@Prada Corporate America has let us Americans know even if she look like a man because she is a Caucasian woman she will always be before Angel. Angel pasion is fashion queen now CC team follow Angel get on ceceral box they put cc on ceceral box it’s so unfair
Prada Ambassador Caitlin Clark attends the Prada Fall/Winter 2026 Womenswear Fashion Show in Milan, at the Fondazione Prada’s Deposito.
#PradaFW26#PradaPeople#CaitlinClark
@harryjsisson If they are messing with ICE at this point, they DO fall under domestic terrorism & put into a database. Not unconstitutional. Keep it up liberals, we need to get rid of you somehow, might as well be GITMO or Federal Prison.
An ICE agent in Portland, Maine just told a woman she’s a “domestic terrorist” for filming them. He said he’s putting her in their “database” of names. People’s rights are being violated every single day by these goons and Trump is endorsing it.
@leoknyc777@mattvanswol Yeah, its unpopular because ICE needs to ramp up deportations by 10x than what they are doing. We need to hit every blue enclave and put the Panic in Hispanic so hard that we no longer have an option of Para Espanol Oprima 2.
🚨BREAKING: Video shows ICE agents shooting an unarmed person, as agents wrestle the person to the ground, in Minneapolis, near Glam Doll Donuts.
You can then see agents open fire on the man’s body as he lies motionless on the ground.
This just happened. More details to come.
@Danicecppz@archeohistories That's because you're racist. If you look people across the middle east and even Asia look black. Doesn't mean they are.
Google dark skinned Indians and see what happens.
Portrait of an unidentified man that was placed over the face and upper torso of his mummy. Dated to 150–170 AD, it is painted in encaustic on a panel of linden wood, and it was originated in Roman Egypt.
This remarkable portrait belongs to a group of artworks known as the Fayum mummy portraits, a tradition that flourished in Roman Egypt between the 1st and 3rd centuries AD. Unlike the stylized depictions of faces seen in earlier Egyptian funerary art, these portraits were painted in a strikingly naturalistic style, giving us lifelike glimpses of people who lived nearly 2,000 years ago.
Painted in encaustic, a technique using hot wax mixed with pigment, the colors remain vivid even after centuries. The medium gave artists the ability to capture depth, texture, and warmth, preserving the humanity of their subjects with astonishing realism. In this particular piece, the curly hair, sharp eyebrows, and direct gaze make the man seem almost alive, as though he could step out of history and into the present.
The portrait was originally placed over the face and chest of the deceased’s mummified body, merging Egyptian burial practices with Roman artistic sensibilities. These works represent more than individual likenesses—they reflect the cultural blending of Greek, Roman, and Egyptian traditions in a society at the crossroads of the ancient Mediterranean world.
What makes the Fayum portraits so moving is the intimacy they provide. Unlike statues of emperors or gods, these images show ordinary people: merchants, soldiers, mothers, and children. Each one is a reminder that behind the ruins and relics of antiquity were lives full of stories, emotions, and identities. This man’s name may be lost to time, but his face survives as one of history’s most hauntingly personal echoes.
#archaeohistories
@WaelOthman44270@GrassRo26328757@archeohistories How do you know they wrote EVERYTHING down? You cannot know that. We can only know all of what they wrote down--not what they didn't. It's also possible they didn't want to reveal how they build their pyramids. I wouldn't immediately jump to "it must be UFOS". Lmao.
@GrassRo26328757@archeohistories Old Egypt used to write everything they do on Wallas and Papyrus.. it was a kind of archiving mechanism. So they wrote about life and death, pets, sex, what they do in day to day work, how they solve issues, etc
The only thing that is missing is how they built the pyramids !
@LCARSDATANODE@Haylee73722953@twist3dpandora@BethesdaSupport It frankly sounds like the game isnt aligning with your preferences/values, so maybe it's a good time to call it quits and find another game that has more pvp and white nationalists?
@Haylee73722953@twist3dpandora@BethesdaSupport its weirdos like this that ruined the game. they DEI their way into a dev position then push their bullshit. Fallout 76 used to be way funner with pvp and looting and prox chat, but a loud minority said no one pvps. Yeah, ok. explain the success of ARC Raiders then.
Herculaneum - a time capsule of ancient 'Roman Life' :
Herculaneum has been preserved like no other site in the world, not even nearby Pompeii. City was buried beneath 16m of ash and mud during eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD, and this layer of detritus saved two-story domus homes with internal architecture and décor intact, including features in wood and marble, decorations, jewelry and even organic remains like food, providing a unique view into the daily lives of the ancient population of Herculaneum.
Herculaneum is named for mythical Greek god, Hercules, who, according the legend told by Dionysius of Halicarnassus, founded the city in 1243 BC. Historic analysis, however, suggests that the city was founded by the Oscans or Etruscans in 7th Century BC , conquered by Samnites in 5th Century BC. In 90 BC, city was dominated by Rome and transformed into a municipium. In final years of Roman Republic, Herculaneum reached the height of its splendor thanks to its coastal location, clean air, and mild climate, making it a popular resort town for many of Rome's patrician families. City was vibrant and densely populated when the earthquake struck in 62 AD, causing serious damage; work to rebuild the city was still going on when the tragic eruption of Mount Vesuvius happened in 79 AD. The cloud of toxic gases from eruption wiped out inhabitants, while entire city was literally sealed under a flow of ash and volcanic rock 16m deep that solidifiedi, preserving almost perfectly intact organic remains like fabric, food, vegetation and wooden structures.
Discovery of ruins at Herculaneum was a complete accident: while a well was being dug in 1707 AD, by the order of Emmanuel Maurice, Prince of Lorraine, a number of marble fragments and statues that once decorated the ancient theater of Herculaneum were unearthed. In 1738 AD, work began again under Charles III of Bourbon led by Spanish military engineer De Alcubierre. In 1755 AD, after a number of important discoveries were made, Accademia Ercolanense was established and was active until 1792 AD. Excavations were suspended a number of times over the years until 1927, when site began to explored in a more systematic way. Important artifacts were unearthed in 1980s, along with sites like Temple of Venus, baths and ancient Greek port where inhabitants tried to find refuge in 79 AD. The site has been home to intense excavation since 2000, especially around the Villa of the Papyrus and the library.
📷 : Neptune and Salacia wall mosaic in House Number 22, Herculaneum; destroyed during the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.
#archaeohistories
@Corrack@Mattpetti32@Mister_Bluesky2@StephenKing That is just untrue. Look at Japan. But even if it was true, you don't need guns to have a threat of violence. There are other weapons. And I wasnt proposing a total ban. We are not in a combat zone (although with the absence of gum laws it sure feels like it more each day).
@bkingyon@Mattpetti32@Mister_Bluesky2@StephenKing I mean the threat of violence is the only thing that prevents absolute corruption. Heck even the Bible’s ending is a threat of extreme violence if you don’t believe. The issue with gun reform is that with how corrupt things are and getting no peaceful legal ways exist
@BeardedOG05@harryjsisson Uh, remember when Trump had ICE detained Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil, a U.S. permanent resident and former Columbia University student? Do 1st amendment rights only get infringed when it's right-wing rhetoric?