Jenyth Cunningham

4.1K posts

Jenyth Cunningham

Jenyth Cunningham

@eeL4416

'I missed something that day'. 'EVERYBODY missed something that day'. 'I'm not everybody'. -Homeland

Katılım Haziran 2025
456 Takip Edilen228 Takipçiler
Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@elonmusk &THAT, Elon, is why I'm back on X again. The love, passion, enthusiasm, hope, determination, vision, sheer hard work & forward thinking - this is MY world❤ A twinkling star -hard to find in today's dark skies, but shining steadfast &bright none the less. Keep burning x
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Arthur MacWaters
Arthur MacWaters@ArthurMacwaters·
I called my engineer friend at SpaceX the other day. 1am Pacific. 3am in Starbase. He was still in the office and not going home any time soon. And he was happy. Energized. Because he's directly influencing the course of a multi-planetary future for humanity. On a fundamental level, this is why Elon companies win. Young, high-competence people are given exceptional individual agency and semi-impossible problems. And they know that their contribution is essential. Any company that does this is much more likely to succeed. Elon does this without fail. Inspires me a lot.
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David Senra@davidsenra

Marc Andreessen (@pmarca) on what it’s like to work at SpaceX: “It’s like being dropped into a zone of shocking competence.” “Everybody is ultra competent, and the reason everybody’s ultra competent is because if they’re not, Elon sniffs it out and fires them. He knows, ‘cause he’s talking to the people actually doing the work.” “The best engineers in the world want to work for him, ‘cause he’s the one CEO like this who’s able to work with them as a peer on whatever the technology is.” “What would be better as an engineer than being able to design a rocket engine with Elon Musk as your engineering partner?”

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D.V. Catt
D.V. Catt@davidsupercat·
Benji is back from the vet. His mouth is healing well with no problems, which is good news. He does have a minor ear infection though but I’ve got some antibiotic drops so it should be fine. He has been eating really well today so hopefully he will start getting back to normal.
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@writethewrongs2 @HomesEngland I once drove a top Kent planning boss &asked him about permissions. His reply was Councils &developers want to build then you can throw all the rare newts you like, they're building. Move the newts, build a token wood, but the decision's already made. I hope that's NOT true.
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🌻 AnnetteJB- Go Wild
🌻 AnnetteJB- Go Wild@writethewrongs2·
Nightingales are at risk....😡👇Come on @HomesEngland why here? A wildlife charity is objecting to plans for 450 new homes due to concerns they could threaten resident nightingales. Homes England's proposals is for land next to the Chattenden Woods and Lodge Hill Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) on the Hoo Peninsula in Kent. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) says the area is the most important nightingale site in the UK and is home to more than 1% of the country's population which could be disturbed by humans and pet cats if the plan is approved. Homes England said extensive surveys had allowed it to understand how future impact could be avoided and its plan had been shaped in consultation with ornithological experts. A spokesperson for the developers said: "They [the proposals] are evidence-based and designed to minimise risks to nightingales, with clear measures in place to mitigate any impacts. "As part of our long-term commitment to nature-positive objectives, the plans include significant improvements to nightingale habitat across the wider Lodge Hill estate." Concerns about the impact housing could have on nightingales in the area were also raised in 2013, and they were flagged again 10 years later. The RSPB says nightingales usually return to the same place to nest every year and nest on, or near, the ground so their eggs and young are at higher risk. It added that the UK's population of nightingales had already suffered a 41% decrease between 1995-2023. Read more here: bbc.co.uk/news/articles/…
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@BattlefieldBen This is a sobering reminder of what human beings will do to each other. We should all be warned. They said 'Never again' after WW1, then THIS happened. We mustn't ever dream it couldn't again.
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Ben Mayne
Ben Mayne@BattlefieldBen·
Just heading off to visit Oradour-sur-Glane for the first time, a location I have wanted to visit for a long time. ‘Down this road on a summer day in 1944, the soldiers came. Nobody lives here now. They stayed only a few hours. When they had gone, the community, which had lived for a thousand years, was dead. This is Oradour-sur-Glane, in France.’
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@BattlefieldBen Like Auschwitz, I don't know if I could visit it -such atrocities went on there, it must be screaming with souls. Thanks for the footage.
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@VoWalesWren We're a set of islands. I'd argue that having sea defences MIGHT be quite important🙄 Starmer sees us as a floating EU dog end & wants EU military forces. He'll defend the EU well before he'll defend the UK. Maybe he should remember when Hitler stormed Europe &reached our shores
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@domdyer70 A friend I'd had for many years -a VERY good friend - started working in this industry &I just couldn't bring myself to stay in touch &hear about how much she loved the job. I really miss her, but I can't support this. It's simply for rich people's sport, the birds don't matter.
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dominic dyer
dominic dyer@domdyer70·
It's happening. Tomorrow ITV News will be releasing the findings of the largest undercover investigation into the British bird shooting industry ever conducted.
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@NEVeteran @archer_rs Thank you, photos are excellent! I'll be honest, I find the night flying comforting - I can go back to sleep knowing someone's patrolling the skies above my bed❤❤
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New England Veteran
New England Veteran@NEVeteran·
Found a picture of one of the Hush Houses we operate, it's so we can do this on the ground at night while you guys are asleep. Gold and Black Tail is my old Squadron too! 493rd Reapers~~~ We had a pet chicken that lived out on that flightline by the runway..it showed up one day from some random locals yard and never left because it got fed really good by us. It was the 'Reaper Chicken' as it was all black. Thing lived around 9-10 years according to the old Facebook page someone from the unit made for it. (it was there before I got there and was there after I left) Would not be the least bit surprised if there was a plaque for that chicken somewhere on that flightline. And if there isn't we need to get one made. That's a long good life for a chicken. Hope you enjoyed this little story of something wholesome behind the scenes at the base.
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RS Archer
RS Archer@archer_rs·
Fox News reporter surprised to discover that RAF Lakenheath in the UK is, a) an RAF base b) not "US Sovereign territory like the US Embassy" c) the property of the British government
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@politicshome @DannyVet @Battersea_PA It's ignorance. All people see is the 'cute' or want one 'cos a celebrity has it or they saw a photo on the internet. They don't think any further than 'Cute -want one'. They're perpetuating cruelty without realising it.
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PoliticsHome
PoliticsHome@politicshome·
Across the UK, more and more dogs and cats are being bred to look fashionable or cute. But this can come at a serious cost to their health and welfare. @DannyVet and @Battersea_PA write that tackling extreme breeding must be central to animal welfare efforts. Partner Content
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@anishmoonka My theory is that's why we're all obsessed with screens &scrolling -it occupies the brain to lessen anxiety. 'Cos we're all stressed by modern life &too much information.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Winston Churchill fought his depression with bricks. He'd lay them for hours at his country home in Kent. He joined the bricklayers' union. And in 1921 he wrote about why it worked. It took psychology another 75 years to catch up. He called his depression the "Black Dog." It followed him for decades. His method for fighting it back was as basic as it sounds: laying brick after brick, hour after hour. Churchill spelled out his theory in a long essay for The Strand Magazine. People who think for a living, he wrote, can't fix a tired brain just by resting it. They have to use a different part of themselves. The part that moves the eyes and the hands. Woodworking, chemistry, bookbinding, bricklaying, painting. Anything that drags the body into a problem the mind can't solve by itself. Modern psychology now calls this behavioral activation. It's one of the most-studied depression treatments out there. Depression sets a behavior trap. You feel bad, so you stop doing things, and doing less means less to feel good about. Feeling worse makes you do even less. The loop tightens until you can't breathe inside it. Behavioral activation breaks the loop from the action side. You schedule the activity first, even when every part of you doesn't want to. Doing it produces small rewards: a wall gets straighter, a painting fills in, a messy room gets clean. Those small rewards slowly rewire the brain. Action comes first, and the feeling follows. Researchers at the University of Washington put this to the test in 2006. They studied 241 adults with major depression and compared three treatments: behavioral activation, regular talk therapy, and antidepressants. For the people who were most severely depressed, behavioral activation matched the drugs. It beat the talk therapy. A 2014 review of more than 1,500 patients across 26 trials backed up the result. Physical work like bricklaying does something extra on top of this. It crowds out rumination, the looping bad thoughts that grind people down during the worst stretches of depression. Bricklaying needs both hands and gives feedback brick by brick: each one is straight or crooked. After an hour you can see exactly how much wall you built. No room left for the mental chewing. The line George Mack used in his post, "depression hates a moving target," is good poetry. The science behind it is sharper. Depression hates a brain that has somewhere else to be.
George Mack@george__mack

Winston Churchill used to lay 200 bricks per day to keep his mind busy when feeling down. Depression hates a moving target.

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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@NEVeteran @archer_rs Only the night flying &crashing your cars in fen ditches -the rest is fine🤣 Most of you are very courteous plus you ARE our 'cousins'🤣❤ Sorry about the 'sh*tty little roads' &our bad teeth🤣🤣
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New England Veteran
New England Veteran@NEVeteran·
RAF Lakenheath was my first assignment. The give away is in the name. All US Air Force Bases that are on sovereign territory are named WXYZ AFB (Air Force Base) Overseas bases that we use temporarily or that belong to someone else (we lease them) have host country naming (eg: RAF/Royal Air Force) or AB for "Air Base" (which Air Base is the most common naming scheme overseas already) Great base, Great people that put up with us in that area and trust me...we get on their nerves.
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@SheldrickTrust These keepers are amazing -the love, dedication &protection they give encapsulates all that is good in the world. God bless them❤
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Sheldrick Wildlife Trust
Sheldrick Wildlife Trust@SheldrickTrust·
Yesterday, we introduced you to our newest addition, Bumpy the orphaned hippo. This was his flight down to Kaluku. He was a perfect passenger – he scrambled right into Keeper Joseph's lap and spent most of the trip chattering in little hippo grunts! Bumpy is very new to the fold – he was rescued over the weekend. His mother appears to have died in a territorial fight, likely defending her baby's life. Now, Bumpy has a family with us and a wild future ahead. Read his full rescue story and become part of his journey through an adoption: sheldrickwildlifetrust.org/orphans/bumpy
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@Sandford_Ambo I'm just wondering about the logistics of how it got there. How would you physically stack it? Is there an RAC for broken down boats? 'I won't be in, just drop it on the drive &put the keys through the letterbox'.
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Derrick
Derrick@Derrick34167625·
@rmorr4567 @Itx_judith Gang … our president touched kids …. No way your worried about mentally unstable ppl tho 😭maga brain is literally equivalent to a cat brain
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𝕁𝕦𝕕𝕚𝕥𝕙
𝕁𝕦𝕕𝕚𝕥𝕙@Itx_judith·
TRUMP JUST "FIRED" 8,980 ACTIVE DUTY AND 5,727 RESERVE TROOPS WHO IDENTIFIED AS TRANSGENDER. DO YOU SUPPORT THIS?
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@stevehollyhouse @asda To be fair we were all warned about 6 months ago (if you listen to any farming programmes) that weather conditions /harvesting issues were going to make spuds crap. And here are crap spuds.
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Steve Rogers
Steve Rogers@stevehollyhouse·
What is happening to your potato’s @asda the last 3 packets have been like this: every spud bruised and end up throwing half of them away?? Not good enough 🤔
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@davidsupercat It takes a long time. After a week my Bert still wasn't eating at all &I pestered the vets 'til they were sick of me! But it was gradual &the strength came back quickly once it started -was probably 2 weeks plus. Keep feeding &cuddling!❤❤
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D.V. Catt
D.V. Catt@davidsupercat·
Benji update:- Six days since his oral surgery and he’s doing ok. He’s eating quite well but is still painfully thin, hopefully he’ll put on weight gradually over the coming weeks. He’s a bit subdued still and not quite himself. His ears seem to be bothering him, so I’ll get that checked out tomorrow, when he goes for his check up. So, no real concern but his recovery is going more slowly than I would like. Thank you all for your kind words and support.
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Jenyth Cunningham retweetledi
Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Fingals cave, Isle of Staffa, Scotland
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Jenyth Cunningham
Jenyth Cunningham@eeL4416·
@N_of_Leigh I'm just worried what lying, obnoxious, treacherous twat we're going to get next😧
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Nigel
Nigel@N_of_Leigh·
Who else is relishing the end of this lying obnoxious treacherous twats political career on Thursday ?
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