Lance 🦉🪶 nag-retweet
Lance 🦉🪶
10.8K posts

Lance 🦉🪶
@HawaiiBirdGuide
I am an ornithological consultant and naturalist (Zoology & Env. Studies - Conservation Biology); birder and sports fan. https://t.co/ukBb4xBHJ3
Kamuela, Hawaii Sumali Nisan 2009
978 Sinusundan602 Mga Tagasunod
Lance 🦉🪶 nag-retweet

30 years ago I was the starting QB at Utah State University. My senior year I got benched. For the next 15 years I walked around feeling like a certified loser. Then I read this quote from Pat Summitt:
'Winning is fun… Sure. But winning is not the point.
Wanting to win is the point.
Not giving up is the point.
Never letting up is the point.
Never being satisfied with what you’ve done is the point.'
It snapped me out of it. If you’re still carrying a sports setback, a benching, a missed opportunity, or any “I’m not enough” story… this is your permission slip to drop it. The game isn’t over. Your story is not yet written. You are still a work in progress. The point is you keep wanting it. You keep getting up. And you listen to that quiet voice that says, "I will try again tomorrow."

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I have no idea who this young girl is which is frustrating for my attribution policy, but she had an important message for Trump, you know, the guy who struggles to construct a coherent sentence and commits crimes against the English language daily.
No way was I not going to post this because I don’t know who she is. Rest assured I am trying to find out.
Meantime this is what happens when you invest in educating future generations.
🎥 TikTok - vm.tiktok.com/ZNR4ExY1G/
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Concerning Social Security payments, my contributions were made for 40 years on every salary I received. Those jobs may not have always been the work I wanted to be doing at the time, BUT I always had a job. The Social Security check is now (or soon will be) referred to as a "Federal Benefit Payment?" I'll be part of the one percent to forward this.
I am forwarding it because it touches a nerve in me, and I hope it will in you. Please keep passing it on until everyone in our country has read it. The government is now referring to our Social Security checks as a "Federal Benefit Payment." This isn't a benefit. It is our money paid out of our earned income! Not only did we all contribute to Social Security but our employers did too. It totaled 15% of our income before taxes.
If you averaged $30K per year over your working life, that's close to $180,000 invested in Social Security. If you calculate the future value of your monthly investment in social security ($375/month, including both you and your employers contributions) at a meager 1% interest rate compounded monthly, after 40 years of working you'd have more than $1.3+ million dollars saved! This is your personal investment. Upon retirement, if you took out only 3% per year, you'd receive $39,318 per year, or $3,277 per month.
That's almost three times more than today's average Social Security benefit of $1,230 per month, according to the Social Security Administration. (Google it – it’s a fact).
And your retirement fund would last more than 33 years (until you're 98 if you retire at age 65)! I can only imagine how much better most average-income people could live in retirement if our government had just invested our money in low-risk interest-earning accounts.
Instead, the folks in Washington pulled off a bigger "Ponzi scheme" than Bernie Madoff ever did. They took our money and used it elsewhere. They forgot (oh yes, they knew) that it was OUR money they were taking. They didn't have a referendum to ask us if we wanted to lend the money to them. And they didn't pay interest on the debt they assumed. And recently they've told us that the money won't support us for very much longer.
But is it our fault they misused our investments? And now, to add insult to injury, they're calling it a "benefit", as if we never worked to earn every penny of it.
Just because they borrowed the money doesn't mean that our investments were a charity!
Let's take a stand. We have earned our right to Social Security and Medicare. Demand that our legislators bring some sense into our government.
Find a way to keep Social Security and Medicare going for the sake of that 92% of our population who need it. Then call it what it is: Our Earned Retirement Income.
😡😡😡✅
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Orcas eat great white sharks. They hunt seals, dolphins, and baby whales. They have never killed a single human in the open ocean. Not once, in all of recorded history.
An orca's brain weighs up to 15 pounds. Yours weighs about 3. They have roughly double the brain cells we do in the regions that handle complex thought. A neuroscientist at Emory named Lori Marino put an orca brain in an MRI and found these animals can tell different species apart underwater. They do it by sending out clicks that bounce off everything around them and come back as a kind of 3D sound map (this is called echolocation). From 500 feet away, an orca knows you're a human and not a seal. It skips you on purpose.
The answer is culture. Orcas around the world are divided into at least 10 separate populations, each with its own food rules, its own language, and its own way of hunting. All of it learned from their mothers. One population eats only fish. Another eats only marine mammals like seals and sea lions. These two populations can live in the exact same water and never swap a single meal. A baby orca learns what food is from its mother, and that list stays the same for life.
In the Pacific Northwest, one population called the Southern Residents eats almost nothing but Chinook salmon. Scientists have documented them killing harbor porpoises 78 times over six decades, carrying the dead porpoises in their mouths, and never once eating them. Even when the group was starving. A 2023 study in Marine Mammal Science looked at all 78 cases and concluded it was play. These orcas would rather go hungry than eat something their culture says isn't food.
Researchers studying whale behavior in 2001 found that orca cultural traditions "appear to have no parallel outside humans." Each family group has its own dialect, its own version of the language. Calves spend about two years just learning how to make all the sounds their family uses. Mothers will slow down a hunt on purpose so their young can watch.
In 2005, a 12-year-old kid was swimming in Helm Bay, Alaska when an orca came at him full speed. At the very last second, the orca seemed to realize it was charging a human. It bent its entire body in half and turned back to open water. In captivity, it goes differently. SeaWorld's Tilikum killed three people during his life in a concrete tank. Research from 2016, published in the journal Animals, traced it to psychological collapse from being locked away from the family bonds orcas need to stay stable.
I think calling this a "mystery" undersells the science. Orcas decide what to eat based on culture, not instinct. No orca mother has ever taught her calf to hunt humans, so no orca hunts humans. Only about 75 of those salmon-eating Southern Residents are still alive. Their pregnancy failure rate is 69% because we've destroyed their salmon runs. They won't break their food culture to survive. Whether we care enough to protect theirs is the part that actually matters.
Nature is Amazing ☘️@AMAZlNGNATURE
One of the biggest mysteries to me is how Orcas, the ocean’s most efficient predators, have never attacked humans in the wild… almost like they know something we don’t.
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On day 1 of my high school history class, our professor got up and said
You are 15 or 16 years old. 200 years ago people your age were married, planted crops, had children, and built a cabin by winter. You can do your homework. The bar set for you historically is embarrassingly low. You are not dealing with regional famine or plague. You do not have to save your family from marauders or go into battle to destroy your enemies. You have to sit down and learn from someone who cares about you in a safe, air-conditioned room. You have no excuses.
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A father told his daughter, "Congrats on your graduation. I bought you a car a while back. I want you to have it now."
Before I give it to you, take it to a car dealer in the city and sell it. See how much they offer.”
The girl came back to her father & said: "They offered me $10,000 dollars because it looks very old"
Father said: "Ok, now take it to the pawn shop".
The girl returns to her father & said: "The pawn shop offered $1,000 dollars because it's a very old car & a lot of work done".
The father told her to join a passionate car club with experts & show them the car.
The girl drove to the passionate car club.
She returned to her father after a few hours & told him, “Some people in the club offered me $100k because its a rare car that's in good condition.”
Then the father said, "I wanted to let you know that you are not worth anything if you are not in the right place. If you are not appreciated, do not be angry, that means you are in the wrong place. Don't stay in a place where no one sees your value ."
The moral of the story : Know your worth and know where you are valued. A diamond doesn't shine on the bottom of a cave.

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🚨 MAN WATCHES A 1965 FRIDGE COMMERCIAL - AND REALIZES WE’VE BEEN SCAMMED BY “SMART” TECH
This 1965 Frigidaire ad is straight-up humbling.They were out here with fully rolling shelves that pulled all the way out, a tilt-out “picture window” hydrator for your fruits and veggies, and ice trays that auto-ejected perfect cubes with zero drama.
Simple mechanical genius built to actually last for decades.
Now? We drop thousands on “smart” fridges packed with glitchy screens, apps, WiFi, and data tracking… that break in a couple years.
We didn’t upgrade. We got played more garbage for the land fills
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Tom Hanks learned a secret about Fred Rogers that no camera ever captured—and it changed everything he thought he knew about kindness.
In Joanne Rogers's living room in Pittsburgh, she told Hanks something the world had never heard. Her husband carried a folded piece of paper in his wallet every single day of his adult life. On it were names. Teachers who saw something in him. Mentors who corrected him. Friends who stayed. Family who shaped him. Colleagues who challenged him.
The list was written in Rogers's own hand. It was not short.
Every morning, Fred Rogers took out that paper, unfolded it, read each name in silence, refolded it, and put it back. No one watched. No one knew. He didn't tell stories about it. He didn't post about it. He simply did it. Daily. For decades.
When Joanne found his wallet on February 27, 2003, the list was still there. The paper was worn translucent at the creases. The folds were permanent. Some names had been added over the years. None had been crossed out.
Hanks didn't write any of this down during their conversation. He told reporters later that this single detail unlocked the entire role. Rogers wasn't performing kindness for children on PBS. Kindness was the architecture of his private life. The list was his blueprint.
Hanks wore Rogers's actual cardigans during filming. He studied the deliberate slowness of Rogers's speech—slower than any voice on television because Rogers believed children needed time to understand what they heard, not just hear it.
He learned Rogers swam every day. That he chose his words the way other people choose routes on a map—carefully, with the person on the other end in mind.
When "A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood" premiered in 2019, Joanne Rogers attended. She told reporters that Hanks hadn't impersonated her husband. He'd captured what Fred did when no one was looking.
The cameras showed a man in a cardigan asking children how they felt. The wallet showed a man who never stopped asking himself who made him possible.
The list is a reminder: We are not self-made. We are name-made. Built by people who gave us something we didn't have—and remembered by whether we remember them.
Fred Rogers remembered. Every single day. Until the last one.

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Holy shit! The Free Press is reporting that Cardinal Christophe Pierre was summoned to the Pentagon and rudely lectured (threatened) by an official that the U.S. military has the power to do "whatever it wants" and that Pope Leo and the Vatican should think twice about opposing Trump.
Tensions have apparently grown so severe that Pope Leo, the first-ever U.S. born pontiff, refused to accept Trump’s invitation to celebrate the nation's 250th anniversary. One Vatican official put it bluntly: "The Pope may well never visit the United States under this administration."

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