Miles G. Morales

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Miles G. Morales

Miles G. Morales

@babsNumber2

Co-founder at @EnchirdT & https://t.co/rqKuoFRIXA, Software Engineer, passionate about art, music and cinema. Tech enthusiast. Warriors fan. See pinned thread for poems.

Littoral, Cameroon Katılım Nisan 2020
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Miles G. Morales
Miles G. Morales@babsNumber2·
Eight billion worlds on one planet, Universes collide. A star is born.
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Skeletor 🧼🧽🫧
Skeletor 🧼🧽🫧@TheMuppetPastor·
I’ve always enjoyed the men/women photography meme. You know, where men take a photo of an object and women themselves in front of the object? But I don’t enjoy it for reasons the creator likely intended. Yes, it works because there’s truth in it. Men like to capture an image and women like to show themselves with said image. And this is simply a difference in the way the sexes observe things, neither good nor evil. Women aren’t narcissistic just because they like selfies. To them, the photo is a memory of their lives at a certain point along with the object. There’s nothing wrong with that, either. Men aren’t suddenly humble or strange for wanting the object itself. To men, capturing the subject of the photo is like capturing a memory of what it was like in a certain point in time. When we look back upon our lives, we will want to see both of these things. It would get lame to see endless photos of ourselves in front of objects, so we need basic photos of subjects. And if we’re never in any photographs at all, we miss our own human reactions to time and events. The reality is that in our lives, we will look back and love both “men and women” photos, and will feel something is lacking if we have 100% of one style. Instead of making it a gender war issue, the meme subtly underscores the reasons why men and women need one another .
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SABI CHEF 🌸🇨🇲
SABI CHEF 🌸🇨🇲@ambe_chanceline·
They don di threaten me with lawyer 😹😹😹 person wey no fit pay 12k Dey afford lawyer? I want talk they block me.
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Village Guluva
Village Guluva@VillageGuluva·
Neyo was spotted with his three girlfriends at Arc Paris. 👀
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AddaMissi🫅🏾
AddaMissi🫅🏾@SalmaMisra·
Tu es camerounaise, tu es née au Cameroun, tu vis au Cameroun, tu dis que tu fais le sport pour le summer body par ce que l’été arrive.🙌🏾 En géographie on vous a dit qu’il y’a l’été au Cameroun? C’est pas vous c’est nous.
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Carlson Ngwasiri
Carlson Ngwasiri@CarlsonNgwasiri·
The project was launched by Iya Mohamed in November 2012. The foundation was completed and construction was progressing well until he was arrested on charges that remain unclear to this day, officially linked to alleged embezzlement at Sodecoton. In reality, the case was driven by internal power struggles at Fecafoot; they simply needed a pretext to remove him. This was followed by the turbulent years from 2013 to 2018, when Fecafoot was run by successive normalisation committees headed by: •Prof. Joseph Owona •Maître Frank Happi •Tombi A. Roko (who served as president for a period) During that time, the project was completely frozen because the fight for control of Fecafoot took priority over everything else. In 2018, Njoya won the elections and immediately restarted construction. Eto’o has now completed the building. Eto’o performed no miracles, he simply finished a project that was already his responsibility to deliver. The sad part is how mediocre we have become: we are celebrating the completion of a simple building as if it were a trip to Mars or the Moon. Normally, we shouldn’t even be telling the world that we are only getting a proper headquarters for Fecafoot today.
A L B R I G H T@BernieWanzie

The FECAFOOT building looked neglected for years. Now they finally build a new one in 2026 and people expect applause? For what exactly? This is the same thing that will eventually happen after the road works are completed in Bamenda…after we have suffered for decades. Call me a hater, I will not clap!!!

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Miles G. Morales
Miles G. Morales@babsNumber2·
@BernieWanzie There's a very simple solution for this. Create a new Google account for the baby. That comes with 15gb of free space. Post the baby's pictures there. That's enough for them to grow up and be able to buy extra space.
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A L B R I G H T@BernieWanzie·
People may think opening an Instagram page for a baby is unnecessary, but think of it as a digital photo album they can look back on when they grow up.
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Edo
Edo@Kravinoff0013·
@HardlyLoose No one safe
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Intel
Intel@intel·
We're thrilled to partner with @Google on something we've been building with them - Googlebook. Premium, powerful devices designed for Intelligence. We can't wait to get it into your hands this fall. Learn more at ms.spr.ly/6013vuzjt #Googlebook #NEXT #Intel
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.@__milange·
@babsNumber2 You cannot cry foul when you throw the first stones.
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.@__milange·
Someone who is meant to protect you is the reason why people are calling you a mini-whore on the internet. Poor child!
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BSAT Properties
BSAT Properties@BSAT_Properties·
I was on a train in Tokyo. We stopped between stations. Announcement in Japanese, then in English: "We apologize for the delay. We will resume shortly." The delay was maybe 3 minutes. Not a big deal. When the train started moving again, another announcement: "We sincerely apologize for the delay. We were stopped for 3 minutes and 20 seconds. This is unacceptable. Thank you for your patience." Three minutes and twenty seconds. They measured it exactly. And called it unacceptable. When I got off at my stop, there were station staff on the platform bowing and handing out delay certificates. I took one out of curiosity. It was an official document stating that the train had been delayed by 3 minutes and 20 seconds, signed and stamped. The staff member said in English "for your employer. So they know the delay was not your fault." I said I'm a tourist, I don't need it. He looked confused. "But the delay affected you. You deserve an apology." Three minutes. They were treating a three-minute delay like a major incident. Later I mentioned this to a Japanese friend. They said "oh yes, delay certificates are normal. Trains are supposed to be exactly on time. If they are late, they must apologize." I said three minutes isn't late, it's nothing. My friend said "in Japan, three minutes is late. On time means on time. Not approximately on time." They said the train company probably investigated why there was a 3-minute delay. "They will find the cause and fix it so it doesn't happen again." I kept the certificate. It's framed in my apartment now. A reminder that somewhere in the world, people care about three minutes. © 6IX.
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