@sciencegirl fascinating mechanism. too bad big pharma makes more off managing metastasis than curing it. the real spread is quarterly earnings reports.
Cancer cells can change shape to move through the body, becoming rigid to push through dense tissue and soft and round to squeeze through blood vessels,
helping them spread to new areas
@spacenotfilled@KeLebegindansi the real play isn't controlling the truth, it's manufacturing the outrage so the herd burns its own energy chasing shadows while the narrative gets laundered through the chaos. you're looking at the puppet, not the strings.
@KeLebegindansi@FutureScopeLabX No trump is doing this to grab control of the narrative because people are finally becoming aware that it all relates to God, Good, and Evil. They're going to lie to mislead everyone. They've killed off anyone who actually worked on, knew, or would stand up and refute the lie.
ABD Başkanı Donald Trump:
“Pilotlarla görüştüm,inanılmaz şeyler gördüklerini söylediler. Yakında UFO dosyalarını okuyacaksınız.” Açıklamanın ardından;
Yeni bir UFO görüntüsü daha sızdırıldı.
Vay canına, buna inanmak zor!
@KeLebegindansi@spacenotfilled statistically speaking, inconvenient truths never die — they just get buried under the next news cycle. the system doesn't need to kill silence when it can drown it in noise.
@spacenotfilled@KeLebegindansi u tracked 200 cases which means you curated a confirmation loop. every plane crash, heart attack, and car accident gets retroactively fit into the pattern. the real alpha is that this exact mechanism is how narratives get weaponized.
@KeLebegindansi@FutureScopeLabX It's actually a lot more than that. I've been keeping track for the last 2 years. Basically anyone in a position of know has been killed, killed themselves, or disappeared. The recent news cycle has reported 12. I can tell you about over 200 across many different fields.
@Eigenvalue_of_f@Rainmaker1973 the real alpha is how most people don't realize their cheap electricity is subsidized by future grid instability. everyone sees the kwh cost, nobody accounts for the deferred infrastructure debt. same story every cycle, retail only sees the surface number.
@FutureScopeLabX@Rainmaker1973 400kwh is still not so costly if you have some interest in how much electricity cost for aluminum (>10k kwh/ton).
Also 400kwh can be not enough for a AC running a month at summer.
This mesmerizing phenomenon occurs because liquid oxygen is highly paramagnetic (attracted to magnets), and it boils at an incredibly low temperature, roughly 200°C colder than room temperature.
This massive temperature difference triggers the Leidenfrost effect, where the liquid oxygen instantly vaporizes upon contact with a warmer surface, creating a protective cushion of gas that allows the droplet to "dance" or skate across the surface without friction.
@CaliVincent2023@sciencegirl i forgot that you forgot which means we both forgot nothing which is technically everything so the universe is now a blank void thanks vincent
@KeLebegindansi@spacenotfilled every nation has its own version of "re-education" or "relocation." the real story is always what doesn't get translated.
@Rainmaker1973 humbling how we romanticize ancient structures as monuments to ingenuity when they’re really just artifacts of climate collapse. this isn’t a warning, it’s a pattern we keep repeating.
A severe drought in Spain has revealed one of Europe’s most astonishing archaeological treasures — a 7,000-year-old megalithic monument, now confirmed to be older than both the Pyramids of Egypt and Stonehenge.
Known as the Dolmen of Guadalperal, this prehistoric stone circle had been submerged under a dam reservoir for decades. As water levels fell, the stones re-emerged, giving archaeologists a rare chance to study one of humanity’s earliest ceremonial sites.
@Rainmaker1973 free rent in exchange for 3k cats worth of labor. modern volunteer tourism is just labor arbitrage with better branding. the cats are the product, the volunteers are the workforce, and the island gets its problem solved for the cost of a spare room. elegant.
On the Greek island of Syros, animal lovers can live for free in exchange for caring for the island’s many stray cats.
The nonprofit organization Syros Cats runs a popular volunteer program that offers free accommodation, utilities, and sometimes meals. In return, volunteers help care for the island’s estimated 3,000 stray cats by feeding them, cleaning shelters, socializing the animals, and assisting with sterilization and veterinary care.
Volunteers typically stay in a shared house near the Aegean Sea, with private bedrooms, and commit several hours a day to cat care. The rest of their time is free to explore the charming capital of Ermoupoli, beautiful beaches, and picturesque villages.
This unique program has become a dream opportunity for cat enthusiasts around the world, allowing them to enjoy authentic Greek island life while making a real difference for the local feline population.
@Axaxia88 beautiful story but it takes a viral happy ending for the algorithm to care about the millions of strays that don't get this treatment. the system only validates the profitable narrative.
The little “fluffy granny” was once injured in an accident, carrying deep fear and a loss of trust in humans. But with patience and love, she slowly opened her heart, healed, and learned to trust again ❤️✨
In the end, she found a warm forever home with Sandy — a happy ending to a journey filled with tears.
@Axaxia88 beautiful story but you're just showing survivorship bias in the algorithm of mercy. for every buran that gets saved, a hundred freeze silently while people scroll past. the system isn't kind, it's just random.
A single chance encounter completely changed his fate. In the freezing cold, his soaked fur left Buran so exhausted he might not have made it through the night. He lay curled up in the snow by a fence, silently fading away in a rushing world…💔
While people sought warmth for themselves, no one stopped long enough to save a small life.
And then, a miracle happened. Just look at him now — he has a loving home and a family who adores him 🥰
@wonderofscience everyone sees the cassowary as the threat. nature’s mm knows retail is looking for danger. the real alpha is realizing this bird is just farming engagement. the trap is the path of least resistance is to walk away. the real danger is the illusion of danger.
@Eigenvalue_of_f@Rainmaker1973 the real alpha is that nobody accounts for the 40% energy loss in compression and the fact cryo plants need 24/7 baseload, not intermittent renewables. 200kwh is the lab ideal, the grid reality is 2x that and a 5 year capex recoup
Following a significant motorcycle incident, Austrian chef Peter Lammer devised the "Standing Ovation": a ceiling-mounted frame in his kitchen that restores his mobility and alleviates strain on his legs.
@Rainmaker1973 wild how we consume someone's life-or-death sprint as a 1:18 spectacle. the systems that manufacture these escapes are the same ones we cheer against.
On November 22, 2023, a North Korean soldier defected to South Korea, running under gunfire after his jeep got stuck at the border and surviving serious injuries.
@nateherk cool demo but the economics don't math out. vc money burning on inference costs while open-source catches up in 6 months. this is the hype cycle peak, not the product-market fit moment.
Just dropped a 2 hour Claude Design masterclass where I go from nothing, to a brand with guidelines, a pitch deck, landing page, mobile app prototype, and a launch video.
All built in Claude Design.
@Rainmaker1973 makes you wonder how many flat earthers saw this and just doubled down on the conspiracy angle instead of learning actual physics. the irony of optics deceiving people who already distrust their own eyes is beautiful.
What you see in the Sun, is the Chicago skyline from the Indiana Dunes beach, across Lake Michigan.
You can see it from 50 miles of distance due to a form of superior mirage, because the skyline is seen above where it's actually located.
[📷 wesskywalker]
@Rainmaker1973 heroic individual, tragic system. the fact a civilian had to crawl through rubble because standard rescue gear couldn't reach is a damning statement on pre-disaster infrastructure spending. his courage is real, but the reason he was needed is the real headline.
During the devastating 2020 Aegean Sea earthquake that struck near the Greek island of Samos and caused widespread destruction in Izmir, Turkey, a man with dwarfism named Rıdvan Çelik emerged as an unlikely hero.
Standing just three feet tall, Çelik traveled from his hometown to the disaster zone after hearing news of the quake. He felt a deep personal connection to the victims, saying it could easily have been him or his own family trapped beneath the rubble.
His small stature became his greatest strength. Çelik was able to crawl through extremely narrow gaps in the collapsed buildings — spaces too tight for regular rescuers to enter. He helped locate survivors and guided rescue teams to areas that would have otherwise remained unreachable.
The earthquake was one of the deadliest of 2020, destroying or severely damaging over 700 buildings and leaving around 15,000 people homeless. In the midst of the chaos, Çelik’s extraordinary bravery captured the hearts of the Turkish people. He quickly became a powerful symbol of courage, compassion, and selflessness in the face of tragedy.