

Dr. . Peter Attia is a Canadian-American physician and author who specializes in longevity and life optimization.
Super tight with Epstein


Dr. . Peter Attia is a Canadian-American physician and author who specializes in longevity and life optimization.
Super tight with Epstein


Can I use it here in Burgerstan?


What does Marmite taste like?


Forced Labubu

I’m reading a book called “German Philosophy 1760 - 1860. The Legacy of Idealism” and so far, it’s basically this

Hadn’t ever really thought about a snake’s penis, until today.


Everything Trump does makes more sense if you ask yourself if it helps Putin.
Cars didn’t last long back then. A 20 year old car was a big deal I the 70s.


I would have thought they’d take their glasses off.


Marasmus line?


The war did raise the price of oil, and make buying Russian oil more popular - so helping his buddy Putin that way.

Ducky

You haven’t met my dad


What is kaggle.com?


Could someone point me to total beginner (like only used windows) self hosting primer? Don’t even know what kind of machine I would need.

Reagan liked apartheid (as I remember)

In 1954, directly confronting the practice of rigid racial segregation of residential neighborhoods, the Bradens assisted an African-American couple, Andrew and Charlotte Wade, who wanted to buy a suburban home but had been unable to do so due to housing discrimination. The Bradens purchased a house on behalf of the Wades in Shively, an all-white neighborhood in the Louisville metropolitan area, and deeded it over to the Wade family. It was reported by Braden that someone had thrown rocks through the windows of the house, burning a cross in front of it, and firing gunshots into the home – and then bombed the house (setting off explosives under the bedroom of the Wades’ young daughter while the home was occupied), driving the Wades out and destroying the home. As a result of their actions, Carl Braden was charged with sedition. Although housing discrimination was illegal, the U.S. Supreme Court ruling specifically on a case in Louisville, Buchanan v. Warley, in 1917, charges were brought against Braden for hatching a communist plot to stir up a race war. A friend of the Wades was also charged with bombing the house to make it appear to have been done by others. No charges were filed regarding the other incidents.[1] Braden denied the accusations that his purchase of the house and its subsequent bombing were all part of a “communist plot”, and denied that he had ever been a member of the Communist Party.[1] He was convicted on December 13, 1954, and was sentenced to 15 years in prison. Immediately upon his conviction, he was fired from the Courier-Journal, and he served seven months of his sentence before he was released on a $40,000 bond pending appeal – the highest bond ever set in Kentucky up to that time.[1][2] His conviction was then overturned.[2][7]


That’s rich people pulling the strings.
Curtain pulled back a little on the ruling class and how they control ideas and corrupt apparent “opposition”