This story gets so much worse. Apparently this all started because police were called out for a disturbance after her husband broke their tv out of anger after finding out his brother was killed by Israel in Gaza. The husband is Palestinian. When the police were taking him into custody his wife stopped them because she wanted to accompany him and that is when the officer threw her on the ground for “interference.” The couple was cooperative with the police the entire time and yet this is how they were treated.
She delivered the baby prematurely because of the physical trauma on her body but thankfully both she and the baby survived and are in good health. She easily could have miscarried.
This entire police department should be investigated and that officer should be arrested and charged with aggravated assault.
Dans les élevages qui approvisionnent Mix Buffet, les truies passent la moitié de leur vie dans des cages exiguës. Leurs porcelets les tètent à travers les barreaux… 😢
Agissons contre cette cruauté!
Glam Up hit $1.8m ARR in 8 months.
Sprout hit $3m ARR in 7 months.
The key to that was our UGC playbook.
I'm finally dropping the playbook and lowkey I'm scared to drop this. You'll understand why once you read it.
It's gonna be three parts but here's part 1. Part 1 itself is 40 pages long.
I made sure it's tactical advice and upfront with no BS.
Bonus: repost + reply 'warmup' and I'll DM you the Account Setup + Warmup module from our internal creator course.
Must be following so I can DM.
https://t.co/2hnJJamrdm
🎙️ How To Opt Out of the Digital Prison
Ep. 137 on @takebackourtech
Hakeem Anwar is a software engineer with over 20 years in tech, and the founder and CEO of @abovephone , a conscious technology company building open source phones, laptops, and software services that free people from reliance on Big Tech. After years of building web and mobile apps for large corporations, he walked away from corporate life during Covid. He also runs Take Back Our Tech, a weekly show covering the biggest stories in tech - always with solutions. Hakeem has done extensive research into the global digital ID rollout, co-authoring the "Life Under Digital ID" report, which maps how 90% of countries already have operational digital ID or will within three years. In this conversation, we discuss global standards enabling biometric interoperability across borders, why "voluntary" always becomes mandatory, and Hakeem demonstrates the Above Phone on screen, making the case for why the window to migrate to open protocols is closing faster than most people realize.
→ Please like, comment, share & follow — to help me beat the suppressing algo's. Thank you!
00:00 - Coming Up...
01:23 - Introduction to Hakeem Anwar
07:23 - "Life Under Digital ID" Report: 90% of Countries Already In
16:24 - Global Standards Making It Interoperable
19:36 - Ad-Break: Ledn & Trezor
21:16 - Biometric Tracking, Digital Opt-Out & the 2027 Window
30:48 - Above Phone: What It Is and Why It Matters
37:15 - Private Messaging: Signal, XMPP & the Funding Problem
40:34 - Ad-Break: Abundant Mines
41:56 - Decentralized Protocols & the Open Internet
47:55 - Above Phone Mission & Features
58:50 - GrapheneOS x Motorola & Age Verification Laws
1:08:16 - Nostr: Self-Sovereign Identity as Antidote to State Digital ID
1:17:09 - Where to Follow Hakeem
94 yaşındaki efsane aktör Clint Eastwood, genç nesle lüksün gerçek anlamını şu sözlerle anlattı:
“Lüksü saatlerde, bilekliklerde, villalarda ya da yatlarda aramayın.
Lüks; kahkaha atabilmek, dostlarla vakit geçirmek, yağmurun yüzünüze düşmesi, sarılmalar ve öpücüklerdir.
Lüksü mağazalarda, hediyelerde, partilerde ya da etkinliklerde aramayın.
Lüks; sevilmek, saygı görmek, anne babanızın hâlâ hayatta olması ve torunlarınızla oynayabilmektir.
Gerçek lüks, paranın satın alabildiği değil; satın alamadığı şeylerdir…”
American bought a brand new printer. She bought the ink for the printer, she bought the paper for the printer, now she’s at home and is ready to print
She can’t print
“They remotely shut off my printer until I paid $7.50 cents to print in my own home, to print on my printer, that I own in my home”
This is the new $7.50 subscription plan by HP Printers
Here’s how the plans work
HP’s Instant Ink and newer All-in Plan programs are subscription services options:
- You pay a monthly fee based on pages printed (not ink used).
- Plans start low, from $1.79–$7.99 per month for 10–100 pages
- $7–$8 per month plans are for around 100 pages
If your payment fails. HP will remotely shutoff your printer
⚡️SMARTFRESH : VOS POMMES GAZÉES AU PÉTROLE PENDANT UN AN ET VOUS N’EN SAVEZ RIEN !
Choc au supermarché : la plupart des fruits « frais » que vous achetez ont passé 24 heures dans une chambre à gaz remplie de SmartFresh (1-MCP), un dérivé d’hydrocarbures proche du propane et du butane.
Résultat ? Une pomme traitée reste parfaitement intacte après 3 mois… pendant que l’autre pourrit. Beaucoup ont jusqu’à 12 mois au compteur au moment où elles atterrissent dans votre panier.
A Persian scholar finished a single math book in 9th century Baghdad that quietly became the foundation for every line of code running on Earth today.
I started reading about him at midnight and could not believe how many things in my daily life trace back to one man.
His name was Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi. The book is called The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing.
Every time you say the word algebra, you are saying his book title. Every time someone says the word algorithm, they are saying his name. Both English words come from him. Both are Latin transliterations of Arabic and of his own identity. The man did not just contribute to mathematics. He named it.
Here is the part almost nobody tells you.
Al-Khwarizmi was born around 780 CE in Khwarazm, in what is now Uzbekistan. He moved to Baghdad and worked at a research institution called the House of Wisdom, which during the Islamic Golden Age was the single most important center of learning on the planet. The caliph al-Mamun hired the best mathematicians, astronomers, and philosophers from across three continents and put them in one building with one job. Translate, study, and produce new knowledge.
Al-Khwarizmi finished his book on algebra around 820 CE. The Arabic title contained the word al-jabr, which referred to one of the two operations he used to solve equations. When the book was translated into Latin in the 12th century, the Latin world did not have a word for what he had built. So they kept his Arabic word. Al-jabr became algebra. The discipline was named after a single Arabic word in the title of a single book by a single man.
The deeper insight is what he actually changed about how humans think.
Before al-Khwarizmi, mathematical problems were solved geometrically. You drew shapes. You measured them. You compared areas. The Greeks had built an entire mathematical tradition on visual proofs and physical constructions. It was beautiful and limited. You could not solve a problem you could not draw.
Al-Khwarizmi did something nobody had done before him at this scale. He said you could solve any problem using abstract symbols and rules. You did not need a shape. You needed a procedure. You moved terms across the equation. You cancelled like terms on both sides. You isolated the unknown. He invented the idea that mathematics is a manipulation of symbols according to rules, not a study of physical figures.
That single shift made everything that came afterward possible. Calculus. Differential equations. Linear algebra. Quantum mechanics. None of it works if math is locked inside geometry. He pulled it out.
The second thing he did is the one that changed how the world counted forever. He took the Hindu numeral system from Indian mathematics, refined it, and wrote a book introducing it to the Arab world. That system included the concept of zero as a placeholder, and a positional notation where the value of a digit depends on its location. Roman numerals could not do complex calculation. Hindu-Arabic numerals could.
When his book on numerals was translated into Latin as Algoritmi de numero Indorum, the word Algoritmi was just the Latin spelling of his own name. Europeans started calling the new method "doing algorism," then "running an algorithm." The word for the most important concept in computer science is literally his name in Latin.
The third thing he did is the part that should haunt anyone who works in tech.
His method of solving problems was systematic. Step one, do this. Step two, check that. Step three, if condition A, then do X, otherwise do Y. He wrote down procedures that could be followed by anyone, anywhere, who knew how to read. The procedure did not depend on intuition or genius. It worked because the steps worked.
That is exactly what an algorithm is. A finite, deterministic procedure for solving a problem. He did not just give us the word. He gave us the entire concept of programming a thousand years before there was anything to program.
When Alan Turing built the first abstract model of computation in 1936, when John von Neumann designed the first stored-program computer in 1945, when every engineer at Google, OpenAI, Anthropic, and DeepMind writes code in 2026, they are working in a paradigm that started with one man in Baghdad twelve centuries ago.
The strangest part is what happens when you walk into any tech office in San Francisco or Bangalore or Lahore today. Engineers say the words algebra and algorithm hundreds of times a day. They do not know whose name they are saying. Almost nobody can spell al-Khwarizmi correctly on the first try.
His original Arabic manuscript is preserved at Oxford. His book on Hindu numerals survives only in Latin translation. The Latin version was the textbook that taught medieval Europe how to count.
The man who built the foundation of the AI revolution did not live to see a calculator. He died around 850 CE, a thousand years before the first electric current was sent through a wire. The civilization he built mathematics for collapsed. The library he wrote in burned. His own grave is unmarked.
But every algorithm running on every machine on Earth right now still answers to his name.
The man who heals what medicine can't:
Dr. Gabor Maté.
This 80-year-old physician says true healing comes from nervous system regulation, not drugs or meditation.
Here are his 7 forgotten laws for ending chronic stress at the root: 🧵
Apricot Seeds heal the big C. Source - World without cancer the story of b17 by G Edward Griffin. 🎈The FDA was created in 1934 to go after natural remedies. 1st one radium water then came the apricot seeds. Somehow they are blind to vaxxines. Book: Murder by Injection rings a 🛎
🚨 TURQUIE DEVIENT LE NOUVEAU PARADIS FISCAL : 20 ANS D’EXONÉRATION POUR LES ÉTRANGERS !
Erdoğan vient de dégainer une bombe attractive : les étrangers qui n’ont pas été résidents fiscaux en Turquie ces 3 dernières années pourront s’installer et ne payer aucun impôt sur leurs revenus et plus-values provenant de l’étranger pendant 20 ans. Seuls les revenus générés en Turquie seront imposés.
Objectif clair : piquer une grosse part de la clientèle dorée de Dubaï et attirer les talents européens qui fuient la sur-réglementation et la fiscalité étouffante. Des posts viraux sur X parlent déjà d’un « Sovereign Individual thesis » en action et d’un coup de maître pour capter les capitaux fuyant le Moyen-Orient instable.
⚡️Les bonus qui font mal à la concurrence :
• Succession : impôt réduit à seulement 1 % sur les transferts de biens.
• Rapatriement d’actifs (argent, or, titres) pour les Turcs et entreprises avec imposition ultra-réduite.
• Cadre plus large : baisses de taxes pour les exportateurs (jusqu’à 9 % pour les fabricants) et avantages pour les sièges régionaux de multinationales.
Pendant que l’Europe et l’Occident alourdissent les charges, la Turquie ouvre grand les portes avec ce package « Türkiye Century Strong Center for Investment ». Istanbul pourrait bien devenir le nouveau hub fiscal que tout le monde regarde.
Qui va sauter sur l’occasion ? Les digital nomads, entrepreneurs et HNWI fuient déjà vers des cieux plus cléments… et Ankara leur déroule le tapis rouge. 🇹🇷💰
⭐️ Abonnez-vous à @Camille_Moscow
Do not ignore these early warning signs of pancreatic cancer! Many people do not know they have pancreatic cancer until it’s too late. The earlier you can detect it, the better the prognosis. Find out how to identify the early symptoms of pancreatic cancer in this video.
If you like this video, check this one out next: https://t.co/seuAFR745e
A 15-year-old American student made $23,000 in a month without leaving his room while his classmates were playing the same game he was getting paid for.
He's not a programmer and never was. He just understood that Epic pays for every minute a player spends on his map - and built a tycoon where people get hooked for an hour at a time. 187,000 minutes of playtime in 30 days. One check from Epic.
Claude wrote all the Verse code from his descriptions with zero lines written by hand. 10 hours of work over a weekend and the map was ready to publish.
1,000 players a day at 20 minutes each is already $5,000-15,000 a month from one map. And until end of 2026 Epic gives away 100% from direct item sales on your map on top of that.
$722 million already paid out. 58 people became millionaires in 2024. And Epic just removed the only barrier that blocked everyone - now Claude writes the code.
#URGENT LE NETTOYAGE « SPIKE » MIS EN ŒUVRE AU JAPON MET LE MONDE SUR LES ROULETTES !
Le Japon a lancé un traitement révolutionnaire qui élimine du corps les protéines Spike responsables des effets secondaires des vaccins contre la Covid-19 ! 📌