This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
BREAKING: Trump and President Xi arrive for a state banquet dinner at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
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."
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
NOW - Xi says that himself and Trump, through meetings and phone calls have kept "China-U.S. relations generally stable."
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π1
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
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."
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π2
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
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.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
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
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
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.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
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.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Leftists are FLIPPING OUT that elonmusk had his son X propped up on his shoulders during the Trump - Xi Summit
It should be the OPPOSITE
ALL of the folks in this photo should have their kids on their shoulders
At the end of the day, THEY are who we are fighting for!
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
It should be the OPPOSITE
ALL of the folks in this photo should have their kids on their shoulders
At the end of the day, THEY are who we are fighting for!
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π3π₯°3
JUST IN - Air India βposts a $2.8 billion loss for fiscal year β2025-26 β Reuters
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π3
Crypto investors watching global stock markets hitting new high every day
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
They canβt be allowed to do this to him
I understand that this is βthe way it isβ and that it has been done to thousands of people before him. That is no excuse for watching it happen again
We are not slaves. We are not subjects. What we are is kindling, waiting to spark
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
I understand that this is βthe way it isβ and that it has been done to thousands of people before him. That is no excuse for watching it happen again
We are not slaves. We are not subjects. What we are is kindling, waiting to spark
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π―9
This is a direct result of decades of woke social engineering and anti-White Afrocentrism that has infiltrated and taken over academia and the media
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π7
A peer-reviewed paper published last year in the journal Bioethics by two professors at Western Michigan University School of Medicine argues that it is "morally obligatory" to genetically engineer ticks to spread alpha-gal syndrome, a permanent condition that makes you violently allergic to red meat.
The paper is called "Beneficial Bloodsucking."
Their argument: if eating meat is morally wrong, then preventing the spread of a disease that forces people to stop eating meat is also morally wrong. Scientists should gene-edit lone star ticks to enhance their ability to carry alpha-gal syndrome and expand their range into urban environments to infect more people.
They call this a "moral bioenhancer." They frame releasing genetically modified disease-carrying ticks as a "vaccination" that only "infringes" on your bodily autonomy rather than "violating" it. The distinction, apparently, is that a tick bit you instead of a government official holding you down.
Alpha-gal syndrome is not mild. The CDC estimates up to 450,000 Americans are already affected. Cases have surged 100-fold in the last decade. Symptoms include anaphylaxis. There is no cure.
Alpha-gal cases are exploding across the United States. The lone star tick's range is expanding far beyond its historical territory. And two academics at a medical school published a paper arguing this is a good thing that should be accelerated.
At what point do we stop treating papers like this as fringe academic exercises and start asking whether anyone is already acting on them?
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
The paper is called "Beneficial Bloodsucking."
Their argument: if eating meat is morally wrong, then preventing the spread of a disease that forces people to stop eating meat is also morally wrong. Scientists should gene-edit lone star ticks to enhance their ability to carry alpha-gal syndrome and expand their range into urban environments to infect more people.
They call this a "moral bioenhancer." They frame releasing genetically modified disease-carrying ticks as a "vaccination" that only "infringes" on your bodily autonomy rather than "violating" it. The distinction, apparently, is that a tick bit you instead of a government official holding you down.
Alpha-gal syndrome is not mild. The CDC estimates up to 450,000 Americans are already affected. Cases have surged 100-fold in the last decade. Symptoms include anaphylaxis. There is no cure.
Alpha-gal cases are exploding across the United States. The lone star tick's range is expanding far beyond its historical territory. And two academics at a medical school published a paper arguing this is a good thing that should be accelerated.
At what point do we stop treating papers like this as fringe academic exercises and start asking whether anyone is already acting on them?
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π€¬2
Another prominent scientist has died under suspicious circumstances.
The FBI has opened a multi-agency investigation into a disturbing pattern of deaths and disappearances involving approximately a dozen U.S. scientists and engineers working in aerospace, nuclear, and defense-related fields.
The latest case involves Joshua LeBlanc, a NASA aerospace electrical engineer who specialized in nuclear propulsion systems for future Mars missions. After LeBlanc was reported missing by his family, authorities discovered his Tesla crashed and burned beyond recognition on a rural road near Huntsville, Alabama. Forensic experts needed several days to positively identify his remains.
LeBlancβs death brings the total to at least 12 similar cases under federal review over the past four years. These include a retired Air Force Major General, a Los Alamos National Laboratory researcher whose phone was found wiped clean, and a NASA materials engineer who vanished while hiking in a Los Angeles forest.
FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed that the Bureau is now coordinating with state and local agencies, the Department of Energy, and the Department of Defense to examine potential links between the cases. While investigators have not yet established a definitive connection or motive, the repeated involvement of experts in sensitive technical fields has raised serious concerns within the national security community.
As the task force broadens its scope, both the scientific and intelligence communities are closely watching for answers regarding this troubling series of incidents affecting key contributors to Americaβs aerospace and defense programs.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
The FBI has opened a multi-agency investigation into a disturbing pattern of deaths and disappearances involving approximately a dozen U.S. scientists and engineers working in aerospace, nuclear, and defense-related fields.
The latest case involves Joshua LeBlanc, a NASA aerospace electrical engineer who specialized in nuclear propulsion systems for future Mars missions. After LeBlanc was reported missing by his family, authorities discovered his Tesla crashed and burned beyond recognition on a rural road near Huntsville, Alabama. Forensic experts needed several days to positively identify his remains.
LeBlancβs death brings the total to at least 12 similar cases under federal review over the past four years. These include a retired Air Force Major General, a Los Alamos National Laboratory researcher whose phone was found wiped clean, and a NASA materials engineer who vanished while hiking in a Los Angeles forest.
FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed that the Bureau is now coordinating with state and local agencies, the Department of Energy, and the Department of Defense to examine potential links between the cases. While investigators have not yet established a definitive connection or motive, the repeated involvement of experts in sensitive technical fields has raised serious concerns within the national security community.
As the task force broadens its scope, both the scientific and intelligence communities are closely watching for answers regarding this troubling series of incidents affecting key contributors to Americaβs aerospace and defense programs.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π3
BREAKING: S&P 500 futures surge to a fresh record high, now on track for the 7th-straight weekly gain.
The S&P 500 is nearing a gain of +$11 trillion in market cap in 7 weeks.
Absolutely incredible.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
The S&P 500 is nearing a gain of +$11 trillion in market cap in 7 weeks.
Absolutely incredible.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
This is horrifying and every American needs to hear this
California resident exposes whatβs really going on with Flock Cameras in America
βI want to be clear what these cameras actually are, and I say that with somebody with 20 years of experience in IT. I've served as the chief network architect for Fortune 500 companies, I've designed data centers, and today I work on cloud infrastructure for one of the largest loan origination companies in the country. I'm not speculating on how this technology works. I've read their patents and I know how it works.
They're AI-powered surveillance machines that capture every passing vehicle and person and transmit that data to a private corporate cloud, making it queryable by a multitude of state and federal agencies. The city of Corona does not control that database, and Corona residents have no public record rights against a private company's servers. Our daily movements are being harvested by a $7.5 billion corporation, that only answers to venture capital investors, not to us. Flock did not reach that valuation on their per-camera subscription fees. That math doesn't add up
The city council should also understand who they're doing business with. Flock CEO was asked whether the company had any federal contracts. He said no. That was a lie.
Public records revealed that Flock had been secretly running a pilot program giving the US Border Patrol access to local police camera data without the knowledge of the cities that paid for the cameras.
Now consider who's behind the company and where your data flows. Flock integrates directly with Palantir, a data fusion platform, with a $30 million contract with ICE. Peter Thiel, the founder of Palantir, is also one of Flock's primary investors. These are not separate companies with separate agendas. They are connected actors that are building a connected infrastructure.
Palantir's own CEO stated publicly just this month that his technology is being used as a political instrument, designed to reduce the political power of certain voters. And that's the ecosystem that our Corona cameras are feeding into.
We're not anti-police at all. We're against mass surveillance of innocent residents by a company with a documented record of deception, built by investors with a stated political agenda. We're asking the City Council to start auditing the queries made against Flock's database, to disclose any data sharing agreements, and to take a vote to cancel the Flock safety contractβ
I looked more into this and he is 100% right
Patents describe broader object detection, including tracking people and pedestrians, patents like US11416545B1. The system uses a centralized cloud database for nationwide queries
Data goes to Flockβs private cloud, AWS-based, encrypted. Nationwide lookup is common, 75%+ of customers are enrolled enabling cross-jurisdictional searches. Residents have no direct public records access to the corporate servers.
This creates a mass surveillance network feeding a private companyβs infrastructure
If you ask me this is laying the infrastructure for a mass surveillance network in America. We are being lied to. Cancel all contracts nationwide
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
California resident exposes whatβs really going on with Flock Cameras in America
βI want to be clear what these cameras actually are, and I say that with somebody with 20 years of experience in IT. I've served as the chief network architect for Fortune 500 companies, I've designed data centers, and today I work on cloud infrastructure for one of the largest loan origination companies in the country. I'm not speculating on how this technology works. I've read their patents and I know how it works.
They're AI-powered surveillance machines that capture every passing vehicle and person and transmit that data to a private corporate cloud, making it queryable by a multitude of state and federal agencies. The city of Corona does not control that database, and Corona residents have no public record rights against a private company's servers. Our daily movements are being harvested by a $7.5 billion corporation, that only answers to venture capital investors, not to us. Flock did not reach that valuation on their per-camera subscription fees. That math doesn't add up
The city council should also understand who they're doing business with. Flock CEO was asked whether the company had any federal contracts. He said no. That was a lie.
Public records revealed that Flock had been secretly running a pilot program giving the US Border Patrol access to local police camera data without the knowledge of the cities that paid for the cameras.
Now consider who's behind the company and where your data flows. Flock integrates directly with Palantir, a data fusion platform, with a $30 million contract with ICE. Peter Thiel, the founder of Palantir, is also one of Flock's primary investors. These are not separate companies with separate agendas. They are connected actors that are building a connected infrastructure.
Palantir's own CEO stated publicly just this month that his technology is being used as a political instrument, designed to reduce the political power of certain voters. And that's the ecosystem that our Corona cameras are feeding into.
We're not anti-police at all. We're against mass surveillance of innocent residents by a company with a documented record of deception, built by investors with a stated political agenda. We're asking the City Council to start auditing the queries made against Flock's database, to disclose any data sharing agreements, and to take a vote to cancel the Flock safety contractβ
I looked more into this and he is 100% right
Patents describe broader object detection, including tracking people and pedestrians, patents like US11416545B1. The system uses a centralized cloud database for nationwide queries
Data goes to Flockβs private cloud, AWS-based, encrypted. Nationwide lookup is common, 75%+ of customers are enrolled enabling cross-jurisdictional searches. Residents have no direct public records access to the corporate servers.
This creates a mass surveillance network feeding a private companyβs infrastructure
If you ask me this is laying the infrastructure for a mass surveillance network in America. We are being lied to. Cancel all contracts nationwide
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π―10
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
NEW: The man Chud The Builder shot yesterday has been identified as Joshua Fox, who was charged with aggravated domestic assault after allegedly threatening his wife with a screwdriver and trying to burn the house down in 2024.
On April 18, 2024, in Clarksville, Tennessee, officers responded to a domestic incident at a Tower Drive apartment.
Joshua Fox told officers his wife would not let him leave. His wife told officers Joshua was upset over vehicle issues preventing him from leaving.
She claimed Joshua had an aerosol can and a lighter and attempted to burn the house down. When she tried to take the can away, they both fell to the ground. She said Joshua then grabbed a screwdriver and held it to her side, causing her to back away.
Officers located the aerosol can and screwdriver as described. They deemed Joshua the primary aggressor and arrested him for aggravated domestic assault.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
On April 18, 2024, in Clarksville, Tennessee, officers responded to a domestic incident at a Tower Drive apartment.
Joshua Fox told officers his wife would not let him leave. His wife told officers Joshua was upset over vehicle issues preventing him from leaving.
She claimed Joshua had an aerosol can and a lighter and attempted to burn the house down. When she tried to take the can away, they both fell to the ground. She said Joshua then grabbed a screwdriver and held it to her side, causing her to back away.
Officers located the aerosol can and screwdriver as described. They deemed Joshua the primary aggressor and arrested him for aggravated domestic assault.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π4π€¬2