Dillon
2K posts

Dillon
@Tigertamer131
Conservative, Veteran, Father, Stepfather, Grandfather, Veteran, COVID Antibodies but No VAX. Jesus Christ is my Savior. God Bless America 🇺🇲
Dallas, TX Tham gia Şubat 2023
310 Đang theo dõi241 Người theo dõi

@LeakyWaterbed @BarackObama @NASA And, he was POTUS when it was officially shut down. But hey, you have a Blessed Good Friday buddy.
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It was inspiring to watch the Artemis II launch yesterday — @NASA’s first crewed mission around the moon since 1972. Our space program has always captured an essential part of what it means to reach beyond what we thought was possible, and I hope the four brave astronauts on this mission will inspire a new generation to follow in their footsteps.


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Passion of The Christ🇻🇦🩸
“Mel Gibson warned actor Jim Caviezel that playing the character of Christ was going to be very difficult and that if he accepted, he most likely would be marginalized by Hollywood.
Caviezel asked for a day to think about it and his response to Mel who was funding and directing the movie was: "I think we have to make it, even if it is difficult." And something else, my initials are J.C., and I am 33 years old. "I didn't realize that until now."
Mel responded with “You're really scaring me you know.”
During filming, Jim Caviezel who plays the part of Jesus lost 45 pounds, he was struck by lightning, he was accidentally struck twice during the scourging scene leaving a deep 14-inch scar, he dislocated his shoulder when the cross was dropped into the hole with him on the cross. He then suffered pneumonia and hypothermia from being nearly naked with only a loin cloth on the cross for endless hours. The crucifixion scene alone took 5 weeks of the 2 months of shooting.
His body was so stressed and exhausted from playing the role that he had to undergo two open heart surgeries after the filming production.
Jim explained, “I didn’t want people to see me. I just want them to see Jesus. Conversions will happen through that.”
Almost like a clairvoyant prediction many amazing things happened.
Pedro Sarubbi, who played Barabbas, felt that it was not Caviezel who was looking at him, but Jesus Christ himself, as he played that role he said of Caviezel, “His eyes had no hatred or resentment towards me, only mercy and love."
Luca Lionello, the artist who played Judas, was an avowed atheist before shooting began. He eventually converted, and baptized his children.
One of the main technicians working on the film was a Muslim converted to Christianity.
Some producers said they saw actors dressed in white they didn’t recognize during one of the filming sessions, and when they reviewed the recordings they realized they couldn’t see them in that footage.
The Passion of the Christ is the highest grossing US religious as well as the highest R-rated film of all time, with $370.8 million! Worldwide, it grossed $611 million.
More importantly, it has reached 100’s of millions of people around the world.
Mel Gibson paid $30 million out of his own pocket for the production of the film because no studio would take on the project.
Today Jim Caviezel simply and boldly proclaims his faith in Christ, and the miracle it was for him to represent Christ as an actor and a greater believer of Christ because of this experience.

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@LeakyWaterbed @BarackObama @NASA Oh jeez you are right, sorry.. Obama was only in "office" when it was officially shut down..
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@SawyerMerritt @SpaceX It really gives you pause to wonder if they have the 4 astronauts in a condo on Cocoa Beach
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NASA’s Artemis II livestream really makes you appreciate @SpaceX’s launch broadcasts.
Bad camera tracking, no onboard cameras, countdown timer disappeared, NASA even showed people in the crowd instead of stage separation lol. The screen also blacked out twice during the first 10 seconds of the launch.
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@SawyerMerritt @SpaceX Epic fail in my opinion. Just banged them on their official YouTube feed watching an animation & loop of mission control feed. No widget for next update on the feed either...it's almost like it's a government run operation 😞
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@NASAArtemis @NASA well, trying to get updates from your "Official" you tube feed is practically impossible, comments turned off, no widget to see what stage the flight is in just a stupid CGI & a live vision of mission control. Why not at LEAST put what time the next update is?
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I'm sorry but I guess I've been completely spoiled by @SpaceX coverage of their launches & missions. @NASA congratulations on getting Artemis off the ground with used shuttle boosters...but cheezy live coverage of the solar panel & nothing else... ?? This is TAXPAYER $$. You should be able to show more live coverage. SMH
@elonmusk would have likely shared some video technology
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@alexgroberman We have given Ukraine more than enough money to do all of what you mentioned & more. Shut the heck up 🤬
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The Artemis program has cost $93 billion.
Ending hunger in America would cost $32 billion a year.
Making school lunch free for every American student would cost $11 billion a year.
Replacing every lead pipe in the country would cost $45 billion.
Covering uncompensated healthcare for every uninsured American would cost $42 billion a year.
NASA just used that $93 billion to send four astronauts around the Moon. They are flying all the way there, looping around the far side, and coming home. Ten days. That is it.
Here's the logic behind that $93 billion spend:
Artemis I launched in 2022. No crew. No humans anywhere near it. Just the rocket and the spacecraft flying unmanned for 25 days to prove the systems worked. The heat shield. The navigation. The separation sequences. 161 test objectives completed. It proved the foundation was sound.
Artemis II is the mission that launched today. Four astronauts. First humans beyond low Earth orbit since 1972. First woman beyond low Earth orbit. First person of color beyond low Earth orbit. They will fly around the far side of the Moon and return to Earth at nearly 25,000 miles per hour. The mission proves the spacecraft can keep humans alive in deep space. That is all it needs to prove.
Artemis III is next. The crew will launch into Earth orbit and dock with the SpaceX Starship lander and the Blue Origin lander for the first time. They will test the vehicles that will eventually carry astronauts to the surface. Still no landing. Just proving the docking systems work.
Artemis IV is the actual landing. First humans on the Moon since 1972. But it only works because three full missions built every piece of infrastructure underneath it. The rocket. The spacecraft. The life support. The landers. The docking systems. None of it skipped. Every mission compounding on the one before it.
Four missions over six years before anyone touches the surface. $93 billion invested in the infrastructure underneath the moment everyone is waiting for.
This is exactly what is happening across most marketing budgets right now.
Most businesses run marketing like standalone missions. Launch a paid ad campaign: one flight, measure the results, mission over. Post on social media: one burst of reach, gone in 48 hours. Send an email blast: one open rate, done. Run a PR campaign: one news cycle, forgotten. Pay an influencer: one burst of attention, then silence.
Every campaign is its own Artemis I, except there is no Artemis II. There is no infrastructure building underneath. Nothing carries forward to the next mission. You start from zero every quarter.
(If you want to see where your site stands across Google and AI search, start here:
seo-stuff.com/free-audit)
SEO and AI search visibility is the only marketing channel that operates like a program instead of a campaign.
You publish one authoritative page. That is Artemis I. It proves the foundation works. It ranks. It earns backlinks. It gets indexed. Then you publish the next one. That is Artemis II. And because the first page already built authority for your domain, the second one ranks faster. It earns trust quicker. It gets cited more often. Each piece of content builds infrastructure the next piece uses to go further.
When ChatGPT cites a source, it evaluates the authority of the entire domain behind it. When Google's AI Overview pulls a reference, it selects based on the depth of everything connected to that page. When Perplexity assembles an answer, it pulls from the sources with the deepest, most authoritative body of content on the topic. These systems do not evaluate each page as a standalone mission. They evaluate the program behind it.
No ad budget influences that selection. No social following determines it. No campaign calendar controls the outcome. The depth of what you have already built is what makes the next piece more powerful. That is how a program works. That is why it compounds.
Paid ads are a standalone mission every time you launch them. SEO and AI search visibility is a program where every mission builds the infrastructure for the next one.
That is the gap SEO Stuff was built to close.
seo-stuff.com
NASA could have tried to land on the Moon with the first crewed Artemis flight. It would have been faster. It would have been cheaper in the short term. And it probably would have failed, because the infrastructure underneath was not ready.
Instead they built a program. Four missions. Six years. Each one proving something the next one needs. And today, more than 53 years after the last human left the Moon, four astronauts are on their way back because every piece of the foundation was already in place.
The question is whether your marketing budget is running standalone missions that reset every quarter, or building a program where every piece of work makes the next one more powerful.
NASA@NASA
Liftoff. The Artemis II mission launched from @NASAKennedy at 6:35pm ET (2235 UTC), propelling four astronauts on a journey around the Moon. Artemis II will pave the way for future Moon landings, as well as the next giant leap — astronauts on Mars.
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For the first time in history, a woman is venturing to the Moon.
NASA astronaut Christina Koch is set to make that milestone on NASA's Artemis II mission — a daring ~10-day journey that will send four astronauts on a voyage around the Moon and farther from Earth than any woman has ever traveled before.
Serving as mission specialist aboard the Orion spacecraft, Koch will help test critical life support, navigation, and communication systems as the crew travels hundreds of thousands of miles into deep space.
She already holds the record for the longest single spaceflight by a woman — 328 days aboard the International Space Station — and in 2019, she took part in the first all-female spacewalk.
Since the Apollo era, nearly 90% of astronauts have been men. Artemis II represents not only a leap in technology, but a profound shift in who gets to explore the cosmos.
“If there’s something to celebrate, it’s that we are at a time when anyone who has a dream gets to work equally hard to achieve that dream,” Koch said. “If we’re not going for all and by all, we’re not truly answering humanity’s call to explore.”

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@Geniustechw What offends me is the unsafe display & handling of firearms. The younger sister doesn't stand a chance if they go live fire with that spacing.
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🚨 NAVY SLEEP CONDITIONS JUST WENT VIRAL — SAILOR SAYS “I CAN’T EVEN BREATHE IN IT”
A Navy sailor records the moment it hits her.
This is where she’s supposed to sleep.
• Barely enough room to turn
• Inches from the wall
• Fully enclosed, stacked compartments
• No real airflow, no space
Then she says: “I can’t even breathe in it… I feel claustrophobic.”
Some are defending it:
“It’s the military, that’s how it is”
Others aren’t buying it:
“This looks inhumane”
“No way people actually live like this”
Thousands of sailors… sleeping like this every night.
Does this build toughness or break people down?
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@Geniustechw We tend to not waste our time protesting but we damn sure vote.
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