#Evel for no hand,no brakes #cycling thru stationary/non stationary obstacles!
Transform ur skill to
#EXTREMEHANDFREECYCLE !!
human male subject @SELFdXb #TLF
@EM_RESUS Incredible moment taxi driver brings monkey back from dead with CPR
Thank you for saving the monkey's life. What an incredible human you are, Sir ❤️
Credit: Newsflare
A call to ban "bike herds" after Florida crash caused by elderly wrong-way driver, the peculiarly American problem of traffic violence, and LA-area bike path news: https://t.co/MnQt0OaXqU #bikeLA
@bikinginla The battle, really is not in the streets.
It's in the brain size of the amygdala.
Compassion for others is a sense not all people can process in a small amygdala.
If we can test, we can treat people to behave better w/ trained mindset to think of others well being, not selfish!
Still looking for information about the hit-and-run that killed Alex Zavala. If anyone knows when and where he was struck, or any other information, please let me know. https://t.co/N3LCThtEcj
On August 1, 2009, Dalia Dippolito of Boynton Beach, Florida, got into the passenger seat of a red sedan for a clandestine meeting and told the driver she wanted him to kill her husband.
She offered him $7,000, and he responded that he'd already bought the gun. They agreed on a date and time when she would be at the gym to establish an alibi.
When Dalia arrived home from her workout on the day of the planned murder, her house was a crime scene. Police told her that her husband was dead and she broke down in tears right there on the street. Officers consoled her and escorted her to the station for a debriefing and explanation.
There, she continued to sob in horror and disbelief — until the man she believed to be dead came out from behind a doorway.
The whole operation had been a setup. The hitman was an undercover cop and her husband himself was in on the sting — with the entire saga had even been recorded for an episode of "COPS."
Franceska Mann, a Polish Jewish ballerina, is noted in various accounts for her act of defiance at the Auschwitz concentration camp, where she reportedly killed a Nazi guard named Josef Schillinger and injured another, Wilhelm Emmerich, while being held as a prisoner.
Her courageous actions are believed to have inspired an uprising among the other female Jewish prisoners, demonstrating a moment of resistance before she was tragically killed.
In the most widely circulated yet unconfirmed account of the incident, it's said that Mann conducted a striptease for the Nazis at the camp. When she was down to just her high heels, she reportedly used one of her shoes as a weapon, striking Walter Quakernack in the face with the heel, which caused him to drop his gun.
Seizing this opportunity, she is believed to have used the firearm to shoot Schillinger and Emmerich. Schillinger reportedly succumbed to his injuries hours later, while Emmerich supposedly sustained a permanent limp from the encounter.