🔵#BRASIL🇧🇷 : Una joven de 21 años, Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas, murió tras caer de 40 metros en la "Ponte do Esqueleto" (Limeira, São Paulo).
Los operadores de la empresa "Entre Cordas" la levantaron en posición "superman" y la lanzaron al vacío .
#COMENTA#COMPARTE
THE LINE HAS BEEN CROSSED—PERMANENTLY
A black man in a red shirt is seen aggressively assaulting a woman who’s down on the ground—unleashing inhuman violence, kicking, stomping, and delivering forceful blows to the women’s face.
A small child (her son, around 2-3 years old) is right there in the fray—crying, trying to intervene by kicking or pushing at the attacker’s legs in a desperate helpless attempt to defend his mother and stop the violence.
This is pure degeneracy, vicious, brutal, and barbaric criminal behavior that is utterly unacceptable and has no place in any civilized society.
Individuals capable of such savagery do NOT belong among us.
REMIGRATION—NOW.
Every possession you own captures a slice of your attention.
Spartans, Samurai, Stoics, Mongol warriors, and monastic scholars all practiced the same thing: they removed everything that distracted them from what mattered most.
You lose a shirt in a cluttered closet, scratch your watch on the way out, trip over unopened packages by the door, and spend your commute thinking about all of it instead of preparing for the day.
"Thinking about things" is the real cost of ownership.
Each object becomes a micro-task competing for cognitive bandwidth before you've even started your actual work.
Cognitive Load: The Science
Psychologist John Sweller's research on cognitive load explains why.
Your brain has finite working memory, like RAM in a computer.
Overload it, and everything slows: focus degrades, creativity stalls, decisions get worse.
The prefrontal cortex, your cognitive command center, has a hard capacity ceiling. Every irrelevant possession unnecessarily spikes that load.
Possessions Block Flow State
Flow, the optimal state of consciousness, requires all of your attention focused on the present moment.
Possessions work against this by fragmenting that attention.
A pair of pants might take 10 seconds of daily thought.
A Rolex could demand 10 minutes.
A house can absorb a full hour.
Across the average American household (roughly 300,000 items), the cumulative cognitive tax is enormous.
Your Default Mode Network, responsible for creative insight during idle moments, gets choked when it's processing possession-related noise instead of generating ideas.
How to Apply Minimalism for Flow
Step 1: Find Your Minimalist Sweet Spot
Tier 1 (Aggressive): Own only what advances your craft. Everything fits in a backpack.
Tier 2 (Tempered): Balance comfort and flow. Small, efficient home with multi-functional items.
Tier 3 (Mild): Each item chosen with intention. Winston Churchill operated here, surrounding himself with books, paintings, and artifacts that fueled his thinking.
Step 2: Run a Possession Purge
Block off a full day, gather everything you own into one room, and sort each item into keep or cut.
Aggressive filter: "Is this a tool that advances my craft?"
Less aggressive filter: "Is what I assume I'll get from this worth the cost of ownership?"
If it's not an obvious "yes," the number of considerations that flood your mind reveals the cognitive weight of that item.
Step 3: Maintain It
Performance maximalists: Remove something for everything you bring in.
Less extreme: Before any purchase, ask: "Is acquiring this worth the temporary neurochemical reward it brings?"
Backup: Run an annual purge to reset.
What Changes Now
Minimalism drives flow by reducing cognitive load.
Flow drives minimalism by making work intrinsically rewarding, so you want less stuff.
That loop compounds over time.
Minimalism in possessions leads to maximalism in performance.
More on this in the article below.
- Rian
🇦🇪🏜️ BREAKING: Dubai largely emptied. Foreign residents gone. Only laborers remain.
The glittering city. The global playground. The safe haven.
Now empty. The war came. The rich left. The workers stayed.
This is the truth the postcards never show.
When the bombs fall, the billionaires fly. The ones who built the towers stay. They sweep. They serve. They survive. Or not.
Dubai without its foreigners is just a desert with tall buildings. Empty malls. Silent streets. Waiting workers.
The empire's playground becomes a ghost town. The laborers become the only proof anyone was ever there.
The war reached the Gulf. The party is over. The workers remain. As always.
The world is seeing the other Dubai. The one the brochures leave out.
Empty towers. Full graves. The same story everywhere.
This one made me shake.
Young German girl is surrounded by blacks & browns.
She sobs and pleads while they take turns abusing her and spitting in her face.
She is completely helpless & they enjoy t*rturing her as a group. She was found st*bbed 30 times and dumped shortly after this video.
Who really won WW2?
We killed the Germans "so we wouldn't have to speak German", then we abandoned them to live like this.
All of Europe now lives like this.
Is this a win for America?
What if we would have minded our own fkng business?
I GAVE GEMINI MY BIRTH DATE AND TIME
It broke down my entire life with unsettling precision.
No horoscopes. No tarot. Just pure artificial intelligence.
Here are 7 prompts you should try:
This speech by Nazi leader Joseph Goebbels was so intense that it literally boosted the morale of the Nazi army to its peak.
His speech made people go crazy.
He was one of the most trusted people close to Adolf Hitler.
Just listened to the intensity in his speech.