🇧🇦 Wealthy foreigners paid to hunt human beings for sport during the Bosnian war, and one of them is finally being chased down.
The suspect is an Italian aristocrat from a rich Milan family, a weapons obsessive who allegedly paid big money to join Serbian snipers above Sarajevo and shoot civilians for fun.
He bragged about it to friends over dinner more than once.
His ex says he flew in with people who turned into weekend snipers "to kill Muslims," and that he kept tallies of his own kills.
The sickest part is that they reportedly paid north of $90,000 for the trip, with extra fees to shoot children and pregnant women.
More than 10,000 people died from snipers and shelling in Sarajevo between 1992 and 1996.
Magistrates across Europe are now digging in, with a meeting at The Hague set for June 29.
The war ended 30 years ago, but the reckoning never came.
Source: NY Post / Writer: Julie
11, 12, and 14 years old.
Raped for days by more than 20 Pakistani immigrants.
Tortured—one had her tongue nailed to the wall to keep her still while they raped her.
The police ridiculed, insulted, and ignored them.
The feminists turned the other way.
If it hadn't been for Elon Musk, who publicly shared the trial testimonies, sparking outrage from Reform UK and internal investigations, no one would have known anything.
You're not angry enough.
- @babetta123
One of the most amazing things I’ve ever seen: a standing ovation for the full Daraxonrasib results
I feel inspired and energised, to put it mildly — we have a targeted therapy for pancreatic cancer now, and nothing is undruggable anymore
Long COVID & ME/CFS teilen oft denselben autonomen Phänotyp – 92% reduzierter zerebrovaskulärer Blutfluss, 95% autonome Dysfunktion. Das sind KEINE psychischen Erkrankungen. Das sind messbare, neurologische Befunde. #MECFS#LongCovid#POTS
https://t.co/RlT0h7P4us
Let me trace the timeline here because nobody's connecting it.
Step 1: Scrape the entire internet. Every book, every article, every conversation, every piece of art, every forum post. Do it without asking. Do it without paying.
Step 2: Train a model on all of it. Call it "artificial intelligence."
Step 3: Go to BlackRock's Infrastructure Summit and announce: "We see a future where intelligence is a utility, like electricity or water, and people buy it from us on a meter."
Step 3 is where you sell people's own knowledge back to them. On a meter.
They took the collective output of human thought, compressed it into a model, and now they want to charge you by the token to access a version of what you and everyone you know already created.
One Reddit user put it perfectly: "They stole all this data from us, the people, our life's work, creativity, art, by devouring the internet and blowing through all copyright laws. Now they want to sell it back to us in the form of a utility."
Imagine if someone photocopied every book in the public library, burned the library down, and then opened a subscription service for the copies.
That's the metered intelligence business model.
And they're pitching it to infrastructure investors as though they invented water.
MIT found Alzheimer's-like amyloid plaques in the brains of people who died of COVID. https://t.co/QbSJWJQhGW
Spike proteins were clustering with amyloid.
This was not in older adults with pre-existing disease.
It was caused by COVID.
On this day in 1999, NATO began bombing its illegal bombing campaign of Yugoslavia without permission from the UN Security Council.
Between 1200-2500 civilians were killed and 5000 were wounded. During the 3 months of bombing, NATO dropped between 10-15 tonnes of depleted uranium bombs.
After years of supporting right-wing nationalist forces to undermine and weaken the integrity of Yugoslavia, NATO begun its campaign to break up the socialist state. Though it claimed to be intervening to stop ethnic cleansing, the Assistant to US Secretary of Defense Strobe Talbott revealed the real reason for the war:
"It was Yugoslavia's resistance to the broader trends of political and economic reform, not the plight of Kosovar Albanians, that best explains NATO's war.”
NATO openly bragged about its destruction of Yugoslavia’s infrastructure, with its spokesperson Jaime Shea proudly saying in 1999 “And the fact that the lights went out in 70% of the country…we can turn the power off whenever we need to and whenever we want to.”
Between the 24th of March and 5th of June 1999, 78 industrial sites and 42 energy installations in Yugoslavia were damaged by bombing or missile strikes. The air strikes destroyed over 20 chemical and petrochemical installations, accounting for around 70% of Yugoslavia’s oil-processing capacity.
He paid the largest insider trading fine in Wall Street history. $1.8 billion. Then he got banned from managing other people's money
Four years later, he came back, started accepting outside capital again, and built Point72 into one of the biggest hedge funds on the planet. Today he manages $89 billion
Meet the banned trader from Long Island who bought the Mets and never stopped winning - Steve Cohen
Timeline:
• Grew up in Great Neck, learned to read odds playing poker in high school
• Graduated UPenn, made $8,000 profit on his first day as a junior options trader
• Launched SAC Capital in 1992 with $20 million
• Averaged 30% annual returns through the '90s and 2000s
• SAC pled guilty to insider trading. $1.8 billion fine
• Banned from managing outside money
• Converted SAC into Point72, managed only his own fortune
• Started accepting outside capital again in 2018
• Bought the New York Mets for $2.4 billion in 2020
• Today: $89 billion AUM, $21 billion net worth
Here's what Point72 is buying now:
$COHR — Coherent, a laser and optics company powering AI data centers. Up 186%
$TER — Teradyne, the robotics company that tests every chip before it ships. Up 77%
$ASML — The only company on Earth that makes the machines that make advanced chips. Up 36%
$BIIB — Biogen, the Alzheimer's drug maker most people have already forgotten. Up 34%
Long before modern kitchens, the earth itself was humanity’s original pressure cooker. Across the globe, from the deserts of the Middle East to the islands of the Pacific, cultures independently developed the art of burying food with hot stones or embers to create slow-cooked feasts for the entire community. Whether it is the Mexican Barbacoa wrapped in agave leaves, the massive Chilean Curanto layering seafood and meats, the Bedouin Zarb buried deep in the desert sand, or the Māori Hāngī steaming root vegetables under wet burlap, the engineering remains remarkably similar. The result is always meat that falls off the bone with a distinct, smoky flavor that no stainless steel appliance can replicate.
Russia’s losing streak is not coming to an end and received another episode, this time in Iraq.
The Iraqi government nationalized the stake of Russia’s Lukoil in regards to the West Qurna-2 oil field, which accounts of around 75%. This oil field produces 460,000 barrels of oil, daily. Instead Iraq‘s oil industry invited US energy giants ExxonMobil and Chevron to bid on the stake.
Iraq wants to avoid being targeted by US sanctions, throwing its former Russian business partner under the bus.
Newsday: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. vows to give patients, physicians more say in Lyme disease fight
HHS will also set up "centers of excellence" around the country to help identify new and better ways to diagnose Lyme disease, and NIH will launch a new study
https://t.co/FhKvvE60sp