I don't think @Unpr0fitable do dev tokens to rug as you said here, it's either his token does well or it doesn't
But in this case I think most people in the coin was a victim even he himself except people that exited the coin at an earlier stage, I don't think it was intentional or in his best interest to do that anyway, I think he just found out late after that happened as most people did, so always try to lay out the "whole" truth, True that happened but was he in on the plan ? No, it was after they donated the fee that the imposter deleted the socials, so we should really be after investigating and finding out the person that'd do such horrible thing as impersonating a grieving family
Cause I've seen @Unpr0fitable roundtrip more than 45k -100k on million topper coins many times so I don't really see a reason why he'd want to intentionally rug his coin to spoil his reputation for some little bands lesser than that fr..... Though everyone would be unhappy cause he didn't really do due diligence finding out the story to the depth, a mistake on his part but I wouldn't label him a "scammer" for that... Well we all know how toxic this space is....Sorry for y'all that believed but lost though
Sorry, on this once again ๐๐ , Here....
An art is what Napoleon says it's.... ๐ฅถ
The Coronation of Napoleon
Painting by Jacques-Louis David, 1807
The Pope travelled to Paris to crown Napoleon Emperor of France
But that was not what happened..
Napoleon picked up the crown, looked at the Pope and placed it on his own head himself ๐. The Pope sat there and watched....That's what this painting is...
The Pope then was Pope Pius VII, He travelled from Rome to Paris, By carriage ๐ in winter, To crown Napoleon Emperor of France, but Napoleon didn't let him..
So he just sat there hand slightly raised blessing a ceremony he had no control over, Napoleon made the most powerful religious figure in the world a spectator as his own event..๐ฅถ๐ฅถ
Look closely, as Napoleon's head is already weighing a crown. That's the one he put on himself moments before this scene, Now he's crowning Josephine..
This is Josephine kneeling on the steps about to be crowned Empress, 3 years after this moment, Napoleon would divorce her for failing to produce an heir, she never stopped loving him..
He named her on his deathbed, The most powerful woman in the most powerful room in Europe kneeling on the cold stone steps for a man who would leave her..
See that woman seated front and center in the royal balcony? That is Napoleon's mother, she looks important, She looks like she belongs there, She wasn't there, She didn't attend the coronation ๐๐
Napoleon and his mother had an argument beforehand. She refused to come, so Napoleon told the painter David to put her in there anyway. History was rewritten before the paint was even dry๐จ..
Every single face in the crowd is a real person. David interviewed attendees. Studied their portrait, Painted over 200 individual faces from life๐ซก. This painting is 30 ft wide and 20 ft tall, It took David 3 years to finish๐ฑ, when Napoleon finally saw it, he took off his hat and bowed to the painter. Even Napoleon knew when someone had outworked him..๐จ๐
Everything in this painting is a lie that Napoleon personally approvedโ๏ธ. His mother- painted in, wasn't there, The Pope- painted as willing wasn't, The crown- already on his own head before anyone could stop him..
David didn't just paint a coronation, He painted the version of history Napoleon wanted the world to remember. And for 200 years- It worked...๐ฅถ๐ซก
โ ๐
Her body was buried in the Chapel of St Peter ad Vincula within the Tower, near other executed figures like Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard. Her husband was buried nearby ๐ชฆ.
Lady Jane Grey: Protestant scholar, reluctant queen, and enduring symbol of Tudor tragedy.
โ ๐
The Execution Of Lady Grey, 1833 โ By Paul Delaroche, A French artist โฃ๏ธ....
Delarocheโs iconic painting captures this exact tragic moment โ blindfolded, innocent, Lady Jane as she pleads, โWhat shall I do? Where is the block? She is being guided towards it by Sir John Brydges.
But then the heartbreaking moment: she couldnโt find the block.
โWhat shall I do? Where is it?โ
An attendant guided her hands.
Her final words: "Lord, into thy hands I commend my spirit!" (echoing Jesus on the cross). One clean stroke of the axe ended her life ๐๏ธ.