A frozen lake in Switzerland reveals a unique phenomenon.
Methane bubbles freeze beneath its surface, adorned with ice flowers, creating a tableau of surreal beauty.
My vagina dried up like a raisin in a blast furnace after watching this fool flail around like a meth-addicted flamingo in heels. Even my clit tried to retract into my spine for protection.
My uterus filed for divorce and joined the Taliban 😭
President Trump not taking new Air Force One back to the U.S. from NATO Summit in Turkey: "It's flying to Europe...We'll be going home by normal methods. We have it going to Europe, to a couple of bases...so the soldiers can see it because it's truly magnificent."
Your morning cup of coffee—even up to five cups a day or decaf—could be a powerful shield against chronic liver disease and liver cancer, according to a massive new decade-long study.
A groundbreaking study tracking over 354,000 participants for more than a decade has revealed that drinking coffee daily is associated with a significantly lower risk of liver cirrhosis, liver cancer, and death from liver disease.
Published in the journal Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, the research indicates that this protective effect generally increases with the amount consumed, showing strong benefits even for those who drink five or more cups a day.
Lead author Dr. Hyunseok Kim, a transplant hepatologist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, highlighted that the findings represent some of the most comprehensive long-term data on coffee’s relationship with liver health to date.
Strikingly, the study suggests that caffeine may not be the primary driver behind these protective benefits, as decaffeinated coffee drinkers experienced similar reductions in risk. Instead, researchers attribute the liver-protecting qualities to coffee's rich concentration of antioxidants, which combat cellular damage and inflammation.
This means that whether you prefer your coffee regular, decaf, black, or even slightly sweetened, maintaining your daily brew is a simple, highly effective way to naturally support long-term liver health.
source: Rogers, K. (2026). Even high amounts of coffee may lower your risk for liver disease. CNN.
And we are back at Greenland. Next is Iran, than Cuba and than Greenland again. Little bit of bitching about NATO in between. Throwing some tariffs around. and back to Greenland, Denmark. Insulting some Allies, lets send the National Guard to a blue city, shoot some protesters, Bomb Iran, and back to greenland.