Exploring the threads of time — uncovering stories from the past, decoding the present, and imagining the future. Every post is a journey across centuries.
Aug 26 • 19 tweets • 4 min read
🧵 In Princess Diana's final 24 hours, 17 "coincidences" occurred that remain unexplained to this day.
Was August 31, 1997 a tragic accident or a perfectly orchestrated plan?
MI6 files declassified in 2023 tell a story that will change your perspective forever...
📍 August 30, 3:00 PM - Princess
Diana told bodyguard Ken Wharfe: "Something feels different today. They're watching differently."
That same day:
- Regular driver Philippe Dourneau gets "food poisoning"
- Backup security team has "visa issues"
- Henri Paul suddenly called to duty
May 30 • 19 tweets • 5 min read
They say the American Civil War was fought to "free the slaves."
The truth?
It was about power, money, and control.
A brutal, bloody war dressed up in morality.
Let’s uncover the lies you were told.🧵
By 1860, America was two countries:
- The North: industrial, capitalist, and urbanizing.
- The South: agrarian, slave-based, and oligarchic.
The real tension?
Economic domination. Not ethics.
May 26 • 20 tweets • 5 min read
On Dec 7, 1941, Japan bombed Pearl Harbor.
2,403 Americans died.
The U.S. entered World War II.
But why did Japan attack?
Because the U.S. backed Japan into a corner—economically, diplomatically, and strategically.
Here’s the truth you weren’t taught:
Japan wasn’t just power-hungry.
It needed raw materials—oil, rubber, iron—to fuel its empire.
The U.S., UK & Netherlands had cut off its access.
No oil = no army, no navy, no empire.
War became inevitable.
May 12 • 20 tweets • 5 min read
How to Survive a Nuclear War After a Bomb Is Dropped:
⚠️ Imagine this: A nuclear bomb just dropped near you.
The sky lights up, the ground shakes—what do you do?
Survival isn’t just luck. Hiroshima and Nagasaki taught us how to fight for life.
Follow this thread🧵
You see a blinding flash—brighter than the sun.
What’s your move?
Duck and cover NOW.
In Hiroshima, people who dropped behind walls or furniture survived the heat and debris.
Get low, shield your head, and wait out the chaos.
May 5 • 14 tweets • 6 min read
He was hailed as a war hero, yet his policies starved 3 million Indians to death in 1943.
The Bengal Famine was no natural disaster—it was a man-made tragedy under Winston Churchill’s watch.
Let’s uncover the truth history often buries.
A Thread 🧵
First, context: In 1943, Bengal (now parts of India & Bangladesh) was under British colonial rule.
WWII was raging, and India was a key supplier of resources for the Allied war effort.
But this came at a devastating cost for Bengalis.
Apr 28 • 15 tweets • 5 min read
On June 22, 1941, millions woke to the roar of tanks and bombs as Hitler’s betrayal of Stalin ignited Operation Barbarossa, a campaign of unimaginable scale.
This fateful clash decided the war and changed nations forever.
Explore the gripping story... 🧵
In 1939, Hitler was obsessed with conquering Poland, but there was a problem:
Britain and France had pledged to defend Poland.
Even worse, attacking Poland could drag the Soviet Union into the war, creating a two-front conflict — a scenario Hitler was desperate to avoid.
Apr 23 • 16 tweets • 7 min read
The Pope Dies! Now, the World's Most Secret Ritual Begins..
Imagine, 120 People Locked Up, Without Cell Phones, Without the Outside World, to Choose a Leader for 1 Billion People.
Conclave comes from the Latin word 'cum clave' which means "with key".
Which means, the cardinals are locked in a room, isolated from the world, until they elect a new Pope.
Apr 22 • 12 tweets • 4 min read
1939: World War II’s flames engulfed Europe. In the Vatican, Pope Pius XII faced a moral dilemma that would define his legacy.
Was his silence on the Holocaust a calculated strategy or a betrayal of humanity?
This thread uncovers a controversial history that still divides us.🧵
Eugenio Pacelli became Pope Pius XII in March 1939, months before Hitler’s invasion of Poland sparked the war.
A seasoned diplomat, he understood global tensions.
The Vatican, a neutral state, sat vulnerably within fascist Italy.
His every decision was a tightrope walk.
Apr 21 • 20 tweets • 6 min read
This is Pope Francis.
The Pope who:
• Carried his own luggage
• Paid his hotel bill after election
• Lived in a simple guesthouse
His humility was a revolutionary leadership that challenged 2,000 years of Church hierarchy.
Here's his story:🧵
Before becoming pope, Jorge Bergoglio worked as a nightclub bouncer in Buenos Aires.
This unlikely background shaped a leader who never forgot his ordinary roots.
When he became Pope in 2013, he was the first to choose the name Francis:
The saint of poverty and simplicity.
Apr 21 • 18 tweets • 6 min read
I’m not a Christian.
But Pope Francis was arguably the boldest Pope ever.
He rejected simplistic views of God, tackled climate change head-on, and preached with a vision that felt straight out of 2140.
Here are 9 reasons why he was centuries ahead of his time: 🧵 1. This why he was a badass:
He never lost his sense of humor.
Asked about migration,
he joked about Irish and Italians.
(I'm Italian, so I’ll allow it.)
But then he got serious—real serious.👇
Apr 13 • 13 tweets • 4 min read
For over 1,000 years, the Roman Empire reigned supreme.
At its peak in 117 AD, Rome controlled:
1.9 million square miles.
70 million people.
The most advanced military in history.
But in 476 AD, it all came crashing down. Here’s the story of how Rome fell 🧵: 1. Barbarian Invasions
Rome’s borders were constantly under attack.
The Huns’ invasion of Europe forced many barbarian tribes—like the Goths—to seek refuge in the Roman Empire.
Instead of integrating them, the Romans treated them as second-class citizens.
Apr 11 • 12 tweets • 4 min read
This is Agatha Christie.
In 1926, she pulled off one of the biggest publicity stunts in literary history.
The whole of London could not stop talking about it.
Now, nearly 100 years later, she remains the world's best-selling fiction writer.
Here’s how she made history🧵👇:
In the flapping 20s, Agatha was regarded as the Queen of Mystery.
Her works inspired intrigue in the minds of many.
But her personal life was falling apart.
First her mother died, and she found out her husband Archie had a mistress he was very much in love with.
Apr 10 • 16 tweets • 4 min read
Most iconic and unbelievable link ups in history ~ A Thread 🧵
And you will be shocked after seeing post number 6 🤯
1. P. Diddy and Donald Trump , 1998 2. Muammar Gaddafi and Barack Obama, 2009
Apr 8 • 13 tweets • 4 min read
26/11: The Day That Shook the World Forever. A Rare Story 🧵
Skip if you’re easily upset.
Terrorists Entering in the Hotel Taj Mahal Mumbai, 26/11
Feb 7 • 20 tweets • 6 min read
The Russian Empire began in 862 AD with Rurik, a Viking ruler, and lasted over 1,000 years through tsars, turmoil, and transformation.
Napoleon called Russia a "mystery wrapped in an enigma.
Let’s unravel it—from Rurik to Revolution. 🧵👇
In 862 CE, Viking chieftain Rurik was invited to rule over the Slavic tribes.
His dynasty lasted 700 years and laid the foundation for Kievan Rus, the first Russian state.
By the 10th century, this federation was the envy of Europe.
But Rurik’s successors wanted more.
Feb 5 • 13 tweets • 5 min read
Why is Alexander called 'Great'?
He killed over 100,000 people, razed entire cities, and looted treasures worth billions in today’s value.
Yet history glorifies him.
Why are conquerors labeled 'great,' and do they deserve it?
Let’s dive in 🧵:
Alexander was born in 356 BCE in Macedon.
His father, King Philip II, united Greece through war and diplomacy.
But Alexander wanted more than Greece—he wanted the world.
At just 20, he inherited the throne and began his legendary conquests.
Feb 2 • 15 tweets • 4 min read
He wasn’t a founder.
Never coded.
Never chased CEO glory.
Yet Jony Ive’s obsession with design alchemy turned Apple into a $3T titan.
Here’s how a shy Brit rewrote the rules of business by making less mean more🧵
1992: Apple was dying.
Products were ugly.
Sales were dropping.
Stock was crashing.
Then walks in a quiet British designer with an obsession:
"Most of our world is just carelessly made. I wanted to change that."
Dec 16, 2024 • 18 tweets • 6 min read
In the 2nd century AD, one emperor declared himself a 'living god.'
Another built a wall to keep out 'barbarians.'
And one event changed the fate of the entire Roman Empire forever.
History’s wildest century — told like never before. 🧵
The 2nd century AD was Rome at its peak.
The empire stretched across 3 continents, with 70 million people under its rule.
It was a time of wealth, power, and monumental achievements. But the cracks were already forming...
Nov 1, 2024 • 22 tweets • 12 min read
Hey #RestoreTheSnyderVerse 🚨
"Zack Snyder's Justice League 2 is actually happened...
This is Justice League 2: Part 1—a story inspired by the official storyboard, where our heroes face new dangers, deep conflicts, and shocking revelations.
Ready to dive 👇🧵 1. The story begins with a natural disaster.
After defeating Steppenwolf, all the superheroes of the Justice League are now working as a proper team, helping people and saving thousands of lives.
Oct 15, 2024 • 22 tweets • 3 min read
The DCEU Is The Injustice Universe:
Let me differentiate between injustice and DCEU and make the connection between:
Injustice originated as a popular video game and comic series that portrays a dark alternate reality in the DC Universe. Here, Superman becomes a tyrant after a tragic event, leading to a divided Justice League.
Oct 11, 2024 • 15 tweets • 3 min read
🚨 Marvel's Most Powerful Hero
He’s stronger than the Hulk, fought alongside the Avengers, and can destroy worlds. But almost no one remembers him. Why?
Because he made them forget. 😳
Let me tell you the wild story of Sentry—a forgotten hero about to shake the MCU. 🧵👇 1/ all starts with Robert Reynolds just "Bob' to his friends. Bob was a regular guy, living an ordinary life. But one night, he woke up, unable to sleep. He couldn't shake this strange feeling that something...or someone...was watching him.