I just found that SpaceX has a dog on their site called Starlink Dog, his name is also Bowie.
It's one of the only Elon interactions with a dog too,
With the IPO being traded on USD, makes sense it's on USDC and ETH having asteroid bowie is ours,
https://t.co/1YxOcc4sRG
https://t.co/D6X7rRw9n2
White men are hunting down Black people in Belfast to exact collective punishment because they share the same race as the perpetrator. Regardless of ethnicity, faith or nationality - Black people are being terrorised for the horrific crime committed by 1 Sudanese man.
๐จ THE ANGER IS NO LONGER CONFINED TO BELFAST
A migrant delivery driver's car has reportedly been set on fire in the north end of Glasgow.
If confirmed, it will add to growing concerns that tensions are spreading.
Every new incident increases the pressure on political leaders to address the causes of public anger rather than simply react to the consequences.
The longer this continues, the more difficult it becomes to dismiss as an isolated problem.
We donโt fool around in Ireland ๐ฎ๐ช
Belfast boys went door-to-door seeking out migrant-occupied houses.
They had enough of ultra-violent migrant attacks on Irish people.
The government started all of this, but by God will the Irish finish it.
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https://t.co/ndWutUNBOR
๐จ DAY THREE IS WHEN GOVERNMENTS START TO WORRY
A protest can be dismissed as a one-off.
A second day can be described as an isolated reaction.
But when demonstrations continue into a third day and beyond, something changes.
The story stops being about the original incident.
It becomes a test of public sentiment.
A test of political authority.
And a test of whether those in power still understand the mood of the country.
The real concern for governments is not the number of people on the streets today.
It is the possibility that the anger driving them there is spreading faster than the authorities can contain politically.
Because if the protests continue, the question is no longer:
"Why are people protesting?"
The question becomes:
"Why are so many people still protesting?"
That is when a local crisis can become a national one.