SMB28

10.3K posts

SMB28

SMB28

@SMB287

เข้าร่วม Nisan 2022
370 กำลังติดตาม346 ผู้ติดตาม
Madison
Madison@Maddy_Harp_001·
The practice is called Co-bedding, placing premature twins or multiples together in one incubator or cot, mimicking their shared womb environment. This promotes co-regulation: they touch, hug, or snuggle, stabilizing heart rate, oxygen levels, temperature, and breathing through familiar scents, sounds, and contact. It reduces stress and crying, improves sleep and growth, and often shortens NICU stays. The 1995 "Rescuing Hug" case popularized the practice worldwide.
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Dr. Lemma
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma·
In 1995, a nurse broke hospital rules to place a newborn into her twin sister’s incubator. The baby was not expected to survive. Kyrie and Brielle Jackson were born 12 weeks early at a hospital in the United States. Each weighed roughly two pounds. They were placed in separate incubators, standard practice to prevent infection. Kyrie gained strength. Brielle did not. Three weeks after birth, Brielle went into critical condition. Her oxygen dropped. Her heart rate spiked. Her skin turned bluish-grey. Nurse Gayle Kasparian tried everything. She held her. She had her father hold her. She wrapped her in a blanket. Nothing worked. Kasparian remembered hearing about a practice used in parts of Europe but never tried in American hospitals. She placed Brielle into Kyrie’s incubator. Their father described what happened next: “She snuggled up to Kyrie and she was just fine. It was immediate. It was absolutely immediate.” Within minutes, Brielle’s oxygen levels were the best they had been since she was born. As she slept, Kyrie stretched her left arm across her sister’s body and held her. Photographer Chris Christo captured the moment. The image spread around the world and became known as “The Rescuing Hug.” Hospitals across multiple countries began placing premature twins together, a practice that had been resisted for decades. Both girls went home healthy. They are now 30.
Dr. Lemma tweet media
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Jhonf Fonseca
Jhonf Fonseca@Jhonffonseca·
¡URGENTE INTERNACIONAL! 🇺🇸🇩🇪 El presidente Donald Trump está considerando seriamente retirar las tropas estadounidenses de Alemania, una decisión que evalúa desde su regreso a la Casa Blanca. Según fuentes de The Telegraph, se trataría de un movimiento de gran escala: hasta 35.000 soldados podrían salir de Alemania y ser reubicados en Europa del Este (incluyendo posibles traslados a Hungría). Esta medida, que Trump ya había impulsado en su primer mandato, busca presionar a los aliados de la OTAN para que aumenten su gasto en defensa y poner fin a lo que considera una carga desproporcionada para Estados Unidos. Un cambio histórico que podría reconfigurar por completo la presencia militar de EE.UU. en Europa y tensar aún más las relaciones transatlánticas.
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SMB28
SMB28@SMB287·
@HellaADZ don’t confuse geographic beauty with the city itself. SF is dirty, filled with crime and💩. I lived there for a decade and now I’ve been gone for a decade and I’m glad to be the latter.
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SMB28
SMB28@SMB287·
@JLucroy20 this guy as a MLB coach is going to struggle with his high school like theatrics
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SMB28
SMB28@SMB287·
@BBGreatMoments The art of hitting 400 and Charlie Lau’s book should both be mandatory reading for any parent or kid connected with youth baseball
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Baseball’s Greatest Moments
Baseball’s Greatest Moments@BBGreatMoments·
Ted Williams understood launch angle and made it simple way before all of the analytics in today’s game. He made it simple and that is part of the reason he was the greatest hitter to ever do it.
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Biased Notre Dame Fan
Biased Notre Dame Fan@CFBGuy999·
Projected 2026 Starting Offense 🍀: WR: Micah Gilbert WR: Mylan Graham LT: Will Black LG: Anthonie Knapp C: Joe Otting RG: Sullivan Absher RT: Guerby Lambert TE: Cooper Flanagan WR: Jordan Faison QB: CJ Carr RB: Aneyas Williams What would you change? 👇
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Oliver Habryka
Oliver Habryka@ohabryka·
@benlandautaylor He already spent 5 years in jail, so it's more like ~6 years in jail/prison + probation period. Which, IDK, is not an enormous factor away from what seems to me like a just judgement here.
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SMB28
SMB28@SMB287·
@SkimMilkey wait…i thought women’s basketball could demand the same prices as the men’s?
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SMB28
SMB28@SMB287·
@geraldposner San Francisco and California are getting exactly what they voted for.
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Gerald Posner
Gerald Posner@geraldposner·
All my friends in my native San Francisco are in a fury over a judge's decision to grant probation to a 24-year-old defendant who had assaulted and killed an 84-year-old man in an unprovoked attack. The judge—Linda Colfax—was appointed to the bench in 2011 and has subsequently run UNOPPOSED in elections. I hope voters remember this case the next time she is running to keep her seat. sfchronicle.com/sf/article/gra…
Gerald Posner tweet media
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SMB28
SMB28@SMB287·
@tbhorka the coaches could boycott the media stuff. there’s no material penalty.
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Tyler Horka
Tyler Horka@tbhorka·
UConn’s Geno Auriemma has serious issues with the setup of the NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament. He says the logistics of it were responsible for the 21% 3-point shooting yesterday’s Sweet 16 teams combined for. “How many arenas are we going to sell out with that bullshit?”
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SMB28
SMB28@SMB287·
@DutchRojas it’s because she wants to cap the billionaire’s benefits while taxing them with no ceiling
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Dutch Rojas
Dutch Rojas@DutchRojas·
Senator Patty Murray posted this yesterday. Every number in it is accurate. The post is still a lie. Here is the technique. The Social Security wage cap is real. Earnings above $184,000 are not subject to the 12.4% payroll tax. A billionaire does pay a fraction of a percent in effective Social Security tax rate. The math is correct. What Senator Murray did not post: Social Security benefits are also capped. High earners do not collect more because they do not pay more. The contribution cap and the benefit cap are the same architectural decision. You cannot lift one without addressing the other. A billionaire who pays 0.002% into Social Security also collects the same capped benefit as everyone else above the threshold. The system was designed this way deliberately. She presented half of a structural equation as if it were the complete picture. This is called cherry-picking wrapped in perception management. It’s designed to manipulate the audience. The numbers are real. The picture they produce is false. The sophistication of the technique is that correcting it requires more words than deploying it. Senator Murray needed three sentences. This post needed three paragraphs. That asymmetry is not accidental. It is the whole point. When someone shows you accurate numbers that produce an outraged conclusion, ask what is not in the frame.
Senator Patty Murray@PattyMurray

If you make under $184k, you pay a 12.4% Social Security tax rate. Everything after that cap is exempt from the tax. So if you make $1 million per year, you pay about 2.2%. And it's 0.002% for billionaires. If we lifted the cap, Social Security could be funded for decades.

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SMB28
SMB28@SMB287·
@OmniAeronautica @Handre you state.. Scarcity, surveillance, and institutional distrust tend to produce resilience, social cohesion, and a preference for order and continuity.”. there’s no preference, it’s mandated. Your entire argument falls down because that line position it as a benefit
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iPilot🅰️
iPilot🅰️@OmniAeronautica·
THE BERLIN WALL PROVED MORE THAN ECONOMICS—IT EXPOSED TWO COMPETING VISIONS OF SOCIETY What the Berlin Wall experiment actually demonstrated was economic failure under central planning, not moral or cultural superiority on one side of Europe over the other. Yes, West Germany decisively outperformed East Germany in GDP, consumption, and innovation. That conclusion is not controversial. But stopping the analysis there misses what happened after 1989, and what persists today across former Soviet-influenced societies. The populations that lived under Soviet control developed a very different psychological and cultural posture. Scarcity, surveillance, and institutional distrust tend to produce resilience, social cohesion, and a preference for order and continuity. When those systems collapsed, many Eastern European societies did not swing toward the same degree of social experimentation seen in Western Europe. Instead, countries like Poland and Hungary retained stronger national identity, more traditional social structures, and a higher sensitivity to instability. This creates a divergence that is often misinterpreted. Western Europe, particularly Germany, optimized for economic dynamism, openness, and individual expression after the war. That model delivered extraordinary prosperity. But over time, it also expanded into broader social and political experimentation, including large-scale migration policies and cultural redefinition that some now view as destabilizing. By contrast, many former Eastern Bloc societies optimized for cohesion over experimentation. They are less permissive, more skeptical of rapid change, and more protective of national identity. That is not evidence that socialism “worked.” It is evidence that the lived experience of socialism produced populations that are more cautious about systemic disruption. So the more precise takeaway is this. The Berlin Wall proved that free markets outperform central planning in generating wealth and opportunity. But the post-Cold War divergence suggests something else: different historical pressures produce different cultural risk tolerances. Western Europe pushed further into openness and transformation. Eastern Europe pulled toward stability and preservation. The current tension inside Europe is not a replay of capitalism versus socialism. It is a conflict between two models of managing success. One prioritizes openness and adaptation. The other prioritizes cohesion and continuity. Both emerged from the same divided history.
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Handre
Handre@Handre·
The Berlin Wall created the most brutal controlled experiment in human history: identical people, split by ideology, watched for 41 years to see which system would prevail. West Germans embraced market economics while East Germans suffered under socialist central planning. The results? Devastating. By 1989, East German GDP per capita sat at roughly 30% of West Germany's level. East Germans consumed 40% fewer calories, owned cars at one-tenth the rate, and waited 12 years for a telephone connection. Meanwhile, their western cousins enjoyed rising living standards, technological innovation, and personal freedom that made West Germany an economic powerhouse. But the socialists had excuses ready. "East Germany started from a worse position after the war," they claimed. Bullshit. Both regions faced identical devastation in 1945. The Soviets actually stripped more industrial equipment from their zone (roughly $10 billion worth), yet this affected rural areas less than urban centers. And East Germany possessed abundant natural resources like lignite coal and uranium that should have provided economic advantages. The real difference? Property rights, price signals, and entrepreneurship versus state ownership, price controls, and bureaucratic allocation. West Germans could start businesses, invest capital, and respond to consumer demands. East Germans filled quotas set by party officials who had never run so much as a lemonade stand. You can't coordinate an economy through committee meetings and five-year plans when prices tell you nothing about real supply and demand. East Germans voted with their feet—2.7 million fled west before the Communists built their wall in 1961. After reunification, investigators found Stasi files on one-third of the population. When you need secret police watching every third citizen, your economic system has already failed.
Handre tweet media
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SMB28
SMB28@SMB287·
@OmniAeronautica @Handre you say order and continuity like it’s some sort of communist benefit. the tens of millions massacred under communist dictators would struggle with that position.
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Sofia Sweet
Sofia Sweet@iluvusofia_xo·
There’s an upscale provider who entered the industry around COVID whom I briefly enjoyed spending time with. During a slow trip she had to Chicago, I extended some support—introducing her to a few of my local clients and offering guidance where I could. I was under the impression we were on friendly terms. Recently, however, I’ve been made aware that she has been speaking negatively about me and, on multiple occasions, has reached out directly to my clients. I won’t mention her name, though I did notice she’s launched a new Twitter account and blocked me—which, if anything, is more amusing than anything else. Situations like this are precisely why I don’t romanticize friendships within this industry. There are always individuals who engage under the guise of connection, but whose intentions are ultimately self-serving—leveraging others for access or visibility without offering any genuine reciprocity. There’s value in maintaining professionalism, grace, and decorum—but it’s equally important to recognize the point at which extending yourself becomes detrimental. Being discerning about who you allow into your circle isn’t unkind; it’s necessary.
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Michael Moreno
Michael Moreno@HealthcareREguy·
Imagine if from 7-10AM Chipotle made the world’s best breakfast burritos… Start in a few exclusive stores, make it go viral, then scale nationally. Seems like it’s a huge opportunity right in front of them.
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Dr. Dating
Dr. Dating@drdating007·
benefits of dating older women
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SMB28
SMB28@SMB287·
@Viralvid_89 she should get to share a cell with a trans.
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GFY TV
GFY TV@Viralvid_89·
When a 'Sovereign Citizen' Meets a Real officer.
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One Bad Dude
One Bad Dude@OneBadDude_·
The No Kings protesters all so old because the elderly are the only ones left paying attention to the mainstream media.
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