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Un científico de Yemen mostró un concepto de prisión de IA del futuro
Cognify propone encerrar a los criminales en cápsulas especiales y reeducar sus cerebros con falsos recuerdos generados por redes neuronales. El resultado son nuevas personas que no querrán violar la ley.
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Hamzah: You guys killed children in Lebanon, is that okay?
IDF Soldier: Yeah, this is okay because of Hamas.
Hamzah: What about the children, the babies?
IDF Soldiers: The babies is good to kill.
Hamzah: Really, in Lebanon?
IDF Soldier: Yes, in Lebanon, in Gaza, in Iran
Hamzah: Have you ever killed any Palestinian children?
IDF Soldier: I killed
Hamzah: How many?
IDF Soldiers: I don't know.
Hamzah: You don't keep track?
IDF Soldier: No, but I killed.
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California legislators are trying to make investigating fraud illegal
Nick shirley@nickshirleyy
California is trying to pass a bill that would criminalize investigative journalism with misdemeanors, $10,000 fines, imprisonment, and content takedown. The proposed bill is titled AB 2624 and was made after I exposed mass fraud by immigrant groups in America. Under AB 2624, government-funded entities like the Somali “Learing” Daycare centers would be protected from being exposed if they operated inside California. The enemy truly is within. When our politicians would rather protect fraudsters and illegal migrants, it’s time for us to stand up or face mass oppression from the traitors who “rule” over us.
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A new GHF whistleblower speaks out for the first time
David McIntosh managed aid sites in Gaza. He also witnessed IDF fired at aid workers for no reason. They shot at their camp constantly.
He says Israeli soldiers shot a 12-year-old boy who was laughing and joking. No weapon. No threat. Just a child. They shot him in the shoulder. He lay bleeding for 30 minutes. No one came. He died.
They denied everything. Over 2,000 aid seekers killed. 19,000 injured. No accountability.
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They put scars on women’s faces for a job interview experiment… then secretly removed them.
The women went in believing they had visible disfigurements — and came out reporting massive discrimination, with interviewers supposedly referencing their “scars.”
Konstantin Kisin used this study to make a powerful point: constantly telling people they’re oppressed or disadvantaged primes them to see discrimination everywhere, even when it isn’t there.
It’s the same psychological effect as buying a new car and suddenly noticing that model on every street.
The ideology of victimhood doesn’t just describe reality — it actively shapes it.
We should be teaching young people they’re strong and capable of overcoming adversity, not training them to see themselves as permanent victims.
What’s one way you’ve seen this “victimhood mindset” play out in real life?
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Canada told this man’s wife to kill herself with MAID because they had “no treatment” for her stage 4 ovarian cancer.
They lied about HIPEC surgery. Lost her chemo requisition. Her oncologist never even met her in person. ERs sent her home with opioids while her lungs filled with fluid.
So they evacuated her by ferry from Vancouver Island to Seattle.
America got her into the system immediately. Started chemo. Gave her the surgery Canada said wouldn’t work.
Every time she went back to Canada, she nearly died again, going septic in Canadian hospitals until her husband literally unplugged her from machines and evacuated her back to the US.
They finally got him a green card in under three months with the help of a Congresswoman. Now they’re in Texas.
His wife is heading into her THIRD remission. She squatted 175 lbs for five reps last week.
Canada’s answer was death. America’s answer was treatment.
That’s the difference. 🇺🇸
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@UcheMaryOkoli @BishopBarron Define the difference between a regular apology and a “big” apology. That said, when has Trump ever apologized publicly? I don’t think he is capable. That said, Bishop Barron is 1,000% correct in his statement.
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The statements made by President Trump on Truth Social regarding the Pope were entirely inappropriate and disrespectful. They don’t contribute at all to a constructive conversation. It is the Pope’s prerogative to articulate Catholic doctrine and the principles that govern the moral life. In regard to the concrete application of those principles, people of good will can and do disagree. I would warmly recommend that serious Catholics within the Trump administration–Secretary Rubio, Vice President Vance, Ambassador Brian Burch, and others–might meet with Vatican officials so that a real dialogue can take place. This is far preferable to the statements on social media.
I am very grateful for the many ways that the Trump administration has reached out to Catholics and other people of faith. It has been a high honor to serve on the Religious Liberty Commission. No President in my lifetime has shown a greater dedication to defending our first liberty. All that said, I think the President owes the Pope an apology.
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