日本語できる外人です。ฝรั่งที่เข้าใจภาษาไทย
the truth will set you free but first it will piss you off. 🇮🇱 !עם ישראל חי 🇺🇦 Слава Україні! Героям слава! 🇹🇼 自由台灣萬歲!
Dalia Ziada is an Egyption scholar, a specialist in national security and radical Islam.
She is a big supporter of the Jewish people and the state of Israel , for which her life was threatened and she was forced to flee her homeland, Egypt.
@daliaziada explains why the Muslim Brotherhood wants to destroy the Jewish communities in the West.
Westerns, you need to watch this !
Lionel Messi is having yet another exceptional World Cup, reminding us every game what greatness looks like. But I'm more interested in the kind of man he is, and why he's an outstanding role model for young men, both on and off the pitch.
At 39 years old, the man is still lighting up th World Cup. He moves with that same magic he had as a teenager, and doing it all with relentless drive and consistency. Year after year, decade after decade, he shows up prepared, humble, and fully committed. No drama, no excuses, just elite standards meticulously maintained while the world watches.
His character shines brightest off the ball too. Messi’s loyalty to his teammates is legendary - celebrating their goals as passionately as his own, lifting the squad in big moments, and building genuine bonds that last across clubs and national teams. He leads by making others better, not by demanding the spotlight.
And then there’s his dedication to his family. Watch him point to the sky after a goal (honouring his late grandmother who first put him on the pitch), kiss his wedding ring for his wife Antonela (they've been together since their teenage years), or see him light up surrounded by his three sons - Thiago, Mateo, and Ciro - on the field or in the stands. Whether it’s sharing a trophy moment or simply being present, Messi’s love for his family is always front and center.
He lives the balance: world-class drive on the pitch, devoted husband and father off it.
That’s the kind of gentleman we can all learn from. True character isn’t alpha male loud dominance - it’s consistency in your craft, fierce loyalty to your people, and making family the real priority that fuels everything else. It’s building a legacy that matters long after the final whistle.
Messi shows us the power of showing up every day - for your work, your team, and the ones you love most.
So gentlemen, unleash the Messi in you, and build your legacy. Cheers 🥂
USA. A hibachi restaurant. My American friends brought me here to enjoy the cuisine of my homeland, and I witnessed a ritual I have never seen in eight hundred years of being Japanese.
The chef stacked onion rings into a tower. He filled it with oil. And he set it on fire.
"THE VOLCANO!" my friends cheered. They knew the ritual. They had seen it many times. In Japan, I have eaten ten thousand meals. No one has ever built me a volcano.
I said nothing. A guest does not question the ceremony.
"Is this how they do it back home?" my friend asked, glowing with joy.
"...The technique is flawless," I said. A samurai may retreat. He may not lie. He may, however, aim the truth very carefully.
Then the chef flicked a shrimp through the air at my face.
"Catch it!" the table roared.
In my land, food is set before you with two hands and an apology for the wait. Here, the shrimp attacks. I caught it. With my mouth. The table erupted. The chef saluted me with his spatula.
I have received medals with less pride.
"You're a natural," the chef said.
"My family has trained for this for generations," I said. It was not technically a lie. We trained. Just not for this.
My friends drove me home, full and happy, honored to have shown me my own country.
A man does not question the volcano. He catches the shrimp.
Whatever this cuisine is, wherever it was truly born — the fire is real, the joy is real, and I caught what was thrown at me.
That is Japanese enough.
They say the devil hates his servants the most.
Here's why...
This painting is called Allegory of Satan, or Lord of the World, painted around 1900 by the Polish artist Ludwik Stasiak. It is not the devil you might expect. There are no flames, no chaos and no horns leering out of the dark. Stasiak painted something far more unsettling.
Here the devil sits enthroned like a ruler of the world, with a sardonic grin on his face, surrounded by the symbols of earthly power: wealth, ambition, domination, and death. Evil, he suggests, never arrives as something horrifying that we instantly reject. It arrives as something attractive. It looks like success. It looks like money, and status, and control. It looks like everything the world tells us to want.
And that is what makes the painting feel so modern, more than a century after it was made. Stasiak was working at the turn of the twentieth century, an age obsessed, like ours, with progress and fortune and getting ahead. And he was warning that the most dangerous evil is not the kind that frightens us, but the kind that seduces us, the kind we serve willingly because it promises to make us powerful.
Which brings us back to the old saying. Look closely at what lies beneath his throne. Scattered at its base are the skulls of the powerful, still wearing their crowns and their helmets in death, the very people who traded their souls for money and power. And he sits above them, amused, because the joke is on them. This is why the devil hates his servants the most. He does not respect them for serving him. He despises them for it, because they handed over the only thing that ever mattered in exchange for things that rot.
That is the real power of the painting: Stasiak did not depict a devil we would run from, he painted a devil we would kneel to, and follow, and call our lord, mistaking our own chains for a crown. He was only giving form to a warning as old as the Gospels themselves: "No one can serve two masters. You cannot serve both God and money."
🚨#BREAKING: Firefighters in Wisconsin are hailing 5 teenage boys as HEROES after they BUSTED DOWN A DOOR TO A BURNING HOME to save a 91-year-old elderly couple and their family on July 4th.
When firefighters arrived, they discovered the boys had already rescued ALL SIX PEOPLE inside the home.
According to investigators, the boys noticed what they thought was a bonfire from their home.
As they walked closer, they saw a home was on fire and started banging on the doors and windows and heard people yelling.
The group of boys BROKE DOWN THE DOOR, ran into the home, called out for the victims and rescued all them.
“We started calling out for people and asking if anybody was in there. And then we ended up getting quite a bit of responses. There ended up being five or six people in the house..."
"...you are kind of just feeling around, yelling, and then I heard a couple in the room on the left. So I went in there and got them out."
As the last person stepped out of the home, the flames intensified.
INCREDIBLE!!!!!!!!
Joe Rogan: “What is it like to buy a company for 44 billion dollars and then people call you a Nazi on that same thing that you bought?”
Elon Musk: “I did Nazi it coming.”
Elon is so funny. 🤣
Todavía no logro comprender cómo 6.000 terroristas palestinos invadieron Israel y, con orgullo, retransmitieron en directo la masacre de familias judías el 7 de octubre, y aun así muchos en el mundo siguen creyendo que son las víctimas.
¿Acaso el mundo ha perdido la cabeza?
America is attacked as if it is the only country to ever have done evil
In fact, it is the only country to ever have *supreme world power* and show restraint
George Washington resigned his commission as general in 1783 when many wanted him to be king
This noble spirit endures
Ironic that America is hated (wrongly) for the very thing she is most noble for.
Elon Musk just said the one thing about America they made sure you’d never learn.
The one thing that should’ve made you proud, not ashamed.
Musk: “After World War 2, the US could have basically taken over the world and any country. Like we got nukes, nobody else got nukes. We don’t even have to lose soldiers. Which country do you want?”
One nation held a weapon no civilization had ever possessed.
Total monopoly on destruction. No rival. No consequence. No limit.
Every empire in history that held that kind of power did the only thing empires know how to do.
They took until there was nothing left to take.
America had a greater advantage than all of them combined.
And rebuilt the nations it just defeated.
Musk: “The United States actually helped rebuild countries. So it helped rebuild Europe, it helped rebuild Japan. This is very unusual behavior, almost unprecedented.”
Not almost unprecedented.
It had never happened. Not once in 5,000 years of recorded civilization.
The nation with the power to take everything chose to rebuild instead.
Enemies became allies. Rubble became economies. Surrender became partnership.
Germany went from ashes to the economic engine of Europe in a single generation.
Japan went from unconditional surrender to the third largest economy on earth.
Three years after the war, America was flying food into Berlin.
Into the capital of the country that just tried to end the free world.
That decision reshaped every economy, every alliance, and every trade route on the planet.
Billions of people lifted out of poverty over the next half century trace back to one moment. One nation choosing restraint over domination.
No other country in history can make that claim. Not one.
Musk: “There’s always like, well America’s done bad things. Well of course America’s done bad things, but one needs to look at the whole track record.”
Every nation on earth has blood in its history.
But the measure of a nation was never its worst chapter.
It’s what it does when nobody can stop it.
When nobody could stop America, it fed its enemies and rebuilt their cities.
You’re being told every day that this country is something to be ashamed of.
By people who have no idea what the world looks like without it.
Every free market. Every open border for trade. Every democracy that took root outside Europe stands in the shadow of that single decision.
The values that built this country didn’t just shape America.
They shaped the modern world.
AI is about to hand a small number of people a power advantage that makes nuclear monopoly look primitive.
1945 was the first test.
AI is the last.
That power is going to exist. The only question left is who holds it.
The most powerful thing America ever did wasn’t building the bomb.
It was having the power to take everything and choosing not to.
The people trying hardest to tear that story down have never built a single thing worth defending.