would horrify the world. Clara was devastated. A scientist herself, she believed chemistry should serve humanity, not destroy it. She openly condemned the use of poison gas, calling it a betrayal of science and a perversion of knowledge. To her, the new weapons represented the moment when intellect had been turned against life itself. Shortly after Haber returned home celebrating the attack as a military triumph, Clara took his service revolver and ended her life in their garden in 1915. She was only forty-four. © Women In World History #archaeohistories
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Elisa Mell
Elisa Mell@andreueli1·
@Bellamy_Saluter @archeohistories What relevance is there that they were Jews, are you antisemetic? They were highly intelligent, do you have a problem with that? Race should have nothing to do with their achievements, unless you are racist
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Bellamy Salute
Bellamy Salute@Bellamy_Saluter·
@archeohistories It is not at all clear that an objection to chemical warfare was why she shot herself. She had a longterm grievance about her husband Fritz Haber neglecting her. Btw, these people were Jews.
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Elisa Mell
Elisa Mell@andreueli1·
@aqueenofmagic Is that pot that they are holding? Does not look like a cigi! Bold for that time lol
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A Queen Of Magic
A Queen Of Magic@aqueenofmagic·
The backstage meeting between Freddie Mercury and David Bowie during Live Aid in 1985 has become one of those unforgettable moments in rock history. Live Aid, held on July 13, 1985, was organized by Bob Geldof and Midge Ure to raise money for famine relief in Ethiopia, and it brought together an astonishing lineup of artists. Queen performed at Wembley Stadium, delivering what many consider the greatest live performance ever, while David Bowie took the stage at the JFK Stadium in Philadelphia. Even though they were on opposite sides of the Atlantic, both artists were central to the spirit of the event. Their backstage encounter captured the excitement and unity of the day. Freddie and Bowie had long admired each other, and fans still talk about the mutual respect that passed between them in that brief meeting. They were two trailblazers, each with a bold style and unmatched presence, sharing a moment behind the scenes of a concert that changed music history. While their exact conversation remains unknown, the image of these two icons together continues to symbolize the magic of Live Aid and the powerful connection between some of rock’s greatest legends. #FreddieMercury #DavidBowie #LiveAid #Queen
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Charmie
Charmie@Charmie39·
@greglaurie And what some people don’t recognize, is sometimes the answer is “no“ and there’s a good reason for it, to be sure.
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Greg Laurie
Greg Laurie@greglaurie·
Sometimes when God doesn’t answer our prayers as quickly as we would like Him to, we think that He’s letting us down. We need to understand that delays aren’t necessarily denials. When we pray and don’t see an answer as quickly as we would like, it may be a result of circumstances that we can’t see... Continue today's devotion at hubs.la/Q044KqJP0
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Elisa Mell
Elisa Mell@andreueli1·
@greglaurie It reminds me of the Hebrew word Shema sang to warriors, not to worry , because God is moving behind the scenes
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
In 1890s, France was ripping itself in two over one man and in the middle of that national fever was a teenage girl, half artist and half sponge, taking it all in. Julie Manet was born into the inner circle of Impressionism: daughter of Berthe Morisot, niece by marriage to Édouard Manet. When her parents died, she grew up surrounded by legends—Renoir, Degas, Monet—under the gentle guidance of the poet Stéphane Mallarmé. Her life was cultured and beautiful. It was also a front-row seat to a country at war with itself. The Dreyfus Affair exposed every fault line France tried to hide: antisemitism, nationalism, fear, and the fragile pride of the state. Captain Alfred Dreyfus was convicted of treason. Some were certain he was innocent. Many were just as certain he wasn’t—and didn’t want to hear otherwise. Julie’s diary shows how politics doesn’t stay in the streets. It slips into salons, into studio gossip, into dinner talk. At first she’s shaken by the idea that an innocent man could be destroyed. Then, almost immediately, you see her retreat into the comfort of authority—trusting the army, trusting the nation, trusting the adults around her. “It couldn’t possibly be so,” she writes, repeating a certainty she didn’t invent. She notes Degas’s furious tirades, Renoir’s sharp comments, and the casual antisemitism that drifted through creative rooms like smoke. She even echoes lines about “powerful Jews” and criticizes leaders who supported Dreyfus—then, in the next breath, admits she’s exhausted: “One has had quite enough of the whole affair.” That’s what makes these pages so unsettling and so valuable. Not heroism—honesty. They show how smart, educated people can still absorb the bias of their world… and how belonging can shape belief. Those teenage entries, later published as *Growing Up with the Impressionists*, are a reminder: culture doesn’t vaccinate you against prejudice. It can carry it. © Women In World History #archaeohistories
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Elisa Mell
Elisa Mell@andreueli1·
@KamalaHarris Kamala Harris is opposed to Freedom and Patriotism, Thank God He did not elect her as our ruler, take another cocktail Kamala
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Kamala Harris
Kamala Harris@KamalaHarris·
Donald Trump is dragging the United States into a war the American people do not want. Let me be clear: I am opposed to a regime-change war in Iran, and our troops are being put in harm’s way for the sake of Trump’s war of choice. Read my full statement:
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Elisa Mell
Elisa Mell@andreueli1·
@KamalaHarris Thank you President Trump for Irans freedom, finally women will be able to walk with dignity and not shame for been women, this is America , Freedom from regimes of horror and brutality, America rules because we have a President that rules!🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
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Peggy Vandervoort
Peggy Vandervoort@PeggyVande59496·
@Fowle85195Tammy @JoJoFromJerz You are STUPID . Plain and simple . Immigrants don’t vote. They can’t vote. They would go to jail if they tried. Don’t you know the law ?
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Elisa Mell
Elisa Mell@andreueli1·
@GoldenAgeUnfold I support ICE because they are cleaning house and those that are against it maybe very well be the perpetrators of gaining unlawful funds, or also paid to be there, protesting, the truth comes out about the fraud and pillage been committed in our Country, it’s Gods Mercy to Us,
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GoldenAge
GoldenAge@GoldenAgeUnfold·
Does the massive statewide "ICE OUT" protest in Minneapolis change your support for ICE?
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Elisa Mell
Elisa Mell@andreueli1·
@Dana55692117 @elonmusk lol, you are just seeing evil because your heart is evil and you dwell in it, I’m so proud that a man is not letting America get ripped off any longer and pedo’s in schools are been exposed, see what you see, sorry for you
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Dana
Dana@Dana55692117·
@elonmusk Just leaving this here too.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Just leaving this here
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𝔉🅰𝒏 Karoline Leavitt
Muslims don’t pray in streets in Iran, Saudi Arabia, or other Muslim countries—it’s illegal and rude, disturbing others. They only do it in countries they’re conquering, as a dominance strategy. Do you back banning public players in streets? A. Yes B. No
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GoldenAge
GoldenAge@GoldenAgeUnfold·
What are the chances you'd vote for Gavin Newsom for President in 2028? A. 100% B. 50% C. 25% D. 0%
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