Sam Fisher (Data Drops) – Telegram
Sam Fisher (Data Drops)
1.12K subscribers
7.32K photos
4.95K videos
10.9K files
12.5K links
All the files that're in my file archive, it's like the library, but not! (you can keep these and there's no fines!)
Download Telegram
Sam Fisher (Data Drops) pinned «Atlas and The Guardian of Earth - The Real BP Earth Watch YouTube If you've watched my content for a while, most of what this guy says will resonate with you, because he describes everything I've stated over the 5 years I've been on Telegram. From the council…»
Forwarded from Instant Media Bot - Video | Music | Files
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Saved by @InstantMediaBot

The Kangaroo Hop - Recreated Full Edition (The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother, 1975)
Any Gene Wilder fans out there? I have a unique treat for you! The one thing that always annoyed me about "Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother" is how the famed "Kangaroo Hop" is never finished properly. So, I fixed it to restore the muffled-out ending to its' total clarity and loop the chorus twice before winding down to a standard song fade-out. Now the song not only has the ending properly restored, but the full-length of the song (or what would have been if released on an album) has been corrected as well. So enjoy hearing the previously unaltered portions of the beloved "Kangaroo Hop" scene in synchronization with the original footage! (That means a little more of Gene Wilder, Madeline Kahn, and Marty Feldman to hear!)

(C) 1975 20th Century Fox, A Walt Disney Company (Yes, the "unfortunately" side comment in the video was a swipe at Disney for being so DUMB lately.), Shared...
👍1
AI responses may include mistakes.

All Hymenoptera, the insect order that includes
ants, bees, wasps, and sawflies, reproduce asexually to produce males through a process called arrhenotoky. In this form of parthenogenesis, unfertilized eggs develop into haploid males, while fertilized eggs become diploid females.
Additionally, some hymenopterans use asexual reproduction to produce female offspring, a process known as thelytoky. This can be a regular reproductive strategy or triggered by circumstances.
Asexual reproduction to produce male offspring (arrhenotoky)

Bees and wasps: In a honey bee colony, the queen produces male drones by laying unfertilized eggs. Workers may also produce haploid male offspring if a queen is absent.
Sawflies: As part of their haplodiploid system, sawflies use arrhenotoky to produce males.

Asexual reproduction to produce female offspring (thelytoky)
Thelytoky in Hymenoptera can be either obligate (the only form of reproduction) or facultative (occurring alongside sexual reproduction).
In ants

Mycocepurus smithii (Amazonian fungus-growing ant): Queens reproduce exclusively asexually, making male ants obsolete in this species.
Cataglyphis cursor (Desert ant): Queens produce new queens asexually, while workers are produced sexually.
Platythyrea punctata: Depending on the population, workers may reproduce asexually to produce female offspring.
Ooceraea biroi (Clonal raider ant): This queenless species reproduces entirely through parthenogenesis, with all offspring being genetically identical female clones.

In wasps

Parasitoid wasps: In many species, including those in the superfamily Chalcidoidea, thelytoky is induced by symbiotic bacteria, most commonly Wolbachia. Infected females produce only daughters, with some species being entirely parthenogenetic. Examples include:
Encarsia species, which are parasitoids of whiteflies.
Trichogramma species, which parasitize the eggs of other insects.
Gall wasps: Some gall wasps, such as Diplolepis rosae, reproduce thelytokously to produce only female offspring. In some species, such as Neuroterus baccarum, sexual and asexual generations alternate.
Cape honey bee (Apis mellifera capensis): In this subspecies, workers can produce diploid female offspring through parthenogenesis, allowing them to reproduce without a queen and parasitize other colonies.

In sawflies

Some sawfly species are parthenogenetic, and males are rare or even unknown.
Forwarded from My Nemesis lives in my tiny mind 24/7/365 RENT FREE
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Sam Fisher (Data Drops) pinned «The line of Ishmael and Zecharia 12:3 - Sam Fisher YouTube https://youtube.com/watch?v=n94ynIheZBM&si=0WXXeT6f1D_cEE-Z»
Forwarded from ЭТО Я
Netanyahu has faced his first U.S. president whom he can't outsmart: the British newspaper Financial Times reported how Trump forced the Israeli prime minister to sign up for peace.
Two weeks before his trip to the U.S. to negotiate a ceasefire plan for the Gaza Strip, Netanyahu addressed his far-right supporters in an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank and vowed that there would be no "Palestinian state."
Now, sitting in a hotel room in New York with his closest advisers and American interlocutors, he was reviewing a draft of a peace plan supported by Trump that ended with the exact opposite: a “real path,” albeit a vague one, to a future Palestinian state.
But this was not the only blow. It has been revealed that the draft of Trump's document emerged after fierce lobbying by Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and other influential Arab and Muslim countries, which also played on the president's anger over Israel's September 9 attack on Hamas' political negotiators in Doha.
Trump has also made it clear that he wants the war to end by the second anniversary of Hamas's attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, which triggered the conflict. This month will also see the announcement of the Nobel Peace Prize winner, which the US president is eager to receive.