LiveFight ری ٹویٹ کیا
LiveFight
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LiveFight
@LiveFight
We take the sport of #boxing seriously, but never ourselves. A roving engine of poor takes.
Texas, USA شامل ہوئے Kasım 2009
421 فالونگ6.9K فالوورز
LiveFight ری ٹویٹ کیا
LiveFight ری ٹویٹ کیا
LiveFight ری ٹویٹ کیا

I remember the morning Froch was made mandatory to Joe’s WBC belt. Within hours he said he was vacating it as he couldn’t make super middle anymore.
So you guys then naturally stripped him of his WBO title.
Joe then backtracked, said I want to keep that belt and will be back at 168. So obviously a duck.
I also remember some of the questionable Calzaghe ‘defences’ you sanctioned , such as Evans Ashira, an absolute nobody at 154lb who came up two weight divisions for a WBO world title defence.
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@ausvstheagenda Unelected globalists creating faux ‘governments’ to deliver their master’s orders.
The useless eaters blink, stare and obey.
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Yow LiveFight, mi translate di post fi yuh inna Jamaican Patois:
"Millions a people a gwaan wid dem everyday life, totally unaware seh wah big ting bout fi hit dem. If Trump blow up Iran power station dem, Iran ago mash up energy infrastructure cross di whole Gulf. Dis woulda be one a di major 'before-an-after' events inna human history."
Big up! 🇯🇲
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LiveFight ری ٹویٹ کیا
LiveFight ری ٹویٹ کیا
LiveFight ری ٹویٹ کیا

The Teenager Who Accidentally Performed Brain Surgery on Himself With a Gun.
In 1983, a 19-year-old Canadian student known in medical journals only as "George" was suffering from a devastating case of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. His condition was so debilitating that he was paralyzed by compulsions, forcing him to wash his hands hundreds of times a day, drop out of school, and completely isolate himself.
Desperate and believing his mind was entirely broken beyond repair, George decided to take his own life. He managed to get his hands on a .22-caliber rifle, pointed the barrel into his own mouth, and pulled the trigger.
The bullet tore directly through the left frontal lobe of his brain, but miraculously missed every major blood vessel and vital life-sustaining area. Paramedics rushed his unconscious body to the hospital, where trauma surgeons successfully removed the bullet fragments and saved his life.
When George finally woke up, his doctors were stunned. Not only had he survived without any permanent physical brain damage or loss of cognitive function, but the crippling mental illness that had ruined his life was completely gone.
By sheer astronomical luck, George had accidentally performed a flawless, incredibly precise prefrontal lobotomy on himself. The bullet had perfectly severed the exact neural pathways responsible for his compulsive behavior, accidentally curing the very illness that drove him to pull the trigger.

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@GriftReport It’s every parents nightmare.
‘Dad, I’m going into town with my friend’ - and then feral scum attacks them.
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🚨BREAKING🚨
SAVAGE MACHETE ATTACK, 12-YEAR-OLD BOY BEATEN UNCONSCIOUS & HELD AT KNIFE-POINT AFTER DEFENDING PAL IN DUNDEE
Brave lad stepped in when a gang harassed his friend in a city centre alleyway near High Street.
Four thugs rushed him, battered him unconscious, jumped on his head then pressed a machete to his throat while he lay helpless.
He suffered a broken jaw and shattered eye socket — rushed for emergency brain scan but has since been released.
Sickening footage of the attack is now circulating online (i will not show that footage)
But i will share the video the father put out:
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LiveFight ری ٹویٹ کیا

@HumanityChad I’m 30 years younger and drive to the shop that’s 300m away.
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At age 80, she completed a 3.8 km swim, 180 km bike ride, and a 42km run in 16 hrs & 45 mins 😱
Natalie Grabow gave the world a new definition of endurance. In Kona, Hawaii, she became the oldest woman ever to finish the Ironman World Championship - a race that challenges even the strongest athletes with its 3.8 km swim, 180 km bike ride, and 42 km marathon.
Completing the course in an impressive 16 hours and 45 minutes, Natalie didn’t just reach the finish, she carved her name into history.
She first raced in Kona back in 2006 and secured her return by winning her age group at Ironman Maryland, proving she’s never been one to shy away from a challenge.
This time, she went even further, breaking the previous record held by Cherie Gruenfeld, who completed the event at age 78.
As Natalie crossed the line to applause and celebration, she showed the world that age isn’t a limitation - it’s a testament to resilience.
Her journey is more than an athletic achievement; it’s a timeless reminder that strength, determination, and spirit don’t fade with age, they only grow stronger with every finish line.
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