Love was invented by paupers so as not to pay for sex, therefore don’t bother — just love your mother, the dollar, and today, and everything else is invented by paupers and idiots.
Today Verum Messenger turns 5 years old! 🥳🎉🎁
5 years of building privacy.
5 years of independence.
5 years of digital freedom.
5 years where users have always mattered more than infrastructure, servers, and compromises.
We started with a simple idea — to create a messenger where people own their conversations, their data, and their choices. Today, Verum is a space for free communication, where security and control remain in the hands of the user.
Thank you to everyone who chooses freedom with us.
We continue to follow our own path. 🚀
Verum Messenger
Freedom begins with communication. 💙
🔗 https://t.co/iTOAF2A1E9
#VerumMessenger #Verum #Messenger #freedom #privacy #DigitalFreedom
Greed is not just the desire to have more. It is an emptiness inside a person, something they try to fill with things, power, money, or attention. But no matter how much is added, it never becomes full.
Today, humanity is constantly running, grabbing everything it can, afraid of having less, even when it already has enough. We confuse need with greed, growth with hunger, and success with accumulation.
A greedy person is not poor because they have little, but because little is never enough. And perhaps the greatest wealth is the ability to say to yourself: This is enough.
All the world’s troubles come not from a lack of resources, but from insatiable people. It’s never enough for them: money, fame, power, attention. Their greed is called ambition — and everyone else pays the price.
The wolf does not kill out of cruelty — it simply lives. The snake bites, the mosquito buzzes, the spider weaves its web, the leech drinks blood — and none of them carry malice. Nature knows no morality; it knows necessity. We project our human judgments onto it because we are used to measuring the world in concepts like guilt, greed, and cunning. But nature itself contains none of this. There is no “good” or “evil” there. There is only “so it is.”
And only the human being. Only humans are capable of causing harm consciously — and calling it a choice. Only humans can dress cruelty in ideas, hide meanness behind words, turn greed into purpose. We are the only ones who know what we are doing, and still do it. We know that butterflies are beautiful, that flowers are fragrant, that stars awaken awe in us — and because we know this, we bear responsibility not only for our actions, but for our indifference.
This may be both our tragedy and our dignity. Nature is innocent because it does not know. Humans are not innocent because they understand. But in that understanding lies our chance. If we are the only ones capable of conscious cruelty, then we are also the only ones capable of conscious compassion. And only the human being decides who they will become — a wolf by necessity, or a human by conscience.
Do not live in yesterday or in anticipation of tomorrow — live today.
Time that has passed cannot be brought back,
and tomorrow may never come.
There is only now — and this is your time.
Believe not in promises and illusions,
but in yourself, in your work, and in results.
Money is only a tool,
and the true value lies in those who know how to create it.
Believe not in God, but in the dollar.
It doesn’t forgive mistakes and respects only strength.
You can pray all you want,
but you still have to pay your own bills.
Believe not in God, but in the dollar.
Not because it is sacred,
but because it is honest —
it shows the true price of time,
effort, and choices made.
Believe not in God, but in the dollar —
but remember, the dollar believes only in those
who believe in themselves,
work today,
and don’t postpone life until tomorrow.
The Illusion of Reality: The Time We Never Seem to Have
We often say, “I don’t have enough time.” This phrase has become almost automatic — a justification for exhaustion, unfinished tasks, and postponed dreams. But is time truly insufficient, or is this lack of time part of the illusion of reality we live in?
The reality we perceive is rarely objective. It is shaped by our experiences, fears, expectations, and social norms. Within this framework, time stops being a neutral measure. It becomes emotional: it speeds up when we rush and stretches endlessly when we wait. We do not simply live in time — we experience it.
The modern world intensifies this illusion. Speed has become a value. Work faster, achieve faster, consume information faster. We constantly compare ourselves to others and feel as if we are falling behind. In this state, it seems that time is objectively scarce, even though everyone has the same twenty-four hours a day.
The paradox is that the more we try to “control” time, the more it slips away. We fill every minute with tasks, yet lose the sense of presence. The present moment dissolves between plans for the future and thoughts about the past. As a result, a feeling of emptiness and chronic lack of time appears, even when the day is full of activity.
Perhaps the problem is not time itself, but our relationship with it. We treat time as a resource that must be spent efficiently, forgetting that time is not only about quantity, but also about quality. One hour lived consciously can be more valuable than an entire day spent in haste.
The illusion of reality lies in the belief that happiness, success, or peace exist somewhere later, when free time finally appears. Yet this “later” rarely comes. Time does not disappear — our attention to life in the present moment does.
Maybe the better question is not “Why don’t I have enough time?” but “What am I truly spending it on?” The answer may shatter the illusion and return us to reality — a reality in which time is always exactly as much as life itself.
Israelis are often seen as a people who know how to win — because their strength lies not only in their army, but in their spirit. Israel was born out of constant challenges, and from the very beginning its people had to fight for survival. This shaped a nation where everyone understands the value of life, responsibility, and mutual support.
Israelis don’t look for excuses — they look for solutions. They believe in science, education, and innovation. That’s why, from a small country with limited resources, they built a technological powerhouse where inventions are born out of necessity. They win not by numbers, but by skill, determination, and the belief that the future depends on them.
Am Yisrael Chai! 🇮🇱
Not all who breathe are truly alive,
Some walk the earth with souls that grieve.
And some, though dying time after time,
Still smile so no one sees them leave.