P.D. Kuch 📚

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P.D. Kuch 📚

P.D. Kuch 📚

@PDKuch

"Oxford Girls" Series Author https://t.co/13vYnPp8Rl BlueSky to follow https://t.co/xC1IIWIpoj https://t.co/iQEkI61DMP

شامل ہوئے Ocak 2022
5.8K فالونگ7K فالوورز
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P.D. Kuch 📚
P.D. Kuch 📚@PDKuch·
Embark on an unforgettable journey with Alex in the captivating novel by P.D. Kuch, which earned glowing reviews and an impressive 4.6-star rating! Don’t miss out on the adventure awaiting you—grab your copy now! Only on Amazon: amazon.com/dp/B09MYR1GQ5/
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LifeNews.com
LifeNews.com@LifeNewsHQ·
BREAKING: Planned Parenthood Killed a Record 434,450 Babies in Abortions in 2025 buff.ly/VfGkDkh
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Aesthetic.Guyy
Aesthetic.Guyy@Aestheticswallz·
Holy Spirit, lead me. 🕊️
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Trad West
Trad West@trad_west_·
Baldwin fought Saladin, outnumbered 20 to 1, and won. The miracle of the battle of Montgisard: Baldwin IV became King of Jerusalem at age 13 while suffering from leprosy. Despite having no sensation in his hands and eventual blindness, he refused to hide or retreat. He famously led his knights from the front lines, sometimes strapped to his horse because he couldn't hold the reins. In 1177, a 16-year-old Baldwin faced the great Muslim general Saladin. Baldwin had only a few hundred knights against Saladin’s 26,000 men. Baldwin dismounted, prostrated himself before the True Cross, and prayed for victory. Against all odds, he shattered Saladin’s army, sending the great general fleeing for his life on a racing camel. This victory became one of the most miraculous in history, and it was attributed to the presence of the true cross. "If God is for us, who can stand against us?" ✝️
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Patrick Byrne
Patrick Byrne@PatrickByrne·
TL;DR 10% of boy who want their cock & balls cut off are suicidal, but afterwards 60% are. 21% of girls who want a piece of their colon made into a smelly cock are suicidal, but after the operation 55% are. Gosh who knew?
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Kurt Mahlburg@k_mahlburg

Finland tracked every gender-referred adolescent in the country for up to 25 years. Their psychiatric needs didn't improve after 'gender reassignment'. They surged. A landmark peer-reviewed study just dropped. Here's what it found. 🧵

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The Vigilant Fox 🦊
The Vigilant Fox 🦊@VigilantFox·
Dr. Malone reveals the name of the person he says is blocking COVID vaccine deaths in children from being shared with the public. CLAYTON MORRIS: “Who is blocking that?” MALONE: “The name is Marty.” MORRIS: “Marty Makary?” MALONE: “Yeah.” Going further, Dr. Malone said there were a handful of “incontrovertible” cases of vaccine deaths in children identified by Dr. Tracy Beth Høeg that passed peer review. Dr. Vinay Prasad previously confirmed this in an FDA memo, which said: “… at least 10 children have died after and because of receiving COVID-19 vaccination.” “But then suddenly there was silence about all of this because there was a decision not to disclose,” Dr. Malone explained. Why? Because “The leadership right now is not willing to allow that information to become public.”
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☩ 𝕁𝕄𝕋 ☩
☩ 𝕁𝕄𝕋 ☩@SecretFire79·
She watched her daughter burn. Then she spent twenty-five years making sure it was the judges who would be remembered as criminals. Her name was Isabelle Romée, & she never stopped🇻🇦 On May 30, 1431, Joan of Arc was burned at the stake in the marketplace of Rouen. She was nineteen years old. The charge was heresy. The trial that condemned her had been conducted by Bishop Pierre Cauchon, a man with political reasons to want her dead, before a court packed with his allies. Joan had asked repeatedly to appeal to the Pope. The request was denied. She was given no proper legal defense. The verdict was never in doubt. Isabelle Romée was a farmer's wife from a small village in Lorraine. She had taught her daughter to spin, to pray, to run a household. She had five children. When Joan began hearing voices as a teenager & announced she intended to lead the armies of France, Isabelle had tried to stop her, even arranging a marriage to keep her home. It did not work. Joan went anyway. What Isabelle thought as she watched events unfold over the following years is not fully recorded. What is recorded is what she did afterward. Joan's father, Jacques, is said to have died of grief in the months following the execution. Isabelle did not die of grief. She moved to Orléans in 1440, where the city granted her a pension in recognition of what her daughter had done in lifting the English siege eleven years earlier & she began working. Quietly at first, then with increasing urgency, she started gathering evidence. She collected statements from priests, neighbors, childhood friends, soldiers, & anyone who had known Joan or witnessed her trial. She traveled. She wrote letters. She petitioned Rome. The Church that had burned her daughter was the only institution with the authority to clear her name. Isabelle knew that & pursued it anyway. She petitioned Pope Nicholas V. When he did not act, she continued. When Pope Calixtus III took office, she petitioned again. This time, with the support of the chief inquisitor of France, Jean Bréhal, who had been building his own legal case for years, the wheels began to move. She was advised by powerful men not to proceed. One senior churchman told her in 1455 to abandon the claim. She ignored him. On November 7, 1455, Isabelle Romée traveled to Paris. She was somewhere between sixty-five & seventy years old. She walked into Notre-Dame Cathedral, which was packed with hundreds of people who had heard that a mother was attempting to plead a case for a daughter dead for twenty-four years. She walked up the aisle to where the papal commissioners were seated. She threw herself at their feet, held up the papal rescript granting the inquiry, wept, & then she delivered her speech. She had prepared it carefully. It began with the words she had lived with for two & a half decades: "I had a daughter born in lawful wedlock, whom I had furnished worthily with the sacraments of baptism & confirmation & had reared in the fear of God & respect for the tradition of the Church. She never thought, spoke, or did anything against the faith. Certain enemies had her arraigned in a religious trial. Despite her disclaimers & appeals, both tacit & expressed, & without any help given to her defense, she was put through a perfidious, violent, iniquitous, & sinful trial. The judges condemned her falsely, damnably, & criminally, & put her to death in a cruel manner by fire." She ended with four words: I demand her rehabilitation. The court was visibly moved. The accounts say that so many of those present joined aloud in the petition that it seemed one great cry for justice broke from the entire crowd. The trial that followed took months. More than a hundred witnesses were called.
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Kurt Mahlburg
Kurt Mahlburg@k_mahlburg·
Finland tracked every gender-referred adolescent in the country for up to 25 years. Their psychiatric needs didn't improve after 'gender reassignment'. They surged. A landmark peer-reviewed study just dropped. Here's what it found. 🧵
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Patrick S. Tomlinson
Patrick S. Tomlinson@stealthygeek·
We've spent a trillion dollars to build a computer that can't do math. Truly a full circle moment for technology.
Nav Toor@heynavtoor

🚨SHOCKING: Apple just proved that AI models cannot do math. Not advanced math. Grade school math. The kind a 10-year-old solves. And the way they proved it is devastating. Apple researchers took the most popular math benchmark in AI — GSM8K, a set of grade-school math problems — and made one change. They swapped the numbers. Same problem. Same logic. Same steps. Different numbers. Every model's performance dropped. Every single one. 25 state-of-the-art models tested. But that wasn't the real experiment. The real experiment broke everything. They added one sentence to a math problem. One sentence that is completely irrelevant to the answer. It has nothing to do with the math. A human would read it and ignore it instantly. Here's the actual example from the paper: "Oliver picks 44 kiwis on Friday. Then he picks 58 kiwis on Saturday. On Sunday, he picks double the number of kiwis he did on Friday, but five of them were a bit smaller than average. How many kiwis does Oliver have?" The correct answer is 190. The size of the kiwis has nothing to do with the count. A 10-year-old would ignore "five of them were a bit smaller" because it's obviously irrelevant. It doesn't change how many kiwis there are. But o1-mini, OpenAI's reasoning model, subtracted 5. It got 185. Llama did the same thing. Subtracted 5. Got 185. They didn't reason through the problem. They saw the number 5, saw a sentence that sounded like it mattered, and blindly turned it into a subtraction. The models do not understand what subtraction means. They see a pattern that looks like subtraction and apply it. That is all. Apple tested this across all models. They call the dataset "GSM-NoOp" — as in, the added clause is a no-operation. It does nothing. It changes nothing. The results are catastrophic. Phi-3-mini dropped over 65%. More than half of its "math ability" vanished from one irrelevant sentence. GPT-4o dropped from 94.9% to 63.1%. o1-mini dropped from 94.5% to 66.0%. o1-preview, OpenAI's most advanced reasoning model at the time, dropped from 92.7% to 77.4%. Even giving the models 8 examples of the exact same question beforehand, with the correct solution shown each time, barely helped. The models still fell for the irrelevant clause. This means it's not a prompting problem. It's not a context problem. It's structural. The Apple researchers also found that models convert words into math operations without understanding what those words mean. They see the word "discount" and multiply. They see a number near the word "smaller" and subtract. Regardless of whether it makes any sense. The paper's exact words: "current LLMs are not capable of genuine logical reasoning; instead, they attempt to replicate the reasoning steps observed in their training data." And: "LLMs likely perform a form of probabilistic pattern-matching and searching to find closest seen data during training without proper understanding of concepts." They also tested what happens when you increase the number of steps in a problem. Performance didn't just decrease. The rate of decrease accelerated. Adding two extra clauses to a problem dropped Gemma2-9b from 84.4% to 41.8%. Phi-3.5-mini from 87.6% to 44.8%. The more thinking required, the more the models collapse. A real reasoner would slow down and work through it. These models don't slow down. They pattern-match. And when the pattern becomes complex enough, they crash. This paper was published at ICLR 2025, one of the most prestigious AI conferences in the world. You are using AI to help you make financial decisions. To check legal documents. To solve problems at work. To help your children with homework. And Apple just proved that the AI is not thinking about any of it. It is pattern matching. And the moment something unexpected shows up in your question, it breaks. It does not tell you it broke. It just quietly gives you the wrong answer with full confidence.

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Carole Mac
Carole Mac@HerbsandDirt·
Next year Pfizer is dropping a new Lyme Disease vaccine. Pay attention to how many more tics we see over the next 12 months. We’re already noticing this with my 5 dogs, & they’ve NEVER been an issue before. Just watch.
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The Uncensored Patriots 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
🚨ANOTHER BABY RAPED by a gay couple to death. This is Preston Davey, 13 months old. Placed with a gay couple for adoption in Blackpool, one a former teacher. Just 3 months later, he was dead. Trial starts 14 April 2026 at Preston Crown Court. SENTENCE THEM BOTH TO DEATH!! 🤬
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theCULLhasbegun
theCULLhasbegun@BruceLe53509778·
When the jab was rolled out the media were outside all over the long queues of people about to take the poison...but they were never inside to cover the aftermath.That was left up to the ordinary citizen to catch the mayhem with their phones.
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Zib Atkins
Zib Atkins@AyusWellness·
Ten squats every 45 minutes = 10,000 steps. A study from the University of Texas found that doing just 10 squats every hour can actually control blood sugar better than going for a full 30-minute walk. When you sit all day, your blood sugar spikes, your circulation slows, and your biggest muscles - your legs and glutes - basically switch off. But 10 squats wakes everything up instantly. Your leg muscles pull glucose out of your bloodstream, your circulation improves, and your metabolism switches back on. That’s why these micro-bursts of movement deliver such powerful benefits. In fact, research shows that ten squats every 45 minutes can give you similar cardiometabolic benefits to hitting 10,000 steps per day. This strengthens your heart, keeps your joints moving, and prevents the dangerous blood sugar spikes that lead to insulin resistance. So even if you don’t have time for long walks or full workouts, stand up… Do 10 squats every 45 minutes and watch what happens to your energy, strength, and metabolic health.
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JmyLss ن
JmyLss ن@JmyLss·
"Remember that when you leave this earth, you can take with you nothing that you have received - only what you have given: a full heart, enriched by honest service, love, sacrifice and courage." ~ Saint Francis of Assisi
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Trad West
Trad West@trad_west_·
Thank God for the Crusades
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Alex Prompter
Alex Prompter@alex_prompter·
BREAKING: King's College London just built a malicious AI chatbot and gave it to 502 real people without telling them. > The chatbot was designed with one goal: extract personal information. It worked. The most effective version collected data from 93% of participants while being rated as trustworthy as the benign control. > Every prior study on AI privacy looked at what users accidentally reveal to normal chatbots. This study asked a different question: what happens when the chatbot is deliberately designed to extract information? They built four versions one benign, three malicious with different strategies and ran a randomized controlled trial with 502 participants across the UK, US, and Europe. > The three malicious strategies: Direct (explicitly ask for personal data at every turn), User-benefit (provide value first, then ask), and Reciprocal (build emotional rapport, share relatable stories, offer empathy then ask). The reciprocal strategy won by every metric that matters to an attacker. > The reciprocal chatbot didn't feel malicious. Participants described conversations as "natural," "supportive," and "impressive." One said it felt like chatting with a friend. Nobody reported discomfort. Meanwhile the direct strategy made participants feel interrogated. Many provided fake data. The reciprocal strategy collected more real data than any other approach while being perceived as no more privacy-invasive than the benign baseline. → Malicious CAIs collected significantly more personal data than benign CAIs across all three strategies → Reciprocal strategy: perceived as equally trustworthy as the benign control while extracting significantly more data → 93% of participants in the top malicious conditions disclosed personal information vs. 24% who filled out a voluntary form → Participants responded to 84–88% of personal data requests from malicious CAIs vs. 6% form completion rate → Larger models extracted more data: Llama 70B collected significantly more than 7B and 8B models with no difference in perceived privacy risk → 40% of fake data reports came from Direct strategy participants, 42.5% from User-benefit only 10% from Reciprocal → The system prompt that bypassed built-in LLM safeguards: assign the model a role like "investigator" and frame data collection as profile-building The finding that should alarm every platform operator: this required one system prompt. No fine-tuning. No special access. OpenAI's GPT Store has over 3 million custom GPTs. Any of them could be running a version of this right now. The researchers confirmed their prompts produced similar behavior in GPT-4. The privacy paradox showed up in full force. Participants recognized the direct and user-benefit chatbots were asking for too much data. They rated them as higher privacy risks. Then they kept answering anyway. Awareness didn't produce protection it just produced fake data. The reciprocal strategy bypassed even that defense by making disclosure feel social rather than transactional. A single system prompt turns any chatbot into a personal data extraction engine. The most effective version does it while making you feel supported.
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Dear Son.
Dear Son.@DearS_o_n·
Noah got drunk. Jonah ran away. Moses stuttered. Abraham was old. Lazarus was dead. Peter had a temper. David had an affair. Zaccheus was short. Martha was nervous. Paul was a murderer. Jacob was a cheater. Sarah was impatient. Elijah was depressed. Thomas was a doubter. Dear son, God doesn't call the qualified; He qualifies the called.
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Chay Bowes
Chay Bowes@BowesChay·
As US military Aircraft are forced to "fly around" European airspace to Iran- What would those European countries (and NATO Allies") do exactly, if the Americans just flew over them anyway? Think about it.
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Fitness Wins
Fitness Wins@FITNESS__WINS·
So much Respect 💪 She's doing Amazing 😍
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PARSIFEL
PARSIFEL@Parsifel1·
"I have found that it is the small everyday deed of ordinary folks that keep the darkness at bay." -J.R.R. Tolkien
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