𝕋𝕙𝕖 𝔸𝕖𝕥𝕙𝕖𝕣𝕤𝕥𝕣𝕖𝕒𝕞 – Telegram
𝕋𝕙𝕖 𝔸𝕖𝕥𝕙𝕖𝕣𝕤𝕥𝕣𝕖𝕒𝕞
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The highest voltage takes on science, current events, and more!
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Who says Britain's days of being number one are over?
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Forwarded from Disclose.tv
NEW - Lego can be "anti-LGBT" because the bricks have "male or female parts" that are made to "mate" with each other, says the Science Museum in London — Telegraph

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/02/06/lego-can-be-anti-lgbt-says-science-museum/

@disclosetv
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Forwarded from Battleground
😂
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Too much winning! First Stephen Colbert, now The View is going on “Hiatus…We only have one more show after this.” Good riddance! (29 seconds)
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Forwarded from Soroca-Beloboca
Japanese journalist for Sankei Shimbun Yuichi Onoda accidentally found himself in a Moscow library — and saw something he didn’t expect: how Russia truly remembers the war. He shared his impressions of an exhibition of children’s drawings dedicated to the exploits of Soviet soldiers. It was a revelation to him that children were not drawing horrors, but heroism, courage, and selflessness. He writes directly that this would be impossible in Japan. Any attempt to remember their soldiers would lead to accusations of militarism.

Onoda drew a parallel: in Russia, it is customary to honor the fallen, to talk to children about defending the Motherland, and not just about suffering and guilt. Memory is not a complex, but a support. And this is the fundamental difference from the Japanese approach, where historical memory is turned into constant self-abasement.

In essence, this journalist from Tokyo admitted that Russia has retained respect for its soldier. Not for the war, but for those who fought, defended, and died. This is the true strength of the people. And while others are afraid to offend "world opinion", in Russia children proudly draw their heroes.

Join us: Soroca-Beloboca !
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Forwarded from Raw Egg Nationalist
Today's good news.
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🇯🇵📞👶 — Japan's Right-wing nationalist Sanseitō leader Sohei Kamiya says Japanese children should be taught to be proud of being Japanese instead of feeling ashamed for WW ll.

🔗 🇯🇵 Colonel Otaku Gatekeeper 🇯🇵 (@politicalawake)
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Forwarded from The Vigilant Fox 🦊
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WATCH: Peter Hotez tells woman her repeated COVID infections are basically her fault for skipping boosters.

WOMAN: “I’m getting COVID often. I took Paxlovid the third time, and then a few weeks later I got it again. COVID was really bad on me.”

HOTEZ: “After you had your first two immunizations way back in 2021, did you get boosters regularly?”

WOMAN: “I got one booster and then after that I stopped getting them.”

HOTEZ: “Yeah. So that’s the reason why you keep up with the boosters.”

Follow @VigilantFox 🦊
More Stories: VigilantFox.com
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4chan is cutting of UK users rather than comply with the UK's intrusive laws.
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Sarah's books at BasedCon! She joins us on the Ark tonight to talk AI! https://www.skirkpierzchala.com
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🇫🇷🇵🇸 France will recognise the state of Palestine in September, President Macron says. He added:

“True to its historic commitment to a just and lasting peace in the Middle East, I have decided that France will recognize the State of Palestine.

I will make the solemn announcement at the United Nations General Assembly next September.”

🔗 Clash Report
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If they don't like the results, the science won't get published. This is how they get endless studies that only agree with their sick ideologies

new chan: @zoomerwaffenx
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Forwarded from Historia Occulta
The Cartographer’s Mirage That Would Not Drift

For centuries, Hy-Brasil was placed with unnerving precision—round, river-split, roughly 200 miles west of Ireland—but its stories never lined up with its coordinates. On some charts, it hovered alone in the Atlantic; on others, it brushed the edge of known coastlines. But the legends always said the same thing: it was visible only once every seven years, then vanished back into mist.

In Irish tradition, it was a place of great knowledge. Not just another lost island, but a hidden source. A surviving manunoscript from the 14th century calls it “the promised land of the saints,” beyond the reach of ordinary maps. Later accounts said it was inhabited by monks, or sages, or black-cloaked scholars who watched without intervening. When Captain John Nisbet claimed in 1674 to have landed there, he described an island of lush fields, strange beasts, and a people who lived in silence, speaking only to share ancient knowledge. His tale may have been fiction—but it didn’t matter. The island had already survived without proof.

What’s most unusual is how the island never slipped into allegory. It wasn’t treated like Atlantis or Lyonesse—morality tales dressed as geography. Hy-Brasil remained concrete: a fixed shape, a known location, visited and missed in equal measure. It existed in that strange middle ground between folklore and navigation—too persistent to be forgotten, too elusive to be real.

Even today, its coordinates are easy to plot. But the island is gone. Or never there. Or not meant to be reached except when the conditions—calendar, belief, visibility—briefly align.

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