@cryptofergani BTC.D needs to revisit the top of the range before it drops. Whales will want to sell their BTC much higher before they rotate into alts.
A 36-year-old Moroccan migrant has been arrested for the anal rape of an autistic underage girl in the bathroom of a kebab shop/pizzeria in Dénia, Spain.
The girl was out eating with her family. This guy approaches them, claims he’s Belgian, says he’s lived in the town for 10 years, chats them up, even gives them his phone number to build trust.
A short time later, the vulnerable autistic girl goes to the bathroom. He follows her in.
He grabbed her, forcibly kissed her, pulled down her trousers, and anally raped her while taking photos of the attack.
Her dad noticed she was gone too long, and eventually at home she broke down and told them what happened. They rushed her to the hospital for a forensic exam.
Cops identified him, the victim and family picked him out of photos, and they found the deleted photos from the bathroom on his phone.
He was even still messaging the girl afterward, trying to get her to meet him at his place.
First of all, death penalty for this parasite. Second of all, immediate deportation for any migrant who has ever come into contact with him.
Either you begin to hold the entire communities accountable or this never ends. One messes up, they all go.
MASS REMIGRATION NOW!
What I've seen the past week actually made me happy.
Cardano FUD was spreading around X, with markets on fire, yet the Cardano community stood strong, fought back, and stuck together.
That's really great to see.
If we can unite in a crisis, let's unite in the good times too and push towards the best future for Cardano.
Cardano has one of the strongest communities in crypto.
I believe two referendums are now needed in Ireland.
The first should be on Ireland’s position regarding EU migration policy. The Irish people should have a direct say on major decisions that affect our country, our communities, and our public services. Legal migration is welcome and necessary. People who come here with proper visas, skills, and a willingness to contribute are an important part of Ireland. But uncontrolled or illegal migration, and any EU policy that limits Ireland’s ability to manage its own borders, should not be decided without the clear consent of the Irish people.
The second referendum should be on the future of RTÉ. It is time to ask the public whether RTÉ should remain publicly funded or be privatised. Many good and decent people work in RTÉ, and this is not an attack on them. But RTÉ must fully disassociate itself from political party influence, whether that influence is real or perceived.
Where any staff, presenters, board members, contributors, or decision-makers have current or past connections to political parties, those connections should be openly declared. A publicly funded broadcaster cannot be seen to have links, loyalties, or sympathies towards any political party, including Fine Gael, Fianna Fáil, the Social Democrats, Labour, Sinn Féin, independents, or any other political group. RTÉ must be completely independent, politically neutral, transparent, and accountable to the people who fund it.
Taxpayers are being asked to fund RTÉ while many ordinary people are struggling with the cost of living, housing, health, and public services. If RTÉ receives public money, then the Irish people deserve confidence that it represents all sections of society fairly, not just the views of political insiders or establishment parties.
The Irish people deserve a say on both issues. These decisions are too important to be left only to government, political parties, or insiders.
Every year you must calculate or hire an accountant to figure out how much of your hard-earned money to hand over to the government.
The crazy part? They already know the precise amount.
Yet they make you guess it, file the paperwork, and pray you get it right.
Get it wrong, even by accident, and you face fines, penalties, or worse.
It’s a humiliation ritual.
They want you to see the money one last time before it leaves your bank account forever.
Compare a map of British Army barracks in Ireland before the ‘famine’ with a map of IPAS centres today.
The British Empire Built the First Network. We Built the Second.
The barracks network was designed to project power, monitor unrest, and ensure resistance could never gather momentum. It was spread across strategic towns, transport routes and key corridors.
Maybe it’s just a coincidence.
But when you overlay the maps, it’s hard not to ask questions.
History doesn’t repeat.
It often rhymes.