Hรก 21 anos, Maradona disse a Pelรฉ: โMeu sonho รฉ cabecear uma bola com vocรช.โ
Um momento de uma era do futebol que nunca poderemos recuperar. ๐๏ธโฝ๏ธ
What people think the Mediterranean Diet is:
- Whole grains
- Olive oil
- A rainbow of vegetables
- One brave little sardine
- Moral superiority, plated
What people around the Mediterranean actually eat:
- Lamb at every wedding, every funeral, and most ordinary Tuesdays
- Pork in roughly fifteen forms, half of them cured
- Prosciutto, salami, pancetta, 'nduja, and a dozen cousins Sainsbury's has never heard of
- Oily fish several times a week
- Eggs, butter, cream and animal fat as the base of nearly everything
- Cheese in volumes that would frighten your doctor
- Full-fat yoghurt thick enough to stand a spoon in
The French eat around twenty-six kilos of cheese each per year, put away more saturated fat than Americans do, and still die of heart disease at roughly a third of the American rate, while quietly outliving them by years.
The version sold in the glossy books is the photogenic tenth of what they put away.
The olive oil is real. The rest was quietly edited out.
I firmly believe that all men dressing like this again would start to fix things.
Look at how everyone is so shocked by how much he respects himself. ๐
This is actual insane aura. ๐โโ๏ธ
In one hand: a clothespin from the 1960s. Solid hardwood, smooth from decades of use. It still works perfectly, some 60 years later.
In the other: a clothespin from 2025. Lighter, paler wood, brittle. The spring is thin and unstable. Marketed as โextra durable,โ my dad just raised an eyebrow.
At first glance, itโs just two clothespins. But they tell a bigger story โ the shift from durability to disposability, from craftsmanship to cost-cutting, from stewardship to constant consumption. This is planned obsolescence in action.
Products are designed to fail so we must keep buying. Slowly, subtly, they break. Frayed wires, cracked hinges, brittle springs. Not because we want more, but because the old was never built to last.
The costs are everywhere. Landfills overflow. Wallets empty. And maybe most quietly, our spirits grow accustomed to impermanence, to the idea that nothing is meant to endure.
What if this philosophy extends beyond objects? What if it shapes how we treat relationships, communities, homes, even the Earth โ as temporary, replaceable, disposable?
It doesnโt have to be this way. That 1960s clothespin reminds us another path is possible. That we once made things to last, and we can again. That quality, care, and intention matter. That we can design for repair, for continuity, for meaning.
New York Times, BBC, Sky News, I see you have trouble finding videos of Iranians protesting the Islamic Republic.
Here is one. Can you please explain why you refuse to report it?
๐จ SADIQ KHAN TURNS LONDONS NEW YEARS FIREWORKS INTO A GLOBALIST PROPAGNADA SHOW ๐ฌ๐ง
From removing the star of David from the Israel flag to the not so subtle EU flag, even though 17.4 MILLION people voted to leave the EUโ๏ธ
EVERYTHING Khan does is AGAISNT the people โ ๏ธ
In case you needed any more proof that Sadiq Khan hates the Jewsโฆ he erased the STAR OF DAVID from the Israeli flag at Londonโs New Yearโs Eve display.
Literally removed the symbol of Jewish identity.
How about we start 2026 by removing Sadiq from office instead?