Sloan_Philly

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Sloan_Philly

Sloan_Philly

@brownmalik99

ΩΨΦ-ΔΕ Spring '17 😈🐶 12 Dawg 🐶 🏈 Palm Beach 🌴 Bahamian 🇧🇸

Palm Beach, FL Katılım Temmuz 2012
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Sloan_Philly
Sloan_Philly@brownmalik99·
Amazing read
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

Orcas eat great white sharks. They hunt seals, dolphins, and baby whales. They have never killed a single human in the open ocean. Not once, in all of recorded history. An orca's brain weighs up to 15 pounds. Yours weighs about 3. They have roughly double the brain cells we do in the regions that handle complex thought. A neuroscientist at Emory named Lori Marino put an orca brain in an MRI and found these animals can tell different species apart underwater. They do it by sending out clicks that bounce off everything around them and come back as a kind of 3D sound map (this is called echolocation). From 500 feet away, an orca knows you're a human and not a seal. It skips you on purpose. The answer is culture. Orcas around the world are divided into at least 10 separate populations, each with its own food rules, its own language, and its own way of hunting. All of it learned from their mothers. One population eats only fish. Another eats only marine mammals like seals and sea lions. These two populations can live in the exact same water and never swap a single meal. A baby orca learns what food is from its mother, and that list stays the same for life. In the Pacific Northwest, one population called the Southern Residents eats almost nothing but Chinook salmon. Scientists have documented them killing harbor porpoises 78 times over six decades, carrying the dead porpoises in their mouths, and never once eating them. Even when the group was starving. A 2023 study in Marine Mammal Science looked at all 78 cases and concluded it was play. These orcas would rather go hungry than eat something their culture says isn't food. Researchers studying whale behavior in 2001 found that orca cultural traditions "appear to have no parallel outside humans." Each family group has its own dialect, its own version of the language. Calves spend about two years just learning how to make all the sounds their family uses. Mothers will slow down a hunt on purpose so their young can watch. In 2005, a 12-year-old kid was swimming in Helm Bay, Alaska when an orca came at him full speed. At the very last second, the orca seemed to realize it was charging a human. It bent its entire body in half and turned back to open water. In captivity, it goes differently. SeaWorld's Tilikum killed three people during his life in a concrete tank. Research from 2016, published in the journal Animals, traced it to psychological collapse from being locked away from the family bonds orcas need to stay stable. I think calling this a "mystery" undersells the science. Orcas decide what to eat based on culture, not instinct. No orca mother has ever taught her calf to hunt humans, so no orca hunts humans. Only about 75 of those salmon-eating Southern Residents are still alive. Their pregnancy failure rate is 69% because we've destroyed their salmon runs. They won't break their food culture to survive. Whether we care enough to protect theirs is the part that actually matters.

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Sloan_Philly
Sloan_Philly@brownmalik99·
Maybe it’s just me, but once you are introduced to me as a child I could never sexualize you, you will always be a child to me. It’s weird asf 🤷🏾‍♂️
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Sloan_Philly
Sloan_Philly@brownmalik99·
I watched Sinners for the first time tonight
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Sloan_Philly
Sloan_Philly@brownmalik99·
He wrong asf and he deserve everything coming from it, but this was a hard reach……. like hard
MLFootball@MLFootball

TRENDING: A video of #Falcons star James Pearce Jr. and his girlfriend Rickea Jackson from two weeks ago has resurfaced and gone viral on social media. Just a heartbreaking situation. 💔💔💔

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Dr Bakare Omolara
Dr Bakare Omolara@dr_olayideh·
HISTORY OF HIV/AIDS Long before HIV was known to medicine, before microscopes could identify it or blood tests could detect it, the virus existed quietly in the forests of Central Africa. In the late 1800s or early 1900s, a hunter moved through dense rainforest, doing what humans in that region had done for generations; hunting primates for food. One animal, a chimpanzee, carried a virus called Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV). In the chimp, the virus caused little harm. In humans, it had never been tested by nature. As the hunter butchered the animal,a small cut on his hand that seemed unremarkable, and easily ignored, became the gateway. In that brief moment, infected blood crossed the species barrier. The virus entered a human body for the first time. Inside its new host, the virus struggled. Human immune cells were unfamiliar territory. Most viruses would have failed here and disappeared forever. But this one changed. Through random mutation and survival, it adapted by learning how to attach to CD4 T-cells, learning how to replicate, learning how to persist. The man survived. He did not know he carried a new virus. He returned to his community, lived his life, and unknowingly passed the virus to others through blood, sexual contact, or childbirth. Slowly, silently, the virus spread. Years passed. Small villages grew into towns. Trade routes expanded along the Congo River. Medical injections were given with reused needles. What began as a single spillover event became a human infection chain. Decades later, this adapted virus had a new identity: Human Immunodeficiency Virus—HIV. By the time doctors recognized it in the 1980s, the virus had already been circulating in humans for generations. It had not appeared suddenly. It had arrived quietly, evolved patiently, and spread invisibly. This is how pandemics often begin not with intention or conspiracy, but with biology, chance, and time.
JUST MIH™@HUMUORn

If HIV is sexually transmitted, how did the first person get it???

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