People sometimes say that when you think strongly about someone, they might feel it. Love can seem like it stretches across distance, beyond time and place.
From a scientific point of view, the brain works through electrical and chemical signals that shape how we think, feel, and remember. It’s powerful, but still grounded in the physical body.
In physics, there’s a real concept called quantum entanglement, where tiny particles can be linked in ways that make their states related. However, this happens at a microscopic level and “does not apply to human thoughts or emotions across distance.”
Still, emotionally, it can feel like an intense connection defies explanation. Sometimes you think of someone at the exact moment they reach out to you. These moments can feel meaningful, even if they’re also influenced by memory, timing, or coincidence…
Love can create strong psychological bonds. When you care about someone, your mind naturally stays tuned to them, so they often show up in your thoughts unexpectedly, or perhaps they never leave.
When you close your eyes and think of someone important, and your heart reacts for no clear reason, it may simply be your emotions and memory working together in a powerful way.
And maybe that’s what makes love feel so intense: not that it breaks the laws of physics, but that it feels deeply real inside us regardless of external reality.
Quantum Love: When 2 minds and hearts feel connected across distance.
@MatrixMysteries Words have power and meaning - if you're eating "killer" bread and drinking water from a can called "liquid death" (which btw is widely available at the co-op here, wtf?) think about what you're doing to your body. Read Masaru Emoto for more info
“Please make sure the world knows the cruelty that has been imposed upon us.”@BrianneDressen@React19org
The doctors in the documentary showed great courage and fortitude.
I hope they will use that same strength to help the one group of people who have not been able to move on - the Covid vaccine injured.
They are still waiting to be acknowledged and helped.
Too many have moved on from this world.
🔻 YOUR BODY WAS ALWAYS CAPABLE OF REGROWING TEETH. THE GENE WAS NEVER MISSING. IT WAS SUPPRESSED. JAPAN JUST PROVED IT BY UNBLOCKING IT WITH A SINGLE INJECTION.
In September 2024, Kyoto University began human trials on a drug that regrows teeth in adults. One injection. New teeth in 9 weeks. No implants. No dentures. No surgery.
The drug deactivates USAG-1 — a protein that blocks tooth regeneration. Remove the block, the tooth grows. Like it was always meant to.
The question nobody is asking: what activated USAG-1 in the first place?
A former molecular biologist — 11 years in a dental research lab funded by one of the three largest implant manufacturers:
"We identified in 2011 that fluoride accumulation in jaw tissue amplifies USAG-1 expression by up to 340%. The more fluoride in the bone, the stronger the suppression. We submitted the paper. Rejected by every journal in 6 weeks. Funding pulled 3 months later. I was told the direction was 'not commercially viable.'"
Not commercially viable. Because dental implants generate $5.4 billion per year. Dentures: $3.8 billion. Root canals: $15 billion. A $24 billion industry built on the assumption that teeth do not grow back.
They did not discover regeneration in 2024. They suppressed it for decades. A mouth that heals itself does not need a dentist every 6 months.
Fluoride calcifies the pineal gland. Fluoride suppresses tooth regeneration. Fluoride was added to your water in 1945. The same decade they built the dental insurance industry.
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Your teeth were designed to regenerate. Something stopped them. Now you know what. Share this.
A farmer in Texas says he hasn't seen a single live calf born since a data center was built next to his property.
Only stillbirths since.
If that's happening to livestock what effects will it have on the people around it?
Nashville Zoo is asking the public to help stop an AI data center from being built next door.
One of America's biggest zoos has launched a campaign against a proposed 69,000-square-foot data center that would sit next to habitats housing endangered species, including vulnerable clouded leopards.
Zoo officials fear the facility's constant noise, artificial lighting, and electrical hum could disrupt animal behavior and breeding programs that have taken years to establish.
The dispute highlights a growing side effect of the AI boom.
As artificial intelligence systems become more powerful, companies are racing to build new data centers to provide the computing power they require. These facilities consume enormous amounts of electricity and often operate around the clock.
Across the United States, communities have increasingly pushed back against new data centers over concerns about energy use, water consumption, noise pollution, and environmental impacts.
Now wildlife conservation groups are joining that resistance.
The Nashville Zoo, which houses more than 3,700 animals representing over 350 species, says the project could threaten one of the most important collections of rare animals in the country.
More than 180,000 people have already signed a petition opposing the development.
The company behind the project says it will use waterless cooling systems, meet noise requirements, and comply with environmental regulations.
But for zoo officials, the location remains the problem.
The battle reflects a growing challenge facing the AI age: how to expand the digital infrastructure powering artificial intelligence without creating new pressures on communities, ecosystems, and wildlife.
https://t.co/GdrsNtLz6E
https://t.co/30cohJlJRp