The parents of Nolan Wells and civil rights @AttorneyCrump appeared on Good Morning America today.
Christine and Elmore Wonsley described their son as โvery lovingโ and a โbright light.โ
Ol Kalou voters are being bribed with cash, GOK mattresses and gas cylinders while state officials campaign with public resources.
That's bribery under Section 9 of the Election Offences Act, and abuse of office under Sections 14 and 15.
@IEBCKenya , @DCI_Kenya , @EACCKenya : act now. Target the offenders, not the voters.
Here is the joint statement that we made earlier.
#Kumekucha. #UkatibaMovement #Ukombozi
This woman is reciting Trumpโs words exactly as he said them during the NATO summit.
We have become so inured to Trumpโs incoherence that is sanewashed by the media 24/7 that we fail to recognize just how much heโs declined.
Reading a transcript of his words makes it SO CLEAR.
Shaq caught wind of this 7-foot-3 kid in Kemah, Texas who powered through the police academy only to fall one point short on the state exam. His whole dream of becoming an officer looked like it was slipping away right there.
Then Shaq jumped in and covered the guyโs living expenses for the next five months so he wouldnโt have to juggle a second job and could zero in on passing that test. Because of that extra push, Jordan Wilmore got back in, nailed it, and just got sworn in as a Kemah police officer.
Bombshell: In an interview with Don Lemon, Attorney Ben Crump admits that text messages were deleted from Nolan Wellsโ cell phone before it was returned to his parentsโฆ
A man thought he was negotiating with one service provider.
Little did he know the Accounts Department, Debt Recovery Unit, Customer Care, and Security Team were all on standby.
When he allegedly refused to pay, the meeting was immediately escalated from "friendly consultation" to "field enforcement."
By the time the dust settled, he had learned the hardest financial lesson of his life:
Always settle your invoice before the audit team arrives.
William Ruto has destroyed the economy luo men can't even afford to pay prostitutes their service fee.
@RightWingWatch Stop calling @dalepartridge and the rest of his foul ilk "Christian" anything. They are racists. They are misogynists. They are Nazis in Bible drag. But they are most definitely NOT "Christian".
Eric Omondi: I have over 430,000 signatures from Gen Zs. We just need to do another 500,000 then we have a referendum to reduce counties from 47 to the former 8. We are going to do away with women reps, senators, nominated members, CSs and all those unnecessary seats
#JKLive
This woman from Texas won 5,000 contests in 30 years.
And neuroscience can now explain exactly why her "trick" worked on a cellular level.
She never called it luck. She called it engineering.
And her blueprint fits on an index card.
Meet Helen Hadsell.
She won over 5,000 contests across three decades. Cars, fully paid vacations to every continent, appliances, cash, and in 1969 a custom-built dream home she'd described down to the furniture placement months before the winner was announced. She entered once.
"You don't need luck. You need focus."
That sentence from Hadsell sounds like something you'd scroll past on a motivational page. Except she had the receipts. Three decades of them.
And the word she chose โ focus โ turns out to be far more neurologically loaded than she could have known when she started winning in 1948.
Your brain absorbs roughly 11 million bits of sensory information every second. Your conscious mind processes about 50. The structure that decides what makes the cut is called the reticular activating system โ a bundle of neurons at the base of your brainstem that functions as the world's most aggressive spam filter. It determines what reaches your awareness and what gets deleted before you ever know it existed. And it takes its instructions from one source: whatever your brain has flagged as important, specific, and emotionally charged.
Buy a red car and suddenly every red car on the highway becomes visible. They were always there. Your RAS just didn't have a reason to show them to you.
Hadsell's entire method โ SPEC (Select, Project, Expect, Collect) โ was a system for programming that filter with military precision.
And every step maps onto mechanisms that neuroscience and performance psychology wouldn't formalize until decades after she'd already used them to win a house.
โธ Select:
She chose the exact prize with photographic specificity. Not "a nice trip." The destination. The hotel. What she'd wear when she got there. Most people move through life wanting vague things โ "more money," "a better job," "something to change." Vague inputs produce vague outputs because the reticular activating system doesn't activate for fuzzy targets. It needs a lock-on signal. Hadsell gave it one every single time.
"Most people fail because their thoughts are scattered." She said this repeatedly, and the cognitive science backing it is enormous. Scattered intention is functionally invisible to your own perceptual system. When you want six different things with equal intensity and zero specificity, your brain treats all of them as background noise. Nothing gets flagged. Nothing gets filtered in. You walk past opportunities that would have been obvious if your internal radar had been calibrated to a single frequency.
โธ Project:
Hadsell didn't imagine winning. She rehearsed having already won. She described walking through the house. She felt the keys. She chose where the couch would go. Cognitive neuroscience now calls this "mental simulation" and the research on it is striking โ when you vividly imagine performing an action, your motor cortex fires at 60-80% of the intensity it would during the real thing. Your prefrontal cortex struggles to distinguish between a richly constructed imagined scenario and an actual memory.
Hadsell was essentially installing synthetic memories of outcomes that hadn't occurred yet, and her brain reorganized around them as if they were already facts.
This is where her system forced something most people never achieve: alignment. When your conscious goal, your subconscious expectation, and your emotional state all point at the same target, your behavior changes in ways you can't consciously track. Micro-decisions shift. Body language shifts. Hesitation disappears. You stop leaking the subtle signals of doubt that create friction in everything you do. Hadsell entered contests with the energy of someone picking up a package that already had her name on it.
โธ Expect:
She drew a razor-sharp line between hoping and expecting. Most people never cross that line. Hope contains a built-in confession that the thing probably won't happen. Expectation carries the neurological signature of certainty. And certainty does something measurable โ it reduces activity in the anterior cingulate cortex, the brain region responsible for conflict monitoring and doubt generation. When you truly expect an outcome, your brain stops manufacturing reasons it might fail. It stops running anxious counter-simulations. It stops sabotaging your own behavior with invisible hesitation patterns.
The placebo effect runs on this exact circuit. A sugar pill changes your biochemistry when your brain shifts from "hoping this works" to "expecting this works." The chemistry follows the belief. Hadsell applied pharmaceutical-grade certainty to every contest she entered for 30 years.
โธ Collect:
After the internal work was done, she let go. She didn't check her mailbox obsessively. She didn't re-enter the same contest out of anxiety. She moved on and let the result arrive. This step sounds passive but it was the most disciplined part of the entire system. Every time you monitor whether something has happened yet, your brain registers the absence and quietly downgrades its probability estimate. Obsessive checking destroys the expectation state. Hadsell understood that detachment after commitment was what kept the whole architecture intact.
"This wasn't magic. It was the power of the mind."
She was right. And the fascinating part is how precisely her intuitive system from 1948 mirrors what elite performance coaches now charge thousands to teach.
Olympic athletes, combat pilots, surgeons โ the highest performers in the most demanding fields on earth all train with some version of this loop: define the target with absolute clarity, mentally rehearse until the outcome feels like memory, cultivate expectation deep enough to silence the doubt circuits, then release attachment to timing and let trained behavior execute without interference.
Hadsell figured this out alone, in Texas, with no neuroscience degree, no coach, and no research budget. She just paid attention to what happened inside her own mind when she won โ and reverse-engineered it into a repeatable process.
The system forced clarity.
It forced discipline. It forced alignment between what she wanted, what she believed, and how she moved through the world.
And for 30 years, reality bent around that alignment like it had no choice.