@isaacrrr7 ça m'est arrivé également sur une plus courte distance a priori mais le chauffeur qui nous a pris en stop a dû rouler sur plusieurs arrêts de bus avant que nous puissions remonter dans le bus que nous avions raté initialement.
This may be the single most damning exposé ever produced by an independent journalist.
In one video, Nick Shirley exposed over $100M in Minnesota Somali fraud, funneled through fake daycares and healthcare fronts.
What he uncovered is staggering:
- Quality Learning Center (misspelled sign): Licensed for 99 kids. $1.9M in 2025, $4M total. Appeared abandoned.
- Future Leaders Early Learning Center: Licensed for 90 kids. $6.67M over two years. Completely empty.
- Mako + Mini Child Care: Licensed for 120 kids combined. $4.6M over three years.
- ABC Learning Center: Licensed for 40 kids. $3M over three years. Inactive.
- Centers trace back to the same people, pointing to a coordinated operation of fake services.
- Staff refused questions and couldn’t explain where the kids were.
- One building alone had 22 healthcare or autism service entities registered
- One day. Over $110M in taxpayer payments tied to the locations he visited.
The video has already surpassed 40 million views and continues to climb.
Government officials are taking notice, with even Elon Musk calling for Tim Walz’s prosecution
All it took was one man and a camera to expose what the state either ignored or allowed. If officials weren’t complicit, this would have been stopped long ago.
Now all eyes are on Minnesota.
It’s time for action.
Well done @nickshirleyy
the billion dollar startup country
The country with the most unicorns per capita is not the US, it’s not the UK… it’s my home country.
Thank you to @waze@CheckPointSW@AI21Labs
When we tell you that Jews love and cherish life, this is what we mean :
The 24-year-old Israeli mountaineer, Nadav Ben-Yehuda, who was 300 meters from the summit of Everest, gave up his dream of conquering the highest peak on Earth, in order to save the life of an injured Turkish climber.
On his way to the summit, Nadav passed two bodies of climbers who had climbed the same ropes he was tied to, and died because they did not have the strength to continue moving, lost consciousness and died. Those who continued to climb simply stepped on them.
Nadav knew the Turkish climber when he saw him on the mountain, his name was Aydin Irmak, because he had met him at the camp. He was unconscious, had lost his gloves, was without oxygen and his helmet was missing. It seemed that he was dying.
None of the climbers stopped to help him. Only Ben-Yehuda felt that he had to help him and try to save his life.
He carried Aydin down the mountain with difficulty because he was heavy. Consciousness returned to him from time to time and he screamed in pain, what which made the operation more difficult.
On their way they also met a Malaysian climber in a very weak condition who could barely stand on his feet. Nadav asked for help from the climbers who passed by to give the injured oxygen, and only some of them did so.
At the end of the journey down they reached the camp and were evacuated by helicopter to Kathmandu and hospitalized. Everyone had frostbite (see Nadav's hand in the photo), Nadav mostly on his fingers because he had to remove his gloves.
Nadav said :
“I was faced with a choice - to be the youngest Israeli to climb Everest, which would be great for my career, or to try to take a climber off the mountain - I chose the second option and I managed to do it ...
Thanks to everyone who helped me in preparation and taught me, which gave me enough strength to go down the mountain myself and pull down the one in need of help "
Nadave Ben Yehuda, a Jewish hero !
Am Yisrael Chai !
When we tell you that Jews love and cherish life, this is what we mean :
The 24-year-old Israeli mountaineer, Nadav Ben-Yehuda, who was 300 meters from the summit of Everest, gave up his dream of conquering the highest peak on Earth, in order to save the life of an injured Turkish climber.
On his way to the summit, Nadav passed two bodies of climbers who had climbed the same ropes he was tied to, and died because they did not have the strength to continue moving, lost consciousness and died. Those who continued to climb simply stepped on them.
Nadav knew the Turkish climber when he saw him on the mountain, his name was Aydin Irmak, because he had met him at the camp. He was unconscious, had lost his gloves, was without oxygen and his helmet was missing. It seemed that he was dying.
None of the climbers stopped to help him. Only Ben-Yehuda felt that he had to help him and try to save his life.
He carried Aydin down the mountain with difficulty because he was heavy. Consciousness returned to him from time to time and he screamed in pain, what which made the operation more difficult.
On their way they also met a Malaysian climber in a very weak condition who could barely stand on his feet. Nadav asked for help from the climbers who passed by to give the injured oxygen, and only some of them did so.
At the end of the journey down they reached the camp and were evacuated by helicopter to Kathmandu and hospitalized. Everyone had frostbite (see Nadav's hand in the photo), Nadav mostly on his fingers because he had to remove his gloves.
Nadav said :
“I was faced with a choice - to be the youngest Israeli to climb Everest, which would be great for my career, or to try to take a climber off the mountain - I chose the second option and I managed to do it ...
Thanks to everyone who helped me in preparation and taught me, which gave me enough strength to go down the mountain myself and pull down the one in need of help "
Nadave Ben Yehuda, a Jewish hero !
Am Yisrael Chai !