If I were pregnant and doctors told me my baby had Down syndrome, I would abort.
No amount of social media posts romanticizing profound disability would change my mind.
Love is not enough. Caring for a severely disabled child demands far more — resources, support, energy, and resilience most people don’t have.
The world is cruelest to those who can’t help themselves. Bringing a child into that reality, knowing the lifelong struggles ahead, isn’t compassion. It’s denial.
Women deserve the right to make this deeply personal choice without guilt or judgment.
Real motherhood sometimes means the hardest decisions. 💔
Pro lifers genuinely believe that you should be forced to carry and give birth to a disabled child that will need constant care their whole lives while they continue to support the party that vows to cut funding for every program that would help those individuals the most
#Bitcoin: How many times have I said the crash starts from the 80–85k region?
How many times have I called for shorts in this region?
How many Sunday Reports have I published and explained it?
My man said something to me that really stuck.
He told me, “I’m not actually here to control you. I’m not your dad, I’m your partner. You’re free to make your own choices. Just understand that every choice has consequences. If you choose something that damages what we’ve built, that’s on you.”
He said, “I’ll always tell you when something hurts me or crosses a boundary, because that’s what healthy communication looks like. But if you keep stepping over the line after I’ve shown you where it is, then you were never really protecting us to begin with.”
And honestly, that’s what accountability in a relationship sounds like.
@DRTnky I’ve been thinking the same. The only way it’s true profit is when you buy another home at the same price as where you first bought it at to cash in on the capital gains. But this is never the case, it’s just sell high, buy high. And increase debt and mortgage.
💰This is HOW i've made my SECOND Successful Game On Roblox 2026...
Here's the Breakdown:
- FOCUS on Following Trends, if you see new game hitting 200k ccu, make it modded and enjoy the bank.
- USE CLAUDE 24/7, no mistakes, just pure coding.
- People dont care about aesthetics, just need pure gambling and ADHD shit.
LOCK in and make it HAPPEN.🫵
#RobloxDev \ #Roblox
Parents took son out of Singapore system> 🇦🇺🦘🐨..
Son skipped NS (save 2 years)
But now son is stuck with
- 20% more tax
- capital gain
- dividend tax
- 10-20% more corporate tax
Save 2 years in return for a lifetime of deadweight chained onto you.
Plus become minority in Australia so you get that random dose of racism as well. Pay more taxes to become a 2nd tier citizen in a new country.
Your kids will be burdened with racism & bullying by white kids who will be physically bigger than them.
Now cannot even get 🇸🇬PR bc ICA will make an example out of you.
Those who’ve been following me for a while know I’ve been banging on about this since last year...
The days of just buying any property, anywhere, and automatically making money are long behind us.
For years people got conditioned into thinking property only goes one way. Buy it. Hold it. Watch it go up.
But markets evolve.
At the end of last year, I gave an abundance of reasons why things were starting to shift underneath the surface. Higher rates. Affordability pressure. Lending constraints. Slowing buyer demand. Policy changes. Investors becoming more cautious. Supply slowly building in certain areas.
Now the leading data is starting to show up.
One of the best indicators of what’s actually happening in property isn’t the headlines. It’s auction clearance rates and time on market.
I spoke to a good friend the other day who’s selling his property, and his agent said something interesting.
“Mate, six months ago I was clearing these out in under two weeks. Now they’re sitting for 2 months plus.”
That says a lot. This week’s auction data tells the same story.
Sydney clearance rates came in at just 43.1%.
Melbourne was 54.4%.
Brisbane dropped below 50% at 49.7%.
Combined capitals are now sitting around 50.4%.
That is a completely different market environment compared to late last year when properties were regularly pushing 70%+ clearance rates.
And this is why I pay attention to clearance rates. They show real buyer demand in real time. Buyers either step up and buy... or they don’t. Prices are lagging data. Clearance rates are leading data.
What we’re seeing now is buyers becoming far more selective. Agents are having to work harder. Sellers no longer hold all the power in negotiations. The easy environment where almost anything would sell quickly is fading.
There will still be outperforming areas. But broad-based easy gains across the entire market? That environment is changing.
The market is transitioning from a strong seller’s market into a far more balanced one.
Big difference.
One of my clients in Singapore is seriously stressed right now.
With the budget for just ONE local Singaporean employee, he can hire FIVE full-time remote employees from Yogyakarta, Indonesia. And get 5x the output.
He’s now planning to replace around 70% of his local workforce with Indonesian remote talent.
Sorry Singaporeans… 😬
Singapore being hit by layoffs from companies moving to Malaysia to lower costs and layoffs because of AI...
No job is secure.
I remember people saying it will take 5 more years before it impacts.
Nah. It's already here and the acceleration is quicker than we imagined.
I don't understand why only a few people, like Mathew Gross, understand just how bad this whole combination of Super El Niño on top of out of control climate change + fertilizer shortages and energy crisis all hitting at the same time is going to actually be. It kind of reminds me of the flooding situation that forecasters were warning about in the Carolinas ahead of Helene- everyone was just kind of like, ok, we get it, there's going to be a lot of rain, but nobody could comprehend just how terrible the situation was going to actually get until 3-4 days after all the missing people couldn't be found alive. If you have any friends in places around the world where famine could hit later this year, please make them aware of how bad it's going to get, and make sure they have a plan to stay alive!
Scientists are warning that a potential Super El Niño could strike later this year and some fear it may become the most dangerous one seen since the 1800s
NOAA now says there’s a 65% chance El Niño conditions turn strong or very strong between October 2026 and February 2027
Some researchers believe it could rival the catastrophic 1877 El Niño an event linked to drought, crop collapse, famine, and more than 50 MILLION deaths worldwide
And this time, the planet is already hotter than ever before
El Niño begins when abnormally warm waters spread across the tropical Pacific Ocean. But the consequences ripple across the globe:
• Extreme heatwaves
• Historic flooding
• Severe droughts
• Crop failures
• Wildfires
• Fisheries collapse
• Stronger climate disasters worldwide
The last major El Niño (2023–2024) pushed global temperatures to record highs. Scientists warn the next one could hit an already overheated climate system making the impacts even more extreme
What’s different now is that our atmosphere and oceans are much warmer than in the 1870s, climate scientist Deepti Singh told The Washington Post
Past Super El Niño events caused tens of billions in economic damage and triggered worldwide humanitarian crises
Now experts fear rising food prices, water shortages, instability, and simultaneous extreme weather across multiple continents
SOMEONE JUST KILLED THE REAL ESTATE INDUSTRY
A guy scanned an entire house with his phone. Uploaded it.
Now anyone on Earth can walk through it in a browser tab. No app. No VR. No agent. No appointment.
Click → you’re inside. Every room. Every angle. Every shadow. Photoreal.
The numbers are insane:
- Agent fee on a $500k home: $15,000
- Cost to make this scan: ~$200
- Time to “tour” 50 houses: one evening
- File size: smaller than a TikTok
The science is wild too:
It’s called 3D Gaussian Splatting instead of polygons (how games render), it uses millions of tiny glowing “splats” of color and depth.
AI reconstructs reality from your photos. The result loads on a phone and looks like you’re THERE.
The grift opportunity is even wilder:
Freelancers are already charging $300–$800 per scan for realtors, Airbnbs, venues, car dealers, museums.
One person + one phone + one weekend = a business.
Open source. Built on PlayCanvas.
Free GitHub: https://t.co/ew6Ql8Ad6u