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𝕋𝕙𝕖 𝔸𝕖𝕥𝕙𝕖𝕣𝕤𝕥𝕣𝕖𝕒𝕞
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Forwarded from Culture War Room
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Russian soldier takes out a drone with a sack of potatoes. Amazing.
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Forwarded from Working Men Memes (Daily Armour Of God)
Königsberg Castle, founded in 1255, is a castle of the Teutonic Order, also called the Royal Castle.

Demolished: 1968–1969
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Right on schedule. Time to "cool the marks." The final step in every con game is to persuade the victim that the con artist is a nice guy so the victim declines to pursue justice. https://archive.is/DuH7r

And it was all in the plan from the beginning.

In the 2017 pandemic planning document, SPARS Pandemic Scenario 2025-2032, pandemic response planners explicitly considered the vaccine injury problem. The planned response is to wait until public pressure builds, call for an inquiry to further stall, and ultimately hand out token sums to the subset of victims who can "prove" their injuries were vaccine-related. At no point will the pharma execs or regulators responsible for the debacle ever suffer any consequences for it, if the pandemic planners have their way. See Chapter 17, page 59.

https://www.centerforhealthsecurity.org/our-work/pubs_archive/pubs-pdfs/2017/spars-pandemic-scenario.pdf

Aren't the coolers - or in this case the authorities responsible for the COVID vaccine debacle - nice and generous people after all, trying to make things right and help out the mark?

Want to learn more about cooling the mark so you can keep an eye out for it happening around you? This article is a bit dry and long winded, but it goes into the topic in detail:

https://www.sci-hub.wf/10.1080/00332747.1952.11022896

For an excellent and readable discussion of con games and how they work, check out The Big Con by David W. Maurer.

https://archive.org/details/the-big-con-the-story-of-the-confidence-man-pdfdrive/page/n79/mode/2up?q=cooling
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The largest and the most populated city on Earth.

Tokyo, Japan.

Join @awakenedspecies
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Forwarded from Today I Learned
TIL that in 550 AD, the Byzantine Emperor sent two monks to China to smuggle silk worms out of there to avoid Persian control over the Silk Road. The monks hid the worms in their walking sticks, and the silk industry they started lasted for 650 years.
https://ift.tt/U8qE2r1
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Forwarded from MurderTheMedia
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Hail to the King of Rifles

Designed for Ultimate Warfare

To bring down an officers horse at 800 yards
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Forwarded from David Avocado Wolfe
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Forwarded from Today I Learned
TIL Occultist, Aleister Crowley, was an accomplished mountain climber. In 1902, he was part of a British expedition attempting to climb K2, the second-highest mountain in the world.
https://ift.tt/m0fOLV2
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📸 On April 30, 1961, 27-year-old Soviet doctor Leonid Rogozov performed a successful operation on himself to remove his appendix in 1 hour and 45 minutes during an Antarctic expedition.

This case became a world-famous sensation.

This surgeon is still the only doctor at the newly built Soviet Antarctic station Novolazarevskaya, who was able to perform an operation on himself in polar conditions. Leonid Rogozov discovered symptoms: fever, pain in the right iliac region. He was the only doctor on the expedition. Diagnosis: acute appendicitis.

An urgent operation could have saved Rogozov’s life, but there was a problem - he was the only surgeon in the 3000 km area. There was no physical opportunity to take Rogozov to the hospital, so he decided to operate on himself. Meteorologist Artemyev and driver-mechanic Teplinsky who held a small mirror to his stomach volunteered to help Leonid Rogozov in this matter. In a supine position, the operation lasted 1 hour 45 minutes.

“I didn’t allow myself to think about anything other than the task... If I had lost consciousness, Sasha would have given me an injection. My poor assistants. I looked at them: they themselves were whiter than their medical gowns. At the most difficult stage of the operation, my hands became like rubber. But then I realized that, in fact, I was already saved!”


After resting for a couple of weeks, Leonid Rogozov continued to perform his duties as part of the expedition. He returned to Leningrad with everyone in 1962. Despite the fallen world fame, Rogozov completed his residency and worked all his life in medical institutions of our Northern capital.
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"Ladies, just why is it that you’d rather meet a bear, than a man, in the woods? Not, you understand, that anyone is judging you."

https://sigmagame.substack.com/p/why-women-love-bears
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Forwarded from Telegrams From Barsoom
Survivors of tsunamis point out that before the wave actually hits, the water dramatically pulls back and recedes from the shore. And when that happens, one doesn’t have long to run away. For human societies entering periods of chaos, history shows a fairly similar dynamic: an increasing number of citizens choose to retreat. They stop serving and caring; they become sullen, uncooperative and uninterested in coming to society’s aid. This is not a problem of morals, nor a situation that is helped by blaming the young. Instead, the withdrawal of the people, just like the withdrawal of the shoreline, is a sign that a tsunami is approaching.

https://unherd.com/2024/04/why-the-west-will-refuse-to-fight/
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Forwarded from Megatron
BREAKING:

🇨🇳🇬🇧China hacked UK Defense Ministry's payroll system, exposing names of current and former service members - BBC/Sky.

Russia and China now have all the information about the spies. Heads will fly in the next period

@Megatron_ron
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Forwarded from Vox Day
How Civilization Ends

Tucker Goodrich is not optimistic, based on his experience with working on engines and machine shops. Due to the dwindling supply of quality machine shops and very poor quality aftermarket parts as well as a lack of people interested in learning the engine building and machine shop trades, I regret to inform our many followers […]

https://voxday.net/2024/05/08/how-civilization-ends/
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Forwarded from Science in telegram
Discovering the Speed of Sight: It’s Different for Everyone!

Hey everyone! Did you know that scientists have cracked the code on the “speed” of our vision, and it turns out, we’re all unique in how fast we process visual signals? This could explain why some of us react quicker to things happening around us.

In an intriguing experiment, researchers wanted to see how many times a light could flicker in a second before people thought it was just steadily shining. It’s like testing how fast your eyes can catch up with a strobe light at a party. Participants were exposed to varying flicker rates, and their job was to say when the light stopped flickering and started to look constant.

So, what’s the big reveal? Well, it seems our ability to process images per second is not a one-size-fits-all. The most eagle-eyed participant could detect flickering up to 65 Hz (yep, that’s 65 on-offs in just one second), while the lower end of the scale was around 20 Hz.

This finding isn’t just cool trivia; it has real implications for understanding human perception and could influence everything from the design of our screens to how visual information is presented to capture our attention effectively.

Stay curious and keep exploring the wonders of how we see the world! 🌍

📌 @science
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