BREAKING: LOL! Republican Rep. Thomas Massie hilariously trolls the MAGA hacks claiming that they "spoke" to Mitch McConnell on the phone for "twenty minutes" today despite him being reportedly braindead.
This is just too good...
"I spoke to McConnell for about 20 minutes this morning," Massie wrote on X. "He said we should end the war with Iran, quit giving aid to Israel, stop spying on Americans without a warrant, and heβs really sorry about how my primary turned out."
Obviously, McConnell did none of those things.
He is (or was, depending on which reports you believe) an unrepentant warmonger, an Israel First fanatic who rabidly supported their genocide in Gaza, a lifelong enemy of Americans' right to privacy, and he did nothing to intervene when Trump targeted Massie in his primary for daring to support the release of the Epstein files.
Massie was mocking Republicans like professional liar Scott Jennings who are insisting that McConnell is not only alive, but capable of speech. The frequent CNN contributor claimed on X that he "spoke" to his "old friend" McConnell on the phone about "IRAN, UKRAINE, the unfolding situation in MAINE, my visit to the TR Presidential Library, and even a little bit of Senate history."
You can count on one hand the number of people who are gullible enough to believe Jennings's claim. The simplest explanation is that he fabricated the story to hide the truth about McConnell (whatever that may be). Trump world doesn't want McConnell to vacate his seat because that would force a special election. If that happens, Massie could run and he could win.
Please β€οΈ and share if you don't believe that McConnell spoke to anyone!
Fear is not just an emotion.
It is a frequency.
And for decades someone has been broadcasting it deliberately into your home, your phone, and your nervous system every single day.
I have been studying this for over 20 years.
What I found is not comfortable.
But it is information every conscious human being needs to have.
Here are 7 truths about fear as a frequency and who is using it against you:
We observe that Earth's naturally resonate energy fields known as Schumann Resonances at 7.8 Hz, 14 Hz, 20 Hz , and beyond are elevated in strength because of the high degree of ionization of Earth's ionosphere from recent solar flare activity (M & X-class flares).
A sungrazer comet has appeared flying towards its perihelion. Four large sunspots are directly in front of Earth at the moment, and it looks like this sungrazer is coming in from south and behind the Sun and will swing in front of Earth during its closest approach
What if you could walk past a surveillance camera and remain unrecognizable to artificial intelligence, while still looking completely normal to other people?
That is exactly what Dutch designer Jip van Leeuwenstein set out to achieve. He created a transparent face mask specifically designed to confuse AI-powered facial recognition systems without hiding the wearerβs identity from human observers.
At first glance, the mask appears almost invisible. Its clever design subtly alters the geometric relationships between key facial features, eyes, nose, mouth, and jawline, that AI systems rely on to identify individuals. To the human eye, the wearerβs face and expressions remain clearly visible and recognizable. To facial recognition algorithms, however, the facial data becomes distorted and much harder to process accurately.
The project was developed as part of the Surveillance Exclusion initiative, which examines the tension between privacy, technology, and the rapid spread of facial recognition in public spaces. Although the mask was first introduced several years ago, it has regained attention as AI surveillance becomes more widespread in airports, smartphones, security systems, and cities worldwide.
A major city in Colombia cooled itself by 2Β°C simply by planting millions of trees and shrubsβdemonstrating that nature provides one of the most effective cooling solutions available.
MedellΓn has turned its urban environment into a cooler, more livable space through its innovative Green Corridors project, launched in 2016. The initiative planted nearly 880,000 trees and 2.5 million smaller plants along busy roads and waterways, replacing heat-trapping concrete with lush vegetation. This created an extensive network of interconnected green zones that function like natural cooling systems, reducing the city's average temperature by more than 2Β°C.
Beyond cooling, the project delivers wide-ranging benefits: it purifies the air, boosts urban biodiversity by welcoming back wildlife, and fosters a healthier atmosphere through shade and evapotranspirationβthe natural process by which plants release water vapor. Honored with the 2019 Ashden Award for Cooling by Nature, MedellΓn's approach has become an inspiring model for cities worldwide seeking sustainable ways to adapt to rising temperatures and combat climate change.
#ShoreFire The Fire is continuing to be Active this Evening and is pushing towards Highway 60, be careful driving East Bound on the Highway 60 due to Bad Visibility from Smoke.
IC is Reporting West Bound Highway 60 has been Shutdown.
Professor Omar Yaghi, a chemist at the University of California, Berkeley and winner of the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, has developed an innovative atmospheric water generator capable of producing up to 1,000 liters of clean drinking water per day directly from dry air.
Using reticular chemistry and advanced metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), the system efficiently captures moisture even in arid desert conditions with very low humidity. The compact, shipping-container-sized units developed by Yaghiβs company, Atoco, operate entirely off-grid using only ultra-low-grade ambient thermal energy or sunlight, requiring no electricity from the grid.
This sustainable technology offers a promising alternative to energy-intensive desalination plants, which often harm marine ecosystems through brine discharge. It is particularly valuable for remote communities, drought-prone regions, and areas affected by natural disasters such as hurricanes in the Caribbean, where centralized water infrastructure may fail.
Yaghiβs personal experience growing up with water scarcity in a refugee community in Jordan has deeply influenced his work. He advocates for scaling decentralized, resilient solutions to address the global water crisis through scientific innovation.
[Atoco official website and related coverage in Interesting Engineering, Food & Wine, and Nobel Prize announcements (2025β2026)]