Early 50’s man happily locked in #chastity for my #keyholder wife (no sharing or sissying). Here to talk to other couples in lifestyle. Also cute animals.
Melinda French Gates will expand her giving to improve women’s health globally, pledging another $215 million to support contraceptive access and maternal care, as well as initiatives aimed at middle-aged women, including further study of menopause. https://t.co/05ECF1Q1DI
Eraserhead, 1977.
The Elephant Man, 1980.
Dune, 1984.
Blue Velvet, 1986.
Wild At Heart, 1990.
Twin Peaks, 1990-1991.
Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, 1992.
Lost Highway, 1997.
The Straight Story, 1999.
Mulholland Drive, 2001.
Inland Empire, 2006.
Twin Peaks: The Return, 2017.
82 years ago today, some of the bravest people in human history stormed the beaches of Normandy to confront absolute evil and back those who had been battling it street by street for nearly a decade.
Thanks to the Soviet Union, who's Russia originally shook hands with Hitler helping trigger the devastating world war, and to the 14 other soviet republics that fought bravely to undo that asinine mistake, those being Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Lithuania, Moldova, Latvia, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Armenia, Turkmenistan, and Estonia, whose 27 million dead and Operation Bagration sixteen days later made Normandy possible by tying down two-thirds of the Wehrmacht on the Eastern Front. Belarus lost roughly a quarter of its population. Ukraine lost an estimated 7 million.
Thanks to the UK, which supplied most of the naval force, most of the air force, the planning, the airfields, and around 61,000 troops on Gold and Sword.
Thanks to Canada, whose 14,000 troops on Juno achieved nearly a total victory and the deepest penetration of any beach on the first day.
Thanks to Free France, whose 177 commandos of Philippe Kieffer's unit at Sword (the only French force to land on French soil on 6 June), the cruisers Georges Leygues and Montcalm shelling Omaha, and the destroyer La Combattante in the screen.
Thanks to Poland, whose navy (Błyskawica, Piorun, Dragon, Ślązak) covered the landings, whose pilots flew air cover (303 Squadron had the highest kill rate of any RAF unit in the Battle of Britain), and whose 1st Armoured Division under General Maczek closed the Falaise Pocket weeks later at Hill 262.
Thanks to Norway, the Netherlands, and Greece, whose navies sailed with the Royal Navy as government-in-exile forces in Operation Neptune.
Thanks to Czechoslovakia, whose 310, 312, and 313 Squadrons flew with the RAF.
Thanks to Belgium, whose pilots flew with the RAF and whose Piron Brigade landed in Normandy in early August.
Thanks to Newfoundland, then a separate dominion, whose artillery served in the Normandy campaign and whose sailors served across the Royal Navy.
Thanks to Australian, New Zealand, South African, and Indian airmen in RAF squadrons, and to the Royal Australian Navy ship that sailed with the bombardment force.
Thanks to Australian, New Zealand, South African, and Indian airmen in RAF squadrons.
And thanks to the United States, whose 73,000 troops landed at Utah and Omaha, and fought bravely despite a decade of isolationism (the Neutrality Acts of 1935 to 1939), an 'America First' movement whose figurehead Charles Lindbergh accepted a medal from Göring in 1938 and made openly antisemitic speeches, a Henry Ford who took the Grand Cross of the German Eagle the same year and whose antisemitic writings Hitler quoted in Mein Kampf, and US corporations (Ford, GM/Opel, IBM, Standard Oil, ITT, Chase) doing business with Nazi Germany, some of which kept operating well into the war and continue to do business with the tyrants of today.
This is sick. 🔥
Carlos Gaines aka "Tyrone Stark" built a 40,000-volt plasma cannon out of scrap metal and old car parts.
This is a working flamethrower with high-voltage arcs blasting pressurized butane into a wall of liquid fire that'll melt anything it touches.
Turning junkyard parts into a functional arc weapon is the kind most people need a lab and a budget to pull off and he did it from scratch.
This man better file a patent fast. And he better watch his back. Because building a functional, tactical weapon in your driveway is a quick way to get the feds knocking on your door to investigate.
@hers4evr401 If those are your criteria, Sharon, then Brian’s little chaste member is the cutest little toy/ behavioral correction tool in the world. 😉
NEW: The Trump Administration has changed the logo of the Kennedy Center's LinkedIn page.
The new logo no longer includes the President's name.
The left image is taken from the Wayback machine.
Kevin O'Leary "gave up" 20,000 acres he was never going to use.
A physicist ran the numbers: his data center needs about 7,000 acres to actually run. The plan was 40,000. So cutting it in half costs him close to nothing.
What he didn't cut: the power. 9 gigawatts, roughly 20 times a normal data center, in a desert where the Great Salt Lake is already drying up. Same as last week.
That's the whole move. Give back the land everyone can see, keep the power nobody's talking about.
The land was never the problem. The energy always was.
"I have no choice" is a strange thing to say after conceding the one number that didn't matter.
Rockets: On The Road Again (1978). French space rockers Rockets give a cosmic twist to the Canned Heat classic.
I think it works. I don't know why, but it works.