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Daniel Neilan 😎🤙
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🆕✍️ | Exclusive: My latest interview for @WorldFootballi is with Mark Fotheringham as he reflects on his time working with Martin O’Neill and Shaun Maloney at Celtic.
He offers fascinating insight into the work at the club during this interim period. 👇
worldfootballindex.com/2025/12/mark-f…




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Glasgow Clyde Tunnel toll considered as council looks to boost income
glasgowlive.co.uk/news/glasgow-n…
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This doctor believes that Death is not the Annihilation of the human mind. He says of consciousness: 'That entity continues, and it persists even when the brain does not appear to be functioning.' He also suggests that 'consciousness may be a separate entity from the brain.'
Sam Parnia, an associate professor of medicine at NYU Langone, is a leading researcher in resuscitation science and consciousness studies. He is the author of Lucid Dying: The New Science Revolutionizing How We Understand Life and Death.
His research explores near-death experiences, the continuation of consciousness after clinical death, and advanced techniques to revive the brain. By leveraging AI and cutting-edge medical technologies, Parnia is reshaping our understanding of life, death, and the possibilities of bringing patients back even after they've been declared dead.
Dr. Parnia’s research reveals that death is not an instantaneous event, but rather a process that unfolds over time. After a person’s heart stops, the cells in their body, including the brain, begin their own gradual death process.
Brain cells do not die as quickly as people once thought when they don’t get oxygen. Instead of dying within minutes, they can survive for hours or even days before the damage becomes permanent. This means there may be more time to help someone who has lost oxygen, such as in drowning or a stroke.

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