Chilly 🩸 Will 🩸
3.6K posts

Chilly 🩸 Will 🩸 retweetledi

In 1944, a 14-year-old Black boy named George Stinney was arrested in South Carolina. He was falsely accused of killing two white girls without a single piece of solid evidence, simply because he was the last person seen with them.
He wasn't allowed to see his family, was interrogated without a lawyer, and "confessed" under pressure and fear. His trial lasted only a few hours with an all-white jury.
Just 81 days after his arrest, he was executed in the electric chair. He was so small that his feet didn't reach the floor, so they had to place a Bible under him to make the straps fit.
The most shocking part: he was innocent. In 2014, seventy years later, a court officially overturned the conviction and declared him innocent.
But George never came back.
His story became a symbol of racial injustice and the failures of the legal system—a child executed in the name of justice, but justice came far too late.
English
Chilly 🩸 Will 🩸 retweetledi

On January 7, 1943, Nikola Tesla died alone in Room 3327 of the Hotel New Yorker. He was 86 years old. A maid found him two days later after he had left a “do not disturb” sign on his door. The official cause was coronary thrombosis. But the deeper truth was quieter — years of isolation, poverty, and a world that had moved on without the man who helped power it.
This was the inventor of alternating current, the system that still runs through our homes today. He pioneered wireless transmission, radio technology, and electric motors. He held hundreds of patents and imagined ideas — like wireless communication and renewable energy — long before they became reality. Yet by the end of his life, he was nearly penniless.
In his final years, Tesla lived simply. He survived mostly on milk, bread, honey, and vegetable juice. Every day he walked to nearby parks to feed pigeons, especially one white pigeon he loved deeply. He once said he loved her as a man loves a woman. When she died, something in him seemed to fade too.
There was a time when Tesla dazzled New York society, lighting bulbs with his bare hands and creating artificial lightning in his laboratory. Investors once backed him. Crowds once admired him. But as his ideas grew more ambitious — especially his dream of free wireless energy for the world — funding disappeared. He became known more as an eccentric than a genius.
And yet, when he died, the world paused. Thousands attended his funeral. Leaders and scientists sent tributes. Years later, the Supreme Court recognized his priority in radio patents. History slowly corrected itself. The world he electrified had not truly forgotten him — it had simply taken time to understand him.
Today, his name lives on in science, technology, and even in companies that shape the modern age. Tesla died alone in a hotel room, feeding pigeons while the current he created hummed through cities. He did not die forgotten. He died having changed the world — and that legacy still shines.
It makes you wonder how many visionaries we ignore while they’re still alive. How many brilliant minds are dismissed as “too different” or “too ahead of their time” until it’s too late?
What do you think — does the world truly value its geniuses, or only recognize them after they’re gone?
English
Chilly 🩸 Will 🩸 retweetledi
Chilly 🩸 Will 🩸 retweetledi
Chilly 🩸 Will 🩸 retweetledi
Chilly 🩸 Will 🩸 retweetledi

IN MEMORIAM: Remembering Rosa Parks, a Black woman whose 1955 refusal to give up her seat on an Alabama city bus to a white man sparked a civil rights revolution, born on this day in 1913. abcnews.link/eCqCrXd

English
Chilly 🩸 Will 🩸 retweetledi

The world has lost a mind whose work guides us every day.
Gladys West, a pioneering mathematician whose contributions helped make modern GPS possible, has passed away at 95, peacefully on January 2026, surrounded by family and friends.
West’s mathematical models of the Earth’s shape became a critical foundation for satellite navigation, allowing precise positioning anywhere on the globe. Her work helps guide everything from airplanes and ships to smartphones and emergency services, though she once joked that she still preferred using paper maps.
Born in 1930 in rural Virginia, West grew up in the South, working on her family’s farm and walking miles to a one-room schoolhouse. She originally planned to study home economics, but discovered a love for geometry that led her to pursue mathematics. A scholarship took her to Virginia State College, where she earned her degree and later a master’s in mathematics.
In 1956, she joined a U.S. Navy research facility in Dahlgren, Virginia. Over a 42-year career, West worked with early computers to develop algorithms that accounted for the Earth’s irregular shape, gravity, and tidal forces, refinements that were essential for accurate satellite positioning.
Without the mathematical groundwork she helped establish, the global navigation systems used today would not function as they do.
For most of her career, West’s contributions remained largely unknown outside scientific circles. Later in life, she received major honors, including induction into the U.S. Air Force Hall of Fame and the Prince Philip Medal.
She inspired generations of scientists and mathematicians.

English
Chilly 🩸 Will 🩸 retweetledi

You boys ain’t paid nothing for them titles they given you because you got money. I beat the game they lie about playing! I’m telling u it’s not worth it! Im a business man not a businessman . Everybody getting exposed except @itsuptherepodcast I’ll always be the last one standing! #itsuptherepodcast @fivioforeign_8fs @21savage @fogfo_looney @itsuptherepodcast
English
Chilly 🩸 Will 🩸 retweetledi

@SimplyBitcoin It’s not just Chinese companies,my 1st gold purchases were from US companies and it was fake too..
English

Which NFL quarterback is this? 🧐 x.com/pahrduve/statu…
English



















