
TimNaples
79.2K posts

TimNaples
@TimNaples
Never argue with an idiot, they’ll bring you down to their level and then beat you with experience - Mark Twain
United States Entrou em Ekim 2012
1.4K Seguindo2.1K Seguidores
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This lawsuit by @ChildrensHD exposes the urgent need for real accountability in pediatric care. My patent-pending Medical Accountability Program (MAP)—an add-on to my DODAT patent (US 12,192,307)—tracks decisions, outcomes, and patient reports transparently to prevent coercion and build trust. Let’s reform healthcare! #MedicalAccountability #MAHA
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The 747’s flightdeck sits so high up off the ground that it truly is close to impossible to accurately ascertain the jet’s true ground speed while taxiing which is of the outmost importance with a jet that size especially during 90° or tighter turns. I’ve never flown a jet without ground speed displayed on either the Navigation Display or the Primary Flight Display (or on both) or on the Electronic Horizontal Situation Indicator (EHSI) on the older 757s and 767s. Question for the wise elders… How did you monitor ground speed during taxi? I’ve seen the control interface unit for the Inertial Reference Units (INS) of yesteryear, did you monitor ground speed through there? How about jets before that without INSs? Just seat of the pants?


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TimNaples retweetou

A lawyer representing a wealthy art collector called him and said, “John, I have some good news and some bad news.”
The art collector replied, “I’ve had an awful day. Let’s hear the good news first.”
The lawyer said, “I met with your wife today, and she informed me that she invested $1,500 in two pictures that she thinks will bring a minimum of $15–20 million. I think she could be right.”
John replied enthusiastically, “Well done! My wife is a brilliant businesswoman! You’ve just made my day. Now I know I can handle the bad news. What is it?”
The lawyer replied, “The pictures are of you and your secretary.”
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@ArturFufkin I saw this native dude at Costco today, he had some serious Coke bottle eyeglasses, and I wonder how he'd fair without optometrists and grocery stores.
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@WallStreetMav This happened in Minneapolis too. The Ameriprise building sold for $6mm when it had previously sold for $200mm.
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Juul paid $400 million for this S.F. tower in 2019.
It is now valued at between $90 million to $100 million.
This building at 123 Mission St is located in the once prestigious heart of San Francisco’s Financial District.
Crime, drugs, poop on sidewalks and homelessness have made the once desirable area a disaster. In addition, the exodus of jobs and business have created so many vacancies, that getting new business tenants is nearly impossible. The building is mostly empty while the new owners consider their options.

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@TimNaples 🧐
Surely there must be some statistical principles at play here. The phallic tendency?
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@NotSoSmolBirb @OnDisasters Unfortunately we lost him a few years ago. To natural causes. Such is life, one by one the old guys fade away. Hard living I guess.
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@TimNaples @OnDisasters What ever became of the "Old, bold pilots?" thought?
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TimNaples retweetou


@MikeyDiMercurio As many times they try and retire that old girl, they find another use for it. It’s irreplaceable.
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"So we took a bigass gun firing rounds big as a Red Bull can at unimaginable rounds/min rate, put a seat on it, a couple jet engines and some wings for good measure, and called it the A-10."
Status-6 (War & Military News)@Archer83Able
Chairman of the JCS Gen. Dan Caine: "The A-10 Warthog is now in the fight across the southern flank and is hunting and killing fast attack watercraft in the Straits of Hormuz."
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TimNaples retweetou

On 14 April 1964, just after takeoff from Essendon, ANSETT-ANA DC-6B VH-INA (Flight AN216) lost the entire propeller assembly from its No. 3 engine at just 200 feet.
A blade broke off due to metal fatigue, causing the rest of the propeller to tear away and nearly rip the one-tonne engine from its mountings. Suddenly, the aircraft was experiencing severe drag, power loss, and a dangerous pull to one side, requiring immediate action from the crew.
Oil sprayed the fuselage as lines ruptured, and propeller debris rained down on North Essendon (one blade piercing a house roof, the others landing harmlessly in a backyard). Miraculously, no one on the ground was hurt. Captain Keith Hants and his crew, with 57 passengers on board, faced an aviator's test of skill and calm.
With the damaged engine barely hanging on, the DC-6B struggled to climb and just cleared the suburbs of Melbourne, heading out over Port Phillip Bay. The crew circled the bay, dumping fuel to lighten the plane for an emergency landing, while a second aircraft was dispatched to assess the damage from the air.
This was to consume and also dump fuel to reduce the aircraft’s weight before attempting the planned emergency landing back at Essendon, and to prepare for a possible ditching in the event of further complications. Fortunately, being an autumn weekday, the number of pleasure watercraft on the bay below the stricken airliner was minimal.
At 1.30 pm, the crew began jettisoning fuel over the bay. At 2 pm, DC-3 VH-ING took off from Essendon, with Captains John Blair & Peter Gibbes (the latter being the ANSETT-ANA Director of Operations), certain DCA personnel & ANSETT-ANA maintenance engineers. The DC-3 was flown alongside VH-INA to examine the damage.
Landing with the engine barely attached was too risky, so after tense manoeuvres, the crew managed to shake it free and drop it into the bay below. Lightened and finally safe, they returned to Essendon and landed without further incident (94 dramatic minutes after takeoff).
A cheering crowd welcomed the crew and passengers home, with even Reginald Ansett himself on the tarmac to congratulate them—a demonstration of calm professionalism and a little luck in the skies over Melbourne almost 62 years ago.

ANSETT-ANA from Facebook




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TimNaples retweetou

This will go down as one of President Trump’s funniest media takedowns of all time.
A Japanese reporter pressed him on why the U.S. didn’t warn allies before the Iran strike — and Trump flipped it instantly.
“Why didn’t you tell me about Pearl Harbor?”
REPORTER: “Why didn’t you tell U.S. allies in Europe and Asia, like Japan, about the war before attacking Iran?”
TRUMP: “One thing you don’t want to signal too much.”
“You know when we go in we went in very hard and we didn’t tell anybody about it because we wanted surprise.”
“Who knows better about surprise than Japan? Okay.”
“Why didn’t you tell me about Pearl Harbor?”
“Okay, right? You know, he’s asking me…no, you believe in surprise I think much more so than us.”
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Of note much of this is federal tax money, like Minnesota same thing. California like Minnesota is supposed to administer the funding. I’m sure you will find some fraud in red states but these big blue states have industrialized it.
There will be more. We will see how JD Vance and his new task force do in discovering fraud in all states.
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@nickshirleyy It's such OPEN fraud. Out in the open. Imagine a legit child care telling a visitor "fuck you" or "Im calling 911 you are trespassing" Californians are paying double the taxes they could be.
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🚨 Here is the full 40 minutes of my crew and I exposing California fraud, Minnesota was big but California is even bigger... We uncovered over $170,000,000 in fraud as these fraudsters live in luxury with no consequences. Like it and share it, the fraud must STOP.
We ALL work way too hard and pay too much in taxes for this to be happening. These fraudsters have been able to defraud American taxpayers for years without any pushback from the public and politicians.
It is time to EXPOSE IT ALL and end America's fraud crisis.
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This could easily be downdraft due to winds aka mountain wave turbulence. There’s bound to be some pretty strong winds that time of year and several of the mountain peaks are almost to 7200 feet. The town of Hobart Mills is almost 6000 feet by itself. You get on the back side of one of those ridges and the downdrafts suck you down. Easy to over stress an airplane trying to yank back too hard on the stick.
7200 feet is way too low to cruise at in that area. They were also fully loaded with pax and crew.
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