⚠️WARNING⚠️
Interacting with this post WILL put Horny Fursuiters with Big Knots twitter on your feed. Please DONT interact because I care abt your algorithm and don’t want you to have Horny Fursuiters with Big Knots on your feed 🙏🙏🙏
#nsfw
@HunterBiden@GBel555 off topic but how is your dad doing? i hope he's doing well, hes the first president i was able to vote for and he was a damn good president in my opinion.
Pride Month starts today, and I’m thinking about the generations of LGBTQ+ leaders, activists, and everyday Americans who sacrificed to push our country forward. This month, we celebrate their courage and make clear we’re not going to let anyone turn the clock back.
HAPPY PRIDE MONTH TO ALL WHO CELEBRATE
LETS BOMBARD THIS SITE WITH RAINBOWS
AND FOR HOMOPHOBIC MOTHERFUCKERS OUT THERE, I HOPE YOU HAVE A VERY UNCOMFORTABLE, SHITTY MONTH
The world has 195 recognised countries.
64 of them id go to prison or be killed for being gay.
That’s 32% of the world where it’s illegal and punishable by death for being who I am.
So talk to me about why we shouldn’t have pride.
Pride is joy. Pride is courage. Pride is a celebration. And Pride is the ongoing fight to ensure every person can live as their authentic self.
This month and every month, we celebrate the LGBTQ+ community and all those continuing the fight for equality.
Happy Pride!
🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️ happy pride month!! i know that this month can be difficult for some people in the community for various reasons. so here are some resources and information links :) 🧵
Happy Pride Month everyone. 🏳️🌈
To everyone in the community, you are all loved, valid and worth of love and support.
Keep yourselves and each other safe as we continue to protest against a world that is growing ever darker for us, especially for our trans siblings.
Our protest is being loud, proud and unapologetic in who we are and who we love (or don't, for my fellow asexual, aromantic and aroace people)
“The plane went silent.”
That’s what passengers aboard British Airways Flight 9 remembered most.
Not screaming.
Not alarms.
Silence.
On June 24, 1982, the Boeing 747 was flying over Java at 37,000 feet with 247 passengers onboard when Senior Engineer Barry Townley-Freeman noticed engine temperatures rising dangerously fast.
Then passengers started calling flight attendants:
“There’s something glowing outside the window.”
Blue light flickered through the engines.
White sparks danced across the wings.
It looked beautiful.
In the cockpit, Captain Eric Moody watched Engine 4 fail.
Then Engine 2.
Then 1.
Then 3.
Within minutes, all four engines were dead.
A fully loaded 747 became a powerless glider descending toward the Indian Ocean.
No thrust.
Barely any radio communication.
No idea what caused it.
Passengers woke from sleep to something deeply unnatural:
The absence of engine noise.
At 37,000 feet, a jetliner should roar.
Instead, there was only wind.
Captain Moody got on the intercom and delivered one of aviation history’s most famous announcements:
“Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem. All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get them under control.”
Some passengers thought it was a joke.
The flight attendants’ faces said otherwise.
What nobody onboard knew was that the plane had flown directly through a volcanic ash cloud from Mount Galunggung.
The ash was made of microscopic glass particles.
Inside the engines, the particles melted at extreme temperatures and coated the turbines like cement, suffocating all four engines one by one.
At 15,000 feet, oxygen masks deployed.
At 12,000 feet, the crew prepared for a night ditching into the ocean.
Captain Moody knew the odds of surviving a water landing in a 747 were almost nonexistent.
Then he tried restarting the engines one final time.
Engine 4 sputtered.
Caught.
Then another.
Then another.
All four engines roared back to life.
But the nightmare still wasn’t over.
The volcanic ash had sandblasted the cockpit windshield so badly the pilots could barely see through it.
Captain Moody had to land a damaged 747 at night using only a tiny clear section of the side window while his first officer called out altitude and distance manually.
Against every odd, the aircraft landed safely in Jakarta.
Every single person onboard survived.
After the incident, volcanic ash became a globally monitored aviation hazard.
And Captain Eric Moody’s calm announcement became legendary — still taught today as a masterclass in crisis leadership:
Tell the truth.
Stay calm.
Give people dignity.
Even when you’re falling out of the sky.