ceepee
842 posts


@dom_lucre Well JP Morgan once famously said Millionaires don’t use astrology billionaires do
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@EndWokeness Hopefully this isn't the day public schools were planning on teaching the kids how to spell Eagles.
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@CollinRugg A pastor who had been living in his car for two years with his wife, dog, and young daughter received $400,000 in under 24 hours through a crowdfunding campaign started by content creator Jimmy Darts.
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NEW: Social media philanthropist, Jimmy Darts, helps raise $150,000 for a struggling family in Oklahoma.
The young boy had previously gone viral after he told Darts that God had been good to him despite his family's struggles.
"Amanda shared with me that she is only a month away from homelessness. She has no car, no money for groceries, and is doing everything she can to care for her children and grandchildren," Darts said on GoFundMe.
"Her son Cody was with her, and through tears he shared that he’s been bullied at school, but still said that God has been good to him."
God bless them.
Video: jimmydarts / ig.
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Dear Lord, we lift up Chuck Norris to You today. Surround him with Your healing power, give strength to his body and peace to his spirit during this medical emergency in Hawaii. Protect him, guide the doctors, and bring him back stronger than ever. In Jesus' name, Amen. 🙏🏿 Get well soon, legend!
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💡 This could really confuse folks suffering from gender identity... or maybe the crab's just living its best non-binary life while we all overthink ours. Science wins again. Nature's been non-binary longer than Twitter debates.🚨Scientists in India just found a Vela carli crab in Silent Valley that's literally half male, half female (gynandromorphy—first time in this family!). Nature's out here serving binary confusion on a shell.
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@TheFigen_ Another fantastic share, thanks!
I've been a huge fan of Hiroyuki Sanada anyway, and seeing these words made my heart feel all warm.
Extra thanks for making this post! 🗡️ 📚

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Japanese actor Hiroyuki Sanada spoke about the contradictions of human nature:
“Some people dream of having a swimming pool at home, while those who have one hardly ever use it. Those who have lost a loved one feel a profound sense of loss, while others often complain about their living relatives. Those without a partner long for one, while those who have one often don't appreciate it. The hungry would give anything for a meal, while the satiated complain about the taste of their food. Those without a car dream of owning one, while those who have a car are always looking for a better one.”
The key to happiness is gratitude: truly seeing and appreciating what we already have, and understanding that somewhere, someone would give anything for what we take for granted.


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The Signal for Help (thumb tucked, fingers closed over it) is real — created by the Canadian Women's Foundation — and has led to actual rescues (2021 Kentucky teen, 2025 cases, etc.).
Bystander apathy is a problem, but posts like this (1.9M+ views) help spread awareness. Even a small % of people recognizing it can save lives.
If you spot it IRL:
- Don’t confront directly.
- Discreetly call emergency services or a helpline with location/details.
- If safe, create a subtle distraction.
Worth knowing. Stay alert. 🫶
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Most people will scroll because they do not like the full story behind beautiful headlines.
The Sagrada Familia in Barcelona has finally reached its planned maximum height after 144 years of construction. It sounds like triumph. But the road there was anything but smooth.
Here is the real history of the obstacles it faced.
The project began in 1882. One year later, Antoni Gaudí took over and radically redesigned it. His vision was complex, experimental, and far ahead of its time. That made construction slow and expensive from the beginning.
Then came the biggest blow.
During the Spanish Civil War, revolutionaries burned parts of the crypt and workshop. Many of Gaudí’s original drawings and models were destroyed. Architects had to reconstruct his plans from fragments, photos, and memory. Decades of delay followed.
Funding has always been unstable. The basilica is financed mainly by private donations and ticket sales, not by the Vatican or the Spanish state. During economic crises and especially during the COVID 19 pandemic, tourism collapsed and construction nearly stopped again.
There were also legal issues. For more than 130 years, parts of the building technically lacked full construction permits from the city of Barcelona. A formal agreement was only reached in 2019, with millions paid in fees.
So yes, it reached its height. But it survived wars, political turmoil, financial shortages, lost blueprints, legal battles, and global pandemics.
It is not just a story of faith and architecture. It is a story of resilience, controversy, and constant reinvention.
Does that make it more impressive to you, or does it show how fragile even the greatest projects can be?




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