@B727FA@engineers_feed You miss the whole point. You can reread the story and see the purposeful revisionist history in the last sentence. Most were not women. That’s the point. It is a great story, but fzcts matter!
@7NewsDC Great question. Yes indeed. The city government, like all of the monuments, parks, roads and taxes needs a refresh. It is not a real city for a reason. Home Rule had good intentions during the Johnson Administration, but it is not sustainable. Take DC back!
@jluliz2010@StateDept You have TDS and choose to ignore the reality of what is happening. “Whistling by the grave yard.” It’s not gaslighting - this is real.
•The official Sagrada Família account announces the inauguration and illumination of the central Jesus Christ tower on June 10, 2026, at sunset, with live coverage starting at 19:45 on their social media.
•The attached video displays time-lapse views of the basilica’s spires, highlighting the newly completed tallest tower topped with a prominent cross, alongside other illuminated elements and visible construction cranes.
•This marks a significant milestone in the 144-year construction of Antoni Gaudí’s iconic Barcelona basilica, bringing one of its most important symbolic features closer to completion.
I took the video directly to @Grok and here was the response:
It’s real.
The video in that X post (from @Old_But_Gold50s) is authentic concert footage — not AI-generated. It shows a genuine accident that happened on April 16, 2026, during a Sinfonia Lahti concert at Sibelius Hall in Lahti, Finland.
Violinist Elina Vähälä was performing the finale of Max Bruch’s Violin Concerto No. 1 with her ~$1 million 1780 Giovanni Battista Guadagnini violin. Conductor Matthew Halls made a wide, energetic gesture with his arm (he was standing with his back partly to her), accidentally knocked the violin out of her hands, and it flew to the floor. She instinctively stuck her leg/foot out to cushion the fall, quickly picked it up, inspected it during a brief pause (orchestra stopped playing), and then continued the performance.