🚨 BREAKING NEWS: Farmers Are Finding BOXES OF TICKS Dumped on American Farmland with MILLIONS Crawling Out
“Look at them pouring out of there…
this is insane.” A farmer opens a box left in the woods... and it’s packed with ticks exploding everywhere.
Not one or two. Hundreds of thousands per box.
Deliberately placed. On purpose. This isn’t nature. This is an attack. America is already seeing record tick-borne diseases.
Alpha-gal syndrome (the tick bite that makes you allergic to red meat for life) is exploding.
Lyme cases surging.
Farmers losing livestock.
Families getting sick.
And now this?
Who the hell is dropping weaponized tick bombs on our food supply?
In the attached post...
THE PENTAGON ADMITS TO IT!
AND THE WOMAN LAUGHS!
"Calls it: "The Cheap Nuke"
at a little over a dollar per death
of AMERICAN PEOPLE.
Bill Gates has poured millions into genetically modified ticks and “population control” bugs.
Coincidence?
Or the final phase of making us dependent on his lab-grown GOY-slop while we can’t even eat real meat anymore?
This is biological terrorism on the heartland.
Our farmers feed the world... and someone is trying to destroy them from the ground up.
SHARE THIS NOW before they scrub it.
Tag EVERYONE YOU KNOW.
Demand investigations.
Protect our farms.
Protect our food.
Crazy that Constantinople fell almost entirely because the Emperor didn't want to pay for a Hungarian's autism project (building a 19 ton cannon with a 30" bore inspired by much smaller models introduced by the Mongols) so the autist in question asked the Ottomans if they would like to fund his superweapon instead.
Being tired of repeatedly losing, they said yes and threw money at him to make the damn thing, which destroyed the previously unassailable walls of the city using 1200lb cannon balls with a range of up to a mile.
Dude wasn't concerned with politics, religion, or the civilizational consequences of his actions. He just really wanted to make an enormous cannon, and by god did he succeed.
An interesting, newly declassified Turkish intelligence report from Atatürk era! In 1932, Turkey's intelligence service in Paris filed a secret report. The subject was a clandestine meeting between the deposed Ottoman Caliph and the owner of a Paris-based Armenian newspaper.
The caliph in question is Abdülmejid II, who was the last caliph of the Ottoman dynasty, exiled to Nice in 1924. The newspaper owner is unnamed here but most probably he was Shavarsh Missakian, founder of Haratch, the Armenian daily in Paris.
According to Turkish intelligence, Missakian traveled to Nice in early February 1932 and was received by Abdülmejid. He later told a trusted friend what happened inside. The caliph opened in French, then switched to Turkish: "Let's speak in our father tongue."
"At a time when the American public is expressing unprecedented levels of distrust in the Israeli government, Congress just proposed tying the U.S. to the Israeli military more than ever before."
Here's the story: 🧵
Buried in the House’s 2027 NDAA is Section 224: the “United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative," which would dramatically expand U.S.-Israel military cooperation far beyond the current aid model.
We’re talking bilateral R&D, weapons co-production & deep defense-tech integration. It also names emerging technologies like AI, quantum, autonomous systems, directed energy, cyber, biotech, and more. In other words: the battlefields of the future.
Your cell phone does not listen to you “by accident.” It's a feature, not a bug.
I talked about traveling to Rome just once and 10 minutes later I started getting flight ads.
It's called “Shadow-Logging” and it happens through 5 settings you've never touched.
Here's how to remove eavesdropping once and for all:
The illusion of silence
Most believe that “Hey Siri” or “OK Google” only work when you say the phrase.
The reality is different.
To detect the keyword, the device has to constantly analyze sound in a low power mode.
You cannot “wake up” if you are not listening first.
The ghost microphone
Have you ever seen an orange or green dot at the top of your screen?
This indicates that the microphone is active. The problem is that, by the time you see it, the audio fragment has already been processed... and sometimes sent.
[Mataderos] El Mirador Salaberry se eleva en Avenida de los Corrales.
Es la segunda construcción más antigua del barrio (1858) y uno de los tres únicos miradores que subsisten en toda la ciudad.
Recorremos su historia 🧵👇
A mediados del siglo XIX, esta zona era campo abierto. El camino vecino no era la actual autopista, sino el "Camino de Tropas", por donde se arreaba el ganado.
Mataderos aún no existía como barrio.
La construcción fue encargada por los hermanos Salaberry, una familia de origen vasco dueña de un tambo en la zona de Las Heras.
Su propósito era divisar el horizonte en medio de la llanura
Good to remember that our fascia is not only connective tissue. It’s also sensory tissue and *highly* innervated (innervated = a tissue that has nerves running through it or connected to it). Fascia is also deeply tied to our autonomic.
Most people think their fascia is just not well exercised or dehydrated and maybe it is (probably is) but there’s a lot more to it. If the body perceives a threat, or chronic (or acute) urgency, or a pain or something that is being forced upon it, it will guard vs release the body.
Some people aggressively foam roll all day long and it will still feel tight at the end for this same reason. Some people can stretch for 30 minutes and loosen up the entire body, but 20 minutes later, everything tightens itself back up into place. Bear in mind the nervous system also has to let go / disengage.
One of the classic approaches in a sustained fascial release is :
Find a barrier on yourself. A barrier is basically the first place the tissue stops gliding. You don’t want to go to a pain barrier but just a clear place of first resistance. Most people have no idea what they are feeling for. Here is how to actually feel for the fascial barrier.
Place your whole hand on an area of your body you want to work with and use a hand that provides open, broad contact (your palm, fingers/fingertips). Then, do NOT slide over your skin like you are applying lotion. Instead, allow your hand to just softly sink into the skin first, just enough that your skin and the tissue underneath it move with your hand.
From there, slowly take the tissue in one direction. Try it up or down or left/right, or in a very small diagonal.
And all you are doing here is looking for the first place the tissue stops moving easily. This is a barrier. They can feel like thicker catches or sticky, ropey or more rubbery. Can also feel like there’s pulling and doesn’t simply go further. It takes some practice. When you find one, just hold there and don’t move. Stay at the barrier (better if you do in silence) and wait there.
This can be 90 seconds or 3 minutes or longer
Sometimes longer. Just sit with it. You may feel heat, a softening, pulsing sensation(s), the tissue ‘melting’, or you may have spontaneous swallowing or
deeper breathing or an involuntary sigh once the tissue begins actual release.
This is especially effective in areas like :
The diaphragm, where hands are resting under the lower ribs while breathing slowly into the area.
The suboccipitals, with a (gentle) sustained support under the base of your skull.
The plantar fascia, where you hold a tender point in your arch instead of rolling rapidly with a ball, etc
The sacrum, just resting hands under the sacrum (or fists under you) and allowing your pelvis to soften and melt onto them.
The jaw, holding the masseter or temporalis w/out kneading aggressively.
The scalp, moving the tissues slowly and then waiting on restriction.
The psoas, while not digging into the abdomen but applying gentle and sustained contact beside your navel while you perform slow breathing.
The thoracic inlet also, in gentle holds around the base of your neck and upper ribs.
This has a pretty high ROI b/c it informs our breathing patterns, vascular flow, lymphatics, joint mechanics and then our pain sensitivity and autonomic. Don’t forget to work on your regulation and healing your nervous system so it feels safe.
If you practice this, a release can happen (often happens) indirectly in some of the following ways : your stomach begins gurgling, sinuses begin draining, the jaw naturally starts unclenching, your feet warming or sharper vision.
Can also present as a sudden emotional drop off after sustained fascial holds. Some of you may have seen those videos that circulate where someone is really crying.
It all sounds very mystical (and it is) until you remember simply, again, your fascia wraps around nearly everything in your entire body, continuously.
Continue below in comments / thread :
Further instruction : Imagine you’re gently sliding a bedsheet across a mattress. Some areas move freely while some catch and bind.
That catch location is what you are feeling for.
In sustained fascial work, a practitioner usually moves the tissue into that direction of restriction until they meet resistance, then waits there instead of forcing through it.
The important part is they aren’t stretching muscle fibers directly the way most people imagine when they stretch.
Again, the body holds and protects.
It braces and guards. Can be something physical or emotional,
old injuries, joint instability, poor breathing mechanics, a barely moving diaphragm, hyper mobile joints, scar tissue changing tension patterns, a diaphragm that barely moves, or weak feet & changing gait, or vision problems that pull the neck forward all day long.
Jaw clenching during sleep
Inflammation sensitizing nerves
The body is a system of incredible adaptation.
When this guarding pattern is emotionally driven and a rejection of the autonomic, it can show us in patterns of
Chronic hypervigilance
Never feeling safe
High sympathetic tone for years
Constant anticipation
Grief, shock & burnout
Living in environments where the body isn’t able to relax
Our nervous system changes muscle tone, breathing patterns, posture, jaw tension, vascular tone and fascial tension in response to emotional states, especially over long periods of time.
Long term fascial change then happens when the body experiences enough safety, stability, correct breathing, strength, grounding, movement, sleep, circulation and a sustained input.
Happy Home Apartments🏡
Part 3
Samuel:- oh, im sorry..
Sru:- hm parledhu, its okay.
Chintu:- raa nanna, adukundham,
Samuel:- Chintu ni amantham yethukuni, potta pai bhurr antu moothi tho kitha kithalu pedthu, hm yevaru police?
Chintu:- nenu police, mi iddaru dhongalu, Sare na
( Actually, Sruthu & valla husb, yepdu kuda chintu ni police ga petti, iddaru oke dhuppati lo dhaakkuni, romance cheskuneyvaru, chintu emo ankelu anni lekkapetti, dhuppati lopala unnaru ani thelsina kuda, illu antha thirigi dhuppati thisi out out anevadu,).. Ipdu kuda adhey
Expect chesthunnaadu chintu..
Chintu:- nen kallu mooskuni numbers count chestha miru dhaakkondi sare na..
Sameul:- oh yes..
Sru:- Chintu count chesthuntey, Samuel ki daily yela adukuntaro vallu antha cheppindhi..
Samuel:- ipdu kuda ala ne chedhama?, i mean babu kosam..
His internet has been slow for 6 months. So, he paid Comcast to upgrade his tier.
Speeds got worse.
He called Comcast again. They blamed his router. He bought a new one. Still slow.
He called a third time. They sent a technician out. The tech ran a speed test from inside the modem and said:"Speeds are fine on our end. Must be your devices."
A neighbor who works in IT came over the next weekend with his laptop.
He looked at the router for two minutes, opened the admin panel, and pointed at four settings on the screen.
"Comcast pushed a firmware update last year. They enabled all four of these silently. This is why your internet is slow. This is why every Comcast customer's internet got slower around the same time."
Here's exactly what he found and turned off. 🧵
The first setting: "Xfinity Wi-Fi Hotspot."
He didn't even know it existed.
Every Comcast-issued router by default broadcasts a ''second public Wi-Fi network'' called "xfinitywifi" meant for any nearby Comcast subscriber to connect to.
That sounds friendly. It isn't.
That second network uses ''your home's bandwidth.'' Your router's processing power. Your electricity bill. To provide free Wi-Fi to strangers walking by your house.
Comcast turned it on for every customer without explicit consent.
The neighbor showed him the fix:
1. Log into your Xfinity account at xfinity. com 2. Go to Services → Internet → Manage Internet → Xfinity Wi-Fi Hotspot Network 3. Toggle it OFF
It took 30 seconds. The router immediately freed up bandwidth that had been routing through it for strangers for months.
The second setting: "Automatic Channel Selection."
The router was set to "Auto" for both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi channels.
Sounds smart. In practice, it's the worst default in modern networking.
Here's why: in any apartment complex or dense neighborhood, dozens of routers all set to "Auto" end up fighting for the same handful of channels.
The neighbor pulled out a Wi-Fi analyzer app on his phone and showed him the problem: 14 other routers in range, all crammed onto channels 1, 6, and 11.
The fix:
1. Log into the router (usually 10.0.0.1 for Comcast) 2. Wireless Settings → Channel → manually set to a less-crowded channel (use a Wi-Fi analyzer to find one) 3. For 5 GHz, set to channel 36, 40, 44, or 149
He set it to channel 161 on 5 GHz. Speeds doubled instantly.
Russian sources report that Ukraine has started dropping anti-vehicle landmines on the M-14 highway between Melitopol and Mariupol.
This key logistical route to Crimea is 100–150 km from the front lines and would require fixed-wing UAVs to reach that far.
1/
This highway has been the primary focus of Ukraine’s sharp rise in strikes on Russian trucks using mid-range UAVs like the “Hornet.”
Landmines at operational depth on this and other routes will greatly increase pressure on Russian logistics. 2/
The Russians have recovered cassettes containing either 48 or 10 landmines of the IBM anti-vehicle/anti-personnel series.
These devices are equipped with “PDP” movement-sensitive fuzes and are powerful enough to immobilize vehicles, leaving them easy targets for strike UAVs. 3/
Most multi-agent systems collapse in production because of one simple mistake: treating AI agents like chatbots instead of employees.
If you throw 5 highly capable, open-ended agents into a shared context window with a generic prompt, you don't get collaboration.
You get cognitive overload, infinite loops, and context drift.
Here is why you need to build an AI Org Chart. 🧵👇
In human organizations, we don't hire 10 people and tell them to "build a startup" without structure.
We define departments, assign roles, and set clear boundaries.
Yet, in AI engineering, developers routinely build "agent pools" where every agent has access to every tool and reads the entire database.
This is the equivalent of giving an intern root access and inviting them to every board meeting. 🤦♂️
To build a resilient multi-agent workspace, you must enforce three architectural boundaries:
1️⃣ Departmental Scopes: Group agents into logical functional units (e.g., Engineering, Product, Growth).
2️⃣ Bounded Context Windows: Only pass an agent the specific state keys it has permission to read.
3️⃣ Role-Scoped Tool Registries: An agent in the Product department should not have database write tools registered to its execution loop.