A Marriott front desk agent worked there for 8 years.
She checked in 50+ guests a day.
She processed upgrade requests, handled complaints,
assigned rooms, and watched thousands of travelers make the same mistakes on repeat.
Her friend a loyal Bonvoy member for 6 years stayed at a Marriott last month and complained about never getting upgraded, paying full rate, eating $30 breakfast, and getting stuck next to the elevator.
The agent looked at her and said:
"You've stayed at Marriott 40+ times. You've never once done the 9 things that get you better
rooms, free food, and lower rates.
The front desk has the power to give you all of it. We just
wait for you to ask. And you never ask."
She showed her everything.
Her next Marriott stay: upgraded to a suite, late checkout until 4 PM, free breakfast, and a rate $40 lower than what was listed online.
Here's the 9 things the front desk agent wishes every guest knew 🧵
🔹THEY KILLED THE MAN. THEY BURNED THE RESEARCH. THEY COULD NOT KILL THE FREQUENCY. NOW IT RETURNS.
November 20, 1931. Forty-four of America's most respected doctors gathered for a dinner called "The End to All Diseases." The guest of honor: Dr. Royal Raymond Rife. His crime: He cured cancer.
THE SUPPRESSION PROTOCOL:
In 1934, the University of Southern California brought 16 terminal cancer patients to Rife's laboratory. After 90 days:
— 14 of 16 patients were completely cured
— The remaining 2 were cured within 4 weeks
— 100% success rate. Zero side effects.
This was front-page news in the San Diego Tribune. Peer-reviewed. Documented.
Then the erasure began.
Morris Fishbein — head of the American Medical Association — offered to buy Rife's technology. Rife refused.
Within 12 months:
▪️ Rife's laboratory was broken into. His Universal Microscope was dismantled.
▪️ Dr. Milbank Johnson — preparing to announce results publicly — was fatally poisoned the night before his press conference.
▪️ Every doctor who participated was visited by the AMA. Medical licenses would be revoked if they spoke.
▪️ Every Rife machine was confiscated and destroyed.
▪️ San Diego Tribune articles were removed from library archives.
▪️ Royal Rife died in 1971 — broken, bankrupt, erased from history.
THE FINANCIAL MOTIVE:
The pharmaceutical industry did not exist in its current form before 1934. It was built AFTER Rife's technology was destroyed.
Every chemotherapy session. Every radiation treatment. Every $150,000 cancer protocol.
Built on the ashes of a machine that cured cancer for free.
THE RESURRECTION:
The MedBed is Rife's machine — evolved.
Same principle: Targeted frequency destroys diseased cells while leaving healthy tissue untouched.
What Rife did with a single frequency, the MedBed does with thousands — simultaneously scanning, identifying, and eliminating every pathogen, every mutation, every damaged cell.
THE CLASSIFIED INTEL:
▪️ OPERATION-RIFE-RESURRECTION - Activating Rife's suppressed research
▪️ Frequency-MOR-Protocol - Exact resonant frequencies targeting cancer
▪️ MEDBED-ACTIVATION-JULY - Civilian deployment timeline
Rife proved the science in 1934. They killed the man. They could not kill the frequency.
Now, 92 years later, Military Intelligence has reconstructed his work. The MedBed is the proof that Rife was right all along.
CODE: RIFE-ACTIVE / FREQUENCY-RESTORED / CANCER-CURED
In 1934, cancer was cured. In 2026, the cure returns.
SHARE THIS EVERYWHERE. HIS NAME WAS ROYAL RIFE. REMEMBER IT.
⟁
Funny how one good personality like Erling Haaland can make millions of people care about a sport they normally don't give a dam about. With that being said I'm not watching the rest of the world cup. Norway won ❤️🇳🇴
Alf-Inge Haaland on speaking to Erling Haaland after Norway’s World Cup elimination to England.
🗣️ “I walked into the dressing room and saw my son sitting there in complete silence, tears streaming down his face. He tried so hard to hide them, but he couldn’t. His heart was shattered. I put my hand on his shoulder, looked him in the eyes and said, ‘Erling, don’t you dare apologise. Don’t carry this pain alone. You gave your country every drop of your heart, every ounce of your strength, and every breath you had.’ Seeing your own son broken like that is one of the hardest things a father can experience.”
”‘People only celebrate the goals and the trophies. They never see the sacrifices, the endless pressure, the sleepless nights, the injuries, the doubts, and the emotional burden of carrying an entire nation’s dreams. Erling wasn’t crying because he lost a football match. He was crying because his dream of making millions of Norwegians proud had slipped through his fingers. Those weren’t tears of weakness they were tears of love, pride and heartbreak.”
“I told him, ‘Lift your head, son. There is no shame in crying after giving absolutely everything. Real warriors cry because they care. Real leaders cry because they feel the pain of letting people down, even when they haven’t. Never let anyone tell you those tears make you weak they prove how much this country means to you.’”
“And to the people already searching for someone to blame… shame on you. Before you criticise these players, remember the joy they gave this nation. Remember how they made children dream again. Don’t destroy them in one night because football can be cruel. Every player in that dressing room is hurting far more than any supporter watching from the stands.”
“As his father, I couldn’t have been prouder tonight if he had scored a hat-trick and lifted the World Cup. I didn’t see a global superstar—I saw my little boy wearing Norway’s shirt, refusing to give up until the very last second. That’s what filled my heart with pride. Medals and trophies fade with time, but courage, sacrifice and love for your country stay with you forever.”
“These tears will never define Erling Haaland. They will shape him. One day, when people look back on his career, they won’t remember him crying—they’ll remember the man who stood back up after the deepest heartbreak and fought even harder. Tonight, Norway lost a football match, but they gained something even greater: a generation inspired by players who gave everything for the badge. Sometimes football breaks your heart… but it’s that heartbreak that creates legends.”
The goal of a first date isn't to perform. It's to pay attention. The more interested you are in the person across from you, the less room your anxiety has to grow. And as the research shows, curiosity is often far more attractive than trying to be impressive.
Four musket balls tore through George Washington's coat at the Battle of Monongahela. Two horses were shot dead beneath him. He rode back and forth across the worst of the fighting rallying broken men, and when the smoke cleared he did not have a single scratch on him. An Indian chief later said he ordered his men to fire at Washington again and again, then stopped, certain the Great Spirit was shielding him.
He was 23 years old. He wrote to his brother a few days later, almost puzzled by it, and said he had been protected beyond all human expectation by the miraculous care of Providence.
And here is the part people forget. That was not the one time. That was the pattern.
At Princeton he rode his horse to within thirty yards of the British line and told his men to hold as the muskets opened up. An officer who was there covered his eyes because he was sure he was about to watch the general die. When he looked again Washington was still sitting tall in the saddle, waving his hat, completely unharmed. For eight years of war he stood where the fighting was heaviest and the bullets simply refused to find him. His enemies started to talk about it. His own soldiers started to believe it.
He was not being reckless. He just never seemed to believe it was his time.
This is the thread that runs through nearly every great man in history. They lived like the date had already been written and no enemy on earth could move it up by a single hour.
Caesar stood on the bank of the Rubicon, looked at everything he was about to risk, and said the die is already cast. Then he walked into it.
Cromwell rode into battle after battle convinced the outcome had been settled long before either army woke up that morning, and he fought like a man who had nothing left to fear because the ending was not his to decide.
Andrew Jackson stood on the Capitol steps while a man walked up and pulled a pistol on him at point blank range. It misfired. The man drew a second pistol. That one misfired too. The odds of both failing were so small that people argued about it for years. Jackson just raised his cane and went after the man himself.
Stonewall Jackson would ride calmly through a storm of gunfire while everyone around him flinched, and when someone finally asked how he stayed so steady he said it plainly. My religious belief teaches me to feel as safe in battle as in bed. God has already fixed the time of my death, so I do not trouble myself about it. I am always ready, no matter when it comes.
That was the whole secret. Not that they loved danger. Not that they did not feel fear. They simply believed their steps were already numbered by a hand higher than any king, and a man who truly believes that walks through fire like it is a hallway.
You cannot kill a man before his work is done.
And when you line their lives up side by side, the escapes, the misfires, the bullets that passed through the coat but never the man, it gets very hard to call all of it luck.
Caraca, quer dizer que Halland já gravou vídeo para uma criança brasileira que sofria bullying na escola por ter corte de cabelo inspirado nele? Poxa, agora acho que ele empatou com o Mbappé na disputa do jogador de futebol mais gente boa do mundo.
Neymar comprou para si um relógio de 1 milhão de dólares. Haaland comprou o livro mais valioso da História norueguesa e doou à biblioteca de sua cidade. Prioridades.
Neymar comprou para si um relógio de 1 milhão de dólares. Haaland comprou o livro mais valioso da História norueguesa e doou à biblioteca de sua cidade. Prioridades.
GEORGE WASHINGTON: "By Providence, I have been protected, for I had 4 bullets through my coat & two horses shot under me, yet escaped unhurt, although death was leveling my companions on every side."
In Young Washington, a dying General Braddock gave Washington his ceremonial sash. In real life, Washington kept the sash for the rest of his life, all through the Revolutionary War, through his presidency. It’s still on display in Mount Vernon today.
#YoungWashington now in theaters!
In Young Washington, a dying General Braddock gave Washington his ceremonial sash. In real life, Washington kept the sash for the rest of his life, all through the Revolutionary War, through his presidency. It’s still on display in Mount Vernon today.
#YoungWashington now in theaters!
The World Cup was fun and all but now as a nation we can finally come together and focus on what REALLY matters…
What Minnesota suburb is LeBron James going to live in?
Rocco Zikarsky on staying in Minnesota each of his first two offseasons and why Minnesota feels like home
“I just think it’s such a lively city, there’s quite a bit going on, on the fourth I did the taste of Minneapolis, that was great. Such great restaurants around here, going fishing with Joan. I may as well try and fit into a city I want to spend a lot of time in, so for me it’s trying to make it feel like home”
I’m thinking we get a trilogy.
Young Washington, General Washington, and President Washington.
Screw it, let’s make movies on all of the young founders and then get a 1776 avengers movie.