Proud liberal, Resister, Democrat, atheist, Pro Israel 🇦🇷 Israel's getting screwed by US mainstream media. All Palestinians hate US and Isreal. Wake up!
🩸🩸🩸 I'm going to post this video every day so we never forget what the 34x POS convicted felon who incites political violence, adjudicated rapist & pedophile Trump did on J6 🩸🩸🩸
Instead of honoring our Constitution's key principle of a Peaceful Transfer of Power, POS Donald Trump Abused his Power on Jan 6th by inciting this violent & deadly attack on our country's Capital and should be in prison for life 🩸🩸🩸
THIS IS WHAT AN INSURRECTION LOOKS LIKE ⬇️⬇️⬇️
On the ancient shores of the Red Sea, buried in desert sands for over 4,500 years, archaeologists uncovered something no one thought could survive — a bundle of fragile papyri now known as The Diary of Merer. These scrolls are the oldest written papyri ever found, and they tell the story not of kings or gods, but of the people who built the Great Pyramid of Giza.
Written in flowing hieratic script, the diary belongs to Merer, an overseer who managed crews transporting the limestone blocks that once shone like sunlight on Khufu’s pyramid. His entries describe daily routines: ferrying stone from Tura quarries, feeding workers, and coordinating deliveries by boat along the Nile River.
What makes Merer’s words extraordinary is what they reveal — the builders were not slaves, but skilled laborers and craftsmen, organized with precision and purpose. Their work was a sacred duty, not forced labor — an act of devotion to a divine ruler whose monument would outlast empires.
Each brittle sheet turns myth into reality, connecting us directly to the heartbeat of Egypt’s greatest age. The pyramids were not the work of mystery, but of human mastery, guided by ingenuity, faith, and endurance.
Merer’s diary is more than a record — it’s a voice across 45 centuries, whispering that the hands which shaped eternity once belonged to ordinary men who believed their labor touched the gods.
#archaeohistories
Palestinian gunmen kill six in Jerusalem bus stop shooting
I'm surprised this made the news.
9 times out of 10 we only get to hear one side of the news.
| Reuters https://t.co/kMX57Q6Y3o