🧐 Yep, Happened in St.Louis..
Bank Of America,Wells Fargo,Chase gave Immigrants 0 down,money back at closing mortgages-Owners didn't make payments.Banks did "quiet" forecloses with immigrant friends-family at less than 1/2 the value with 0 down no doc loans .THEY NEVER MOVED!
🚨😱 20 YEARS of family tradition… and it was all a lie started by 4th-grade him at SeaWorld.
The family passes around this locket so EVERYONE gets to wear Great-Grandma’s ashes for a full year. Kid version of him loses the real ashes in the water… panics… and secretly fills the locket with BLACK PEPPER instead.
Nobody noticed. For TWO DECADES. The whole family kept wearing and passing around “Grandma” like normal… until he finally confessed.
Then they hit him with the plot twist: they quietly refilled it with a fresh batch of real Grandma ashes… and didn’t tell HIM either 😭💀
He’s been seasoning his food with the “new batch of Grandma” this whole time.
Family heirlooms hit DIFFERENT when your relatives are the seasoning 🤣🪦
Tag your group chat who would’ve kept the pepper swap going — they NEED this full saga before the next family reunion!
🔥 Full story: @adrian__peru (IG & TikTok) — Part 1 & Part 2 stitched for the chaos”
I just explain to my grandkids that I'm autistic and they accept anything I do now as 'normal'.
Seriously. That diagnosis has given me a 'get out of social jail free' card for every Alpha. The fact that I got it from a neuropsych and not from an online quiz carries weight.
They're not as stupid as we think they are.
Une camarade de 3eme vient d'expliquer à l'un de mes jumeaux que "mettre un point à la fin d'un texto, c'est froid et distant"...
Un ami lituanien me dit, de son côté, que les jeunes lui déconseillent fortement de mettre dans ses messages une majuscule en début de phrase, voire de ponctuer son texte. Car : "Quelqu'un qui écrit avec une syntaxe et une ponctuation soignées peut être perçu comme condescendant..."
Et quand j'interroge Grok, pour savoir si c'est une maladie très répandue, cette bestiole m'explique froidement :
- "Écrire tout en minuscules est devenu un marqueur stylistique de relâchement assumé. Cela signale : je ne fais pas d'effort rhétorique, je parle comme je pense ."
Bref, cela signale que je suis cool et sincère...
Génial.
Nous avons donc, en quelques années, régressé de mille deux cents ans. Au moins.
-Au départ, les Grecs et les Romains écrivaient tout en majuscule, sans séparation entre les mots, sans point en fin de phrase. Ce qui rend leurs textes extrêmement pénibles à déchiffrer.
- Ce n'est qu'au IVe siècle après Jésus-Christ que les scribes commencent à inventer les lettres minuscules.
- Au VIIe siècle, les moines irlandais copiant des textes latins commencent à introduire systématiquement des espaces entre les mots.
- Au VIIIe siècle, Charlemagne, lui, instaure la majuscule en début de phrase, le reste étant en minuscules (ce qui permettait de placer plus de texte dans une seule page, donc d'économiser du parchemin, ce matériau étant extrêmement cher)
- Au XIIe siècle, les Universités inventent ensuite le paragraphe, qui permet de donner un peu de respiration à un texte.
- Et ce n'est qu'à la fin du XVe siècle que le génial Alde Manuce, imprimeur et humaniste vénitien, invente la virgule et le point-virgule dans ses éditions des grands textes antiques (c'est aussi lui qui crée l'italique : trop fort🙂).
Bref, du Ve av. J.-C. au XVe siècle ap. J.-C. : il a fallu 20 siècles pour rendre nos textes lisibles.
Mais aujourd'hui, des zoulous de la "Gen. Z" ont décidé que tout ceci était "froid et condescendant".
Le raisonnement est délicieux : les points en fin de phrase, la majuscule en début... font perdre un peu de temps, quand on pianote sur un écran.
Certes, cela rend les messages bien plus lisibles, pour celui à qui le message s'adresse; mais cela demande à celui qui le rédige un petit effort supplémentaire.
Et ça, c'est pas cool.
Résultat : si je refuse de faire un effort pour les autres, et que je les oblige à en faire un... je ne suis pas une grosse feignasse égocentrique.
Non : je manifeste, tout au contraire, combien je suis cool et sympa.
Question de génération, surement.
Ok boomer, tout ça, tout ça...
Mais j'avoue, pour ma part, que je trouve ce genre de philosophie un zest paradoxal.
Voire un peu agaçant.🙂
They hit first. Preached talent shortage while flooding the market with foreign labor.
We answer with the rules they wrote.
Last night I sat across from the merchant princes and asked straight:
"Why import when qualified Americans are already here and ready?"
Their answer was simple.
Cheaper margins beat fair wages.
Here is the counter.
Every PERM and green card path legally requires public proof that no qualified U.S. worker is available.
They bury those postings hoping nobody applies.
Now the ledger is open.
Apply. Qualify. Shut the certification down.
One solid American application kills the labor market test for that role.
No PERM. No green card attached. It's working watch them go home!
Patriots, hit the hidden postings they never wanted you to see:
https://t.co/QCpXqyG5xk – aggregator surfacing PERM-required jobs
HIRE AMERICANS FIRST.
Screenshot every application.
Keep the receipts.
Share the proof when it lands.
Bookmark. Quote. Share to wake the network.
Let it not be said we stood by while the Republic was sold one job at a time.
I first really noticed it in the 2010's, but it's been going on far longer.
Guys, 1 out of every five docs in the USA is foreign born. The thing that really pisses me off is that they limit admissions to US medical schools and turn away highly qualified candidates. That creates an artificial shortage that they later fill with foreign labor.
This is deliberate
I get why Katie Hobbs would be upset as more and more people hear @caseymurph1’s story.
After generations of ranching in Arizona, he’s losing his grazing lease on state land to a foreign solar company.
Katie Hobbs is prioritizing foreign solar farms.
I’ll put Arizonans first.
I have an announcement…my figure of 100 million is incorrect…
Kayleigh just put out numbers that should shock every American. Nearly 7 million H-1B visas since 2015, and former officials admitting 80 to 90 percent of the Indian ones are straight-up fraudulent.
This isn’t immigration, it’s a slow-motion takeover.
Based on these figures, I will recant my figure of a 100 million illegal aliens in the country, and I now estimate we need to round up a 106 million!!!!
I made the mistake of putting a solid, pine dresser in the bedroom of my (then) young son.
Pine wood has knots. Lots and lots of knots.
The smell began gradually at first. I kept thinking, "That smells like piss. Old dog piss. But we don't have a dog."
It got worse and worse. One day I was sorting out his toy box and discovered that there was a layer of dried urine in the bottom of the box. Turns out, each toy had become a target.
After cleaning all that up, my nose went on the hunt. And that's when I discovered the dresser. It was GLUED to the carpet with an insane amount of urine. He'd been at it for a couple of months. (Yes, I vacuumed his room, but I hadn't rearranged furniture in awhile. That's a spring cleaning thing.)
It was a rental.
It cost me $500 to get a carpet cleaning service in there to save the place.
Raising boys is an adventure.
.@PeteHegseth has announced an internal audit of Bill Gates-connected company Microsoft’s digital cloud system for allegedly being used by Chinese nationals to hack Government systems in Aug. 2025.