Robert Varhite 🔑

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Robert Varhite  🔑

Robert Varhite 🔑

@reallybob1

There's no place in America for dictators! Anti-Mandates! Gender is hardwired! XY ≠ XX

United States Katılım Eylül 2016
7.8K Takip Edilen7.1K Takipçiler
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ARYA™
ARYA™@elia_mafhh·
Not all heroes wear capes, and not all angels are in heaven. That was a beautiful thing you did for that horse.❤️🥹
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DrOzCMS
DrOzCMS@DrOzCMS·
On our way to Minnesota where fraudsters are about to “lear” a hard lesson on stealing from the American taxpayer. @nickshirleyy
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Heather LeMire
Heather LeMire@HeatherLemire1·
Proud mama. My 19 year old son swore in to serve in the Navy this morning. He leaves shortly after for bootcamp. I waited to bawl my eyes out until I got in the car. So excited to see him grow as a man on this journey.
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SciTech Girl
SciTech Girl@scitechgirl·
🚨 Scientists may have “frozen” light… and it sounds impossible. Researchers discovered ways to slow and trap light so it behaves in strange new ways inside quantum labs. This breakthrough could help create future quantum computers, powerful sensors, and technology that feels straight out of science fiction. The idea is simple but mind-blowing: light may someday be controlled and stored almost like matter itself. Source:
Harvard Gazette. Physicists freeze light into strange new quantum state. Harvard University.
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Mr PitBull Stories
Mr PitBull Stories@MrPitbull07·
He gave the stray dog pizza every day… but somehow, the dog kept coming back skinnier. The owner of a small pizza shop in Boston had been leaving leftover slices near the back door for a thin stray dog that kept showing up during the day. He figured the dog was finally getting one decent meal, but over the next week, the dog looked weaker instead of stronger. His ribs showed more, his walk slowed down, and the owner couldn’t understand why. That changed when he checked the CCTV behind the shop. The dog wasn’t eating the pizza at all. Every day, he picked it up, carried it down the alley, and dropped it near a group of hungry stray cats hiding by the back fence. He stood there while they ate first, taking almost nothing for himself. The shop owner said it broke him a little, because he had seen plenty of people take more than they need, but this dog, who had almost nothing, still chose to give.
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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
Six years ago, I got a call I never expected would change my life forever. It was 2018. A routine welfare check. The kind of call we take dozens of times a year. I pulled up to the address in Kingman, Arizona, walked through the door — and found a two-year-old girl sitting alone. Her name was Kaila. She had a skull injury. A brain bleed. A dislocated elbow. She was two years old. I sat down on the floor with her and waited for social services to arrive. We played. We talked in that way toddlers and adults talk — mostly her babbling, me listening like every word mattered. And honestly? Every word did. When child services finally asked if my wife and I would consider fostering her, I called home before I even left the scene. Kaila moved in that week. We told ourselves it was temporary. We told ourselves not to get attached. Within days, she called my wife "Mom." We never looked back. The paperwork took time. The process wasn't easy. But the moment a judge made it official and Kaila became ours — permanently, legally, completely — there wasn't a dry eye in that courtroom. Not even from the cop who thought he was just answering a welfare check. She's in preschool now. She runs into the house after school, backpack bouncing, talking a million miles a minute. She has no idea that the man she calls Dad was the first person who ever sat down on the floor and made her feel safe. Someday I'll tell her. For now, I'm just her dad. "People ask me if I feel like a hero. I don't. I just answered a call. She's the one who walked into a broken situation and still chose to love us back. That's the remarkable part." — Lt. Brian Zach, Kingman Police Department
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Astronomy Vibes
Astronomy Vibes@AstronomyVibes·
🚨 In the strange and fascinating world of quantum physics, there exists a phenomenon so mysterious that even Einstein called it “spooky action at a distance.” It’s known as quantum entanglement, and it links particles together in a way that defies space, time, and all known laws of communication. When two particles become entangled, they share a quantum state—meaning what happens to one instantly affects the other, no matter how far apart they are. You could separate them by galaxies, and still, a change in one would mirror in the other immediately. No signal travels between them, and no measurable delay occurs. It’s as if the universe itself bends to keep them connected. Scientists have confirmed this effect through countless experiments, proving that reality operates on levels far beyond what our senses can grasp. Quantum entanglement isn’t just a theoretical wonder; it’s now being used to shape future technologies—from unbreakable quantum encryption to faster-than-light communication research and revolutionary computing systems. What’s truly astonishing is the implication: everything in the universe might once have been entangled during the Big Bang, suggesting that distant corners of space could still be subtly linked through hidden quantum threads. Entanglement challenges our understanding of distance, time, and individuality. It reminds us that separation might only be an illusion—and that the universe, at its deepest level, moves as one.
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Mor Edge Insight
Mor Edge Insight@MorEdge_Insight·
Simply incredible 🚨💦🌊 While the world struggles with energy-hungry desalination, Israeli scientists are pushing the boundaries with next-generation nanomaterial membranes. Researchers at the Technion and Ben-Gurion University, often in collaboration with international partners, are developing ultra-thin nanomembranes (some just a few nanometers thick) using graphene oxide, mixed-matrix composites, and advanced polyelectrolytes. These membranes achieve higher water flux (more water produced) while dramatically reducing the pressure and energy needed compared to traditional reverse osmosis. Early results and prototypes show potential energy savings of 30-50% in desalination processes, along with superior rejection of salts, heavy metals, and persistent contaminants like PFAS (“forever chemicals”) in a single pass. Some designs also offer better anti-fouling properties, leading to longer membrane lifespan and lower maintenance. When combined with Israel’s world-leading desalination infrastructure (already supplying ~80% of the country’s drinking water), this nanotechnology could make clean water far more affordable and accessible, not just for Israel, but for water-stressed regions worldwide. This is Israeli innovation solving one of humanity’s biggest challenges at the molecular level. Proud every single day. 🇮🇱
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SciTech Girl
SciTech Girl@scitechgirl·
🚨 Scientists Captured The Exact Moment Water Was Created For the first time ever, scientists recorded hydrogen and oxygen atoms bonding together to form water at the nanoscale. Using advanced microscopic technology, researchers watched the tiny atoms connect in real time — something humans had never seen before. What looks like a simple drop of water is actually the result of an incredible atomic reaction that powers life on Earth. The footage is giving scientists a whole new understanding of chemistry and how matter transforms at its smallest level. Source:
Yao, Y., et al. Nature. Published by Nature Publishing Group.
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Lucy
Lucy@TheLucyShow1·
This delivery man is humanity at its best! 🤗
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Scientists in Japan have developed a groundbreaking treatment that could double the average lifespan of cats, extending it from around 15 years to nearly 30 years. The key lies in a protein called AIM (Apoptosis Inhibitor of Macrophage), discovered by Dr. Toru Miyazaki. While cats naturally produce AIM, they lack the ability to activate it effectively. This deficiency leads to the gradual buildup of waste in the kidneys, the leading cause of death in domestic cats. Dr. Miyazaki’s team created an injectable form of activated AIM that directly restores the kidneys’ natural cleaning function. In clinical trials, cats with advanced kidney disease showed dramatic improvement after treatment. The therapy works both as a preventive measure for healthy cats and as a treatment for those already ill. If approved, the treatment could revolutionize feline healthcare. Commercial rollout is expected to begin in Japan as early as 2025, with wider availability projected for 2027. The research has also sparked interest for its potential applications in human medicine, as the AIM protein plays a similar waste-clearing role across species.
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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
The wolf does not touch the dead — not man, not beast — its honor stands above hunger. It loves only once, for life; never crossing bloodlines, never betraying. If its mate dies, it chooses solitude over replacement. It knows its young, and when its parents grow frail with age, it returns — bringing food, bringing loyalty. When you kill a wolf, it holds your gaze — no fear, no hatred — until its soul slips away. Smarter than the cleverest dog by far, yet it cannot be tamed; no leash, no whip can command its spirit. They say the wolf is the villain — But sometimes, what they call evil… is simply misunderstood.
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Iris Seraphina 
Iris Seraphina @iris_seraphina·
Graduating students visit their Kindergarten teacher. 🥹 Warning: the screen gets blurry at about 20 seconds 😭 If you have impact this profound on young souls you’re gifted by GOD!!!!! Let this sink in, they are graduating HS 13 years later they come to honor her. That’s pure magic!!!!! Congratulations to her and her students. 🙌🏼 #Graduation #Teachers
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Mr PitBull Stories
Mr PitBull Stories@MrPitbull07·
Cat Swept Into the Sky During Tornado Somehow Walks Home Alive With the storm closing in fast, they had no choice but to run for shelter and hope he had hidden somewhere safe. Minutes later, their porch camera sent an alert. When they opened the clip, they froze. Milo was standing on the porch one second, and the next, the tornado’s winds lifted him into the air, carrying him nearly 80 feet above the yard before he disappeared into the gray sky. “I thought it was over,” Mrs. Whitaker said, admitting she cried through the night. But against all odds, the next morning, Milo strolled back to the front porch dusty, shaken, but alive. “I’m pretty sure he had to trade three or four of his nine lives for that one,” Mr. Whitaker joked.
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Curiosity
Curiosity@CuriosityonX·
MIND=BLOWN This isn’t just a picture. It’s a soul-shattering mirror. Earth → Sun → Stephenson 2-18 → TON 618 Each step erases the last like it never existed.
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Nature is Amazing ☘️
Nature is Amazing ☘️@AMAZlNGNATURE·
The caracal, aka the “desert lynx” is one of the most strikingly beautiful wild cats on Earth. Known for their long black ear tufts and powerful jumps, caracals can leap into the air to catch birds mid-flight. They are solitary hunters found across Africa and parts of Asia.
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Batu
Batu@yetkisizherif·
minik kuş en yakın arkadaşının uykuya daldığını fark edip başı yere düşmesin diye onun yastığı olmaya karar veriyor
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TheNewPhysics
TheNewPhysics@CharlesMullins2·
🚨 FOR THE FIRST TIME, SCIENTISTS RESTORED HEARING USING STEM CELLS Researchers injected lab-grown stem cells into damaged human ears… and some patients regained measurable hearing ability. The goal? Repair the tiny sensory hair cells and neurons inside the cochlea that normally never regenerate once destroyed. This is massive because hearing loss affects hundreds of millions of people worldwide… and most current treatments only compensate for damage rather than actually repairing it. Why this matters: • Could restore natural hearing instead of amplifying sound • May help reverse certain forms of deafness • Opens the door to regenerating damaged sensory tissue • Could eventually treat tinnitus and nerve-related hearing disorders • Pushes regenerative medicine into real human neural repair The deeper implication? We’re entering an era where medicine may stop managing damage… and start rebuilding biology itself. Your body may not be as permanent as we once thought. Follow for more future physics and breakthrough technology.
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