JimboSlice72
773 posts


@TheRealMarina0 Hitting someone with a vehicle is deadly force. It better have been a SERIOUS crime.
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@SeanM1727 @TheRealMarina0 So just like the way Renee Good hit an officer with her car as well
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🚨BREAKING: California congressional candidate Mai Vang refuses to recite the Pledge of Allegiance and turns her back on the U.S. flag during public meetings.
The Sacramento City Councilmember has openly boasted about the practice at ceremonies, drawing sharp criticism as she campaigns for higher office.

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California congressional candidate Mai Vang declines to recite the Pledge of Allegiance.
Sacramento City Councilmember Mai Vang, running in CA-7, has repeatedly chosen not to say the Pledge at public meetings and has turned away from the U.S. flag during the ceremony.
She shared on social media that she uses the moment to reflect on America’s “injustices.”
This is drawing criticism from veterans and others ahead of Memorial Day, with some questioning whether declining the Pledge aligns with serving in Congress.
Shouldn’t members of Congress take pride in reciting the Pledge of Allegiance? 🇺🇸
(Video: AI)
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🚨MUSLIM STUDENT SAYS EGYPT IS WAY SAFER FOR WOMEN THAN AMERICA?
A University of Houston student who lived her entire life in Egypt before moving to the U.S. 2 years ago claimed life there is “infinitely better," “way more fun,” and “way safer.”
She said she never felt the need to carry pepper spray walking at night in Cairo or Alexandria.
When asked if she’d feel safe walking around as a woman in Iran, Afghanistan, or Pakistan, she replied she didn’t know.
Egypt’s laws include unilateral talaq divorce rights for men only; women inheriting half the share of male relatives; blasphemy punishable by up to 5 years in prison; and de facto criminalization of homosexuality.
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@7007Carol @Rainmaker1973 And then Biden took credit for rolling it out and quoted as saying, " if you get the vaccine, you won't get COVID", and all the liberals yelling "TrUsT tHe ScIeNcE!!!! yep, seems like selective memory
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@Rainmaker1973 Anybody remember trump hurrying the scientists to come up with a vaccine and they tried telling him you cant rush it? But he insisted they do? Selective memory.
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Scientists at Stanford Medicine have proposed an explanation for the rare cases of myocarditis that can occur after mRNA COVID-19 vaccination. The research points to a two-step inflammatory process involving the cytokines CXCL10 and IFN-gamma.
According to the study, vaccine-activated immune cells, particularly macrophages, produce high levels of CXCL10. This molecule then stimulates T cells to release IFN-gamma, creating a potent inflammatory signal that can damage heart muscle cells. The team confirmed this pathway through experiments using human heart tissue models, immune cells, and mice.
Importantly, blocking CXCL10 and IFN-gamma reduced signs of heart injury in laboratory models while largely preserving the protective immune response generated by the vaccine. The researchers also tested genistein, a natural compound found in soybeans, which showed anti-inflammatory effects in the models, though further clinical studies are required.
Myocarditis following mRNA vaccination is very rare, occurring in approximately 1 in 140,000 people after the first dose and 1 in 32,000 after the second, with higher rates observed in young males. Most cases are mild and resolve with full recovery. The study notes that COVID-19 infection itself carries a significantly higher risk of myocarditis, roughly 10 times greater than vaccination.
This work may inform the development of safer future mRNA vaccines while underscoring the established benefits of current ones in preventing severe COVID-19 outcomes.
[Cao, X., et al. (2025). Inhibition of CXCL10 and IFN-γ ameliorates myocarditis in preclinical models of SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination. Science Translational Medicine, 17(828)]

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@mikedawg163243 @Rainmaker1973 The view is apparently the leading authority on the history of ancient western civilization
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@Rainmaker1973 The show the view claims Markus was black or chineese
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Archaeologists in southern Turkey unearthed the marble foot of a life-sized statue of the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius. The find offers a tangible link to one of Rome’s most respected rulers and underscores his enduring historical importance.
Marcus Aurelius (121–180 AD) reigned from 161 to 180 AD during the Pax Romana. He is remembered both as a capable military commander who led campaigns against Germanic tribes such as the Marcomanni and Quadi, and as a profound Stoic philosopher. His personal reflections, compiled in the famous work Meditations, remain one of the most influential texts in Western philosophy, exploring themes of duty, virtue, reason, and resilience.
Even while directing military operations, Marcus Aurelius continued his intellectual pursuits, often writing amid the hardships of campaign life. The newly discovered sculpture fragment highlights the widespread admiration for the emperor across the Roman Empire and reflects the high level of artistic skill of the period.

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Aboriginal man Tom Noytuna using newly installed phone for the first time, circa 1980....
The photograph shows Tom Noytuna covered in white ochre, which is often used in traditional ceremonies, using a newly installed telephone for the first time in the remote outstation of Korlobidahdah, central Arnhem Land. It was taken around 1980 by photographer Penny Tweedie.
Remote telecommunications infrastructure expanded dramatically across Australia during the mid-to-late 20th century, connecting many isolated Indigenous and rural communities to national phone networks for the first time. In vast regions of the Australian Outback, access to reliable communication had long been limited by extreme distances, sparse populations, and difficult terrain.
For many Aboriginal communities, the arrival of telephones represented more than technological convenience, it changed access to emergency services, medical care, family communication, education, and government resources. Prior to expanded telecommunications systems, some remote settlements depended heavily on radio networks, infrequent transport routes, or traveling service providers.
Throughout the 1970s-80s, Australia invested heavily in modernizing rural infrastructure including roads, airstrips, electricity and telecommunications across remote territories.
The Royal Flying Doctor Service, founded in 1928, became famous for using radio communication to deliver medical advice and emergency healthcare to isolated communities scattered across the Australian interior.
© Reddit
#archaeohistories

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@Machad_inc @archpng In California not only would it cost 2.5 billion, it would take 40 years, it would have had an original cost estimate of $10,000 and 3 months to complete
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@archpng In America, that would cost 2. 5 million.
In California, it would cost 2.5 Billion.
If we had real environmentalists here in the states, they would volunteer their time and resources to do wonderful work like this.
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In Japan, some trees are not simply cut down when construction reaches them.
Using a careful transplanting method linked to nemawashi, workers prepare the roots, bind the root ball, and move the tree to a new location instead. The process can take months of planning, because the goal is not just to move the tree — but to keep it alive.
A powerful reminder that progress does not always have to begin with cutting something down.

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