I believe that Chud the Builder should be punished as if he were a black criminal, which is to say, given an extremely lenient probation sentence
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I believe that Chud the Builder should be punished as if he were a black criminal, which is to say, given an extremely lenient probation sentence
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Ice Poseidon reacts to ChudtheBuilder being charged with attempted murder after shooting someone "you can't claim self-defense if you call black people the N word"
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Bitcoin 4-Year ROI as of 2026-05-14
Current Price: $79,869
Price 4 Years Ago: $30,034
4-Year ROI: 166% $BTC ROI BitcoinChartBot
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Current Price: $79,869
Price 4 Years Ago: $30,034
4-Year ROI: 166% $BTC ROI BitcoinChartBot
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SNEAKO defends ChudTheBuilder after he has been charged with ATTEMPTED MURDER and faces up to 39 YEARS in PRISON
"If Black people can say the word, White people should be able to as well.."
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"If Black people can say the word, White people should be able to as well.."
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When women say they want you to "open up" 99% of the time they are thinking "cute insecurity or BS" not actual trauma or problems. Sad reality is most women get the ick when men are weak because men are supposed to be the strong ones
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BREAKING: Trump and President Xi arrive for a state banquet dinner at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing
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NOW - Trump talks about the "deep sense of mutual respect," between the American and Chinese people highlighting how "founding father, Benjamin Franklin, published the sayings of Confucius in his colonial newspaper."
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NOW - Xi says that himself and Trump, through meetings and phone calls have kept "China-U.S. relations generally stable."
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NOW - Xi: "Both China and the U.S. stand to gain from cooperation and lose from confrontation, our two countries should be partners rather than rivals."
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A single psilocybin session can ease endβofβlife anxiety.
Psychedelic therapy is providing an unexpected source of comfort for those facing the end of life. For many terminally ill patients, the greatest burden is not physical pain but overwhelming fear, anxiety, and a crushing sense of purposelessness. Conventional approaches such as antidepressants and talking therapy can soften these symptoms, yet they frequently fail to help people truly come to terms with their prognosis or find serenity in their remaining time.
This unmet need has led researchers to explore psilocybin, the psychoactive compound found in certain mushrooms. In two landmark studies, a single high-dose session paired with psychotherapy produced swift and substantial reductions in anxiety and depression among patients with life-threatening cancer β effects that persisted for months. Many participants reported profound emotional breakthroughs, heightened clarity, and experiences of awe that fundamentally shifted their perspective on death. Some described feeling reconnected to life, to nature, and to loved ones in ways they had thought were lost forever.
Other nations are moving faster. Australia, Germany, and Canada have already opened limited pathways for psychedelic-assisted therapy in severe or treatment-resistant cases. The European Union is funding research on a large scale. In the UK, however, psilocybin remains a Schedule 1 drug β officially deemed to have no medical value β which severely restricts studies and blocks access even within tightly controlled trials.
The timing could hardly be more poignant. As Parliament considers legislation on end-of-life choices, the question of how best to support dying people emotionally has taken centre stage. A recent YouGov survey found that a clear majority of UK adults favour easing restrictions on psilocybin research for the terminally ill. Public opinion appears to have outpaced current policy.
Psychedelic therapy is not a universal solution, nor will it suit everyone. Yet for some, it offers something profoundly human: the possibility of meeting death with reduced terror and a renewed sense of meaning.
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Psychedelic therapy is providing an unexpected source of comfort for those facing the end of life. For many terminally ill patients, the greatest burden is not physical pain but overwhelming fear, anxiety, and a crushing sense of purposelessness. Conventional approaches such as antidepressants and talking therapy can soften these symptoms, yet they frequently fail to help people truly come to terms with their prognosis or find serenity in their remaining time.
This unmet need has led researchers to explore psilocybin, the psychoactive compound found in certain mushrooms. In two landmark studies, a single high-dose session paired with psychotherapy produced swift and substantial reductions in anxiety and depression among patients with life-threatening cancer β effects that persisted for months. Many participants reported profound emotional breakthroughs, heightened clarity, and experiences of awe that fundamentally shifted their perspective on death. Some described feeling reconnected to life, to nature, and to loved ones in ways they had thought were lost forever.
Other nations are moving faster. Australia, Germany, and Canada have already opened limited pathways for psychedelic-assisted therapy in severe or treatment-resistant cases. The European Union is funding research on a large scale. In the UK, however, psilocybin remains a Schedule 1 drug β officially deemed to have no medical value β which severely restricts studies and blocks access even within tightly controlled trials.
The timing could hardly be more poignant. As Parliament considers legislation on end-of-life choices, the question of how best to support dying people emotionally has taken centre stage. A recent YouGov survey found that a clear majority of UK adults favour easing restrictions on psilocybin research for the terminally ill. Public opinion appears to have outpaced current policy.
Psychedelic therapy is not a universal solution, nor will it suit everyone. Yet for some, it offers something profoundly human: the possibility of meeting death with reduced terror and a renewed sense of meaning.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π4π1
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BREAKING: Pakistan Army Rocket Force Command has tested the Fateh-4 long range cruise missile. The missile is believed to have a range of 750β1,000 km and can carry a 450 kg high explosive warhead.
It is also reported to use low altitude terrain following flight profiles designed to reduce radar exposure and complicate interception by enemy air defense systems.
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It is also reported to use low altitude terrain following flight profiles designed to reduce radar exposure and complicate interception by enemy air defense systems.
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