JC
130 posts



The Philippines has declared a national energy emergency in response to the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, another sign of strain in Asia as the Middle East conflict stifles oil delivery and threatens an energy crisis. ABC News' Britt Clennett reports. abcnews.link/rsCnLcW


if memecoins have a million fans, then i am one of them. if memecoins have ten fans, then i am one of them. if memecoins have only one fan then that is me. if memecoins have no fans, then that means i am no longer on earth. if the world is against memecoins, then i am against the world.



CA: 7QaHVrA5r2PJr63ABAzQXZ6iSU4ogcoMNyJU9zG7pump This lore is too powerful and starting to go viral: x.com/Animalesapriet… TL;DR: Tahlequah swam 1,600 km for 17 days carrying her dead calf, repeatedly diving to keep it from sinking in an extraordinary display of grief and devotion. She’s nicknamed “The Aeneas Orca” because, like Aeneas - the Trojan hero who carried his father from burning Troy - she bore her child across the sea as a symbol of endurance and sacred duty. “Tahlequah,” the orca, swam 1,600 km across the ocean carrying her dead calf so it would not sink. Scientists said this was not ordinary behavior but something extraordinary - a display of profound grief and true endurance The reason Tahlequah is called “The Aeneas Orca” is because Aeneas, the Roman demigod, fled the burning ruins of Troy with his father on his back - just as Tahlequah carried her calf through the vast Pacific. Tahlequah had to dive again and again to retrieve her calf every time it slipped beneath the surface, refusing to let it sink, without eating or properly resting - showing endurance beyond instinct and a grief that would not yield. And to be clear, her name is Tahlequah. J35 is simply her scientific designation within the J pod - but Tahlequah is the name that carries her story. The whitewhale conflict with orca also adds to this lore


Recorrió 1.600 km con el cuerp0 de su cría para no dejarlo hundir. En 2018, Tahlequah, una orca conocida como J35, hizo algo que dejó a todos sin palabras. Su cría se fue de este mundo poco después de nacer, y ella pasó 17 días cargando el cuerp0 por todo el Pacífico. Fueron más de 1.600 kilómetros. Tenía que sumergirse una y otra vez para rescatarlo cuando se hundía, sin comer ni descansar como debía. Los científicos lo confirmaron después. Esto no era instinto animal. Era duelo real. Y su manada entera hizo algo increíble. Redujeron el ritmo de nado para acompañarla y le compartían comida para que pudiera seguir. Al final, ella dejó ir a su cría. Dos años después, en 2020, volvió a ser madre. Esta vez el bebé nació sano y le pusieron Phoenix. Hoy ambos siguen nadando juntos en el Pacífico.

