When my brother is watching the matches he knows everything to do and how to play better than everybody but when he’s playing on Sundays, not a goal a score.
I have to support him though.
Inspired by https://t.co/OjIvlQbDhO, but for football.
Draft a Premier League XI from random clubs and seasons. Build your team. Simulate the season.
Can you go 38-0?
https://t.co/znFjgOW4Wj
#football#soccer#fifa#premierleague
A cow in Brazil sold for $4.8 million. Her eggs go for $250,000 each.
Her name is Viatina-19, and the buyers want her DNA. They take a single one of her egg cells, mix it in a lab with sperm from a top bull, and put the resulting embryo inside a different cow that carries the pregnancy.
An average Brazilian calf sold at market in 2024 went for $403. A regular bull from the same breed goes for around $2,000. One of Viatina-19’s eggs is worth more than 600 ordinary calves, or 125 of those bulls.
At 1,101 kilograms (about 2,400 pounds), Viatina-19 is roughly twice the size of a normal cow of her breed. She got that big unusually fast, and she passes the trait to her babies. Breeders pay for that. She’s also won Miss South America at a global cattle beauty contest based in Texas.
She’s a Nelore, white with a hump on the back and loose neck skin. The first Nelore cows arrived in Brazil in 1868 from India, where they had been bred for thousands of years to handle scorching heat. Today the Nelore makes up about 80% of all 230 million cattle in Brazil.
Cows like Viatina-19 are too expensive for any one person to buy alone. An internet executive named Ney Pereira bought a 50% share of her in 2022 for $800,000. Two years later, his half was worth around $2.15 million. Three different Brazilian companies now share her, and they split the money every time someone buys an egg.
Viatina-19 lives like a head of state. Cameras everywhere. An armed guard stays on the property, and a vet looks after her full-time. Down the road, a lab called Geneal has 500 surrogate cows walking around pregnant with cloned copies of various champion cows. About one in three of those cloned pregnancies makes it to a live calf.
Brazil exported $17 billion of beef in 2025 and just passed the United States as the world’s biggest beef producer. Cows like Viatina-19 are how the country plans to stay there. One egg at a time.
The Fi We Children Foundation says raising the age of consent will not solve the growing issue of teenage pregnancy.
READ MORE HERE: https://t.co/lQ1nlcAco3
According to Executive Founder Africka Stephens, the absence of a close-in-age exception risks drawing adolescents into the criminal justice system for engaging in consensual relationships with their peers.
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