“¡POR FAVOR, NO DEJEN QUE MÉXICO GANE EL MUNDIAL!” 💬🇰🇷🇲🇽
Un aficionado surcoreano se volvió viral tras compartir una curiosa razón por la que, según él, el Tri no debería levantar la Copa del Mundo.
Y no, no tiene nada que ver con una rivalidad futbolística.
En un video explicó que, después de ver cómo celebran los mexicanos cada triunfo de su selección, e incluso las victorias de otros equipos que terminan favoreciendo a México, llegó a una inesperada conclusión:
“Si México gana el Mundial, el planeta entero va a explotar.”
Entre bromas, aseguró que los festejos serían tan descomunales que podrían prolongarse durante años, detener la economía e incluso provocar terremotos, tsunamis y toda clase de fenómenos alrededor del mundo.
Para rematar, lanzó una petición al resto de las selecciones:
“Por favor, por el futuro de nuestros hijos… no permitan que México gane el Mundial.”
Como era de esperarse, el video desató miles de reacciones. Muchos mexicanos respondieron que, después de escuchar esa teoría, ahora tienen todavía más ganas de ver al Tri conquistar, por fin, la ansiada Copa del Mundo. 🇲🇽🏆
Florida tried to create "Alligator Alcatraz."
The Miccosukee Tribe stood up and sued. As a result, Alligator Alcatraz was officially shut down today.
We need to thank the Miccosukee Nation for their courage and attention to this fight; this victory wouldn't have happened without their commitment to protecting our environment.
We cannot consider #AI to be morally neutral. In reality, every technical tool embodies choices and priorities through what it measures, ignores, and optimizes, and how it classifies people and situations. Ethical discernment cannot be limited to asking whether we are using a system for good or bad purposes. It must also examine how that system is designed and what vision of the human person and society is embedded in the data and models that guide it. #MagnificaHumanitas
Plants as teachers. Today I observe how graciously they do the dance of death and rebirth, going to seed and germinating again across seasons, across cycles.
Holocausto de Corazones al Sagrado Corazon de Jesus, 17th century Mexican.(Immaculate Heart of Mary; Transverberated heart of Santa Teresa; Charitable heart of San Lorenzo; Ardent heart of San Cayetano;Inflamed heart of San Ignacio;Chaste heart of San Jose, Sacred Heart of Jesus)
The future arrives with a software update and a mandatory checkbox agreeing to terms nobody reads.
Replicants may inherit the Earth, but eventually they too will be trapped in pointless customer service chats with no escape.
A bleak symmetry.
#BladeRunner#MoreHumanThanHuman
Pope Leo XIV has just released a historic manifesto on artificial intelligence, calling it the biggest challenge facing humanity today and urging robust regulation to ensure AI works for the common good, not profit.
A single Greek word: ΕΥΦΡΟΣΥΝΟΣ.
It translates to 'joyful' or 'the joyful one'. It carries a call to 'enjoy, have fun, and be cheerful'.
Our design project began with this mosaic in 2021. After a four-year break, it's returning and will continue to grow.
Now, let's examine the mosaic.
The word ΕΥΦΡΟΣΥΝΟΣ inscribed here is a masculine adjective/personification from the same root as Euphrosyne.
Euphrosyne, whose name means “mirth,” “merriment,” or “good cheer,” is one of the Three Charites, known as the Three Graces, in Greek mythology. She is especially associated with joy, cheerfulness, and delight. As one of the Charites, she belongs to a group of goddesses connected with grace, beauty, festivity, charm, and pleasure, and the Charites are often linked with Aphrodite’s divine retinue..
Ancient Antioch was founded by Seleucus I Nicator in 300 BC, eventually becoming one of the Eastern Mediterranean's major cultural and commercial centers during the Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine periods.
The mosaic was unearthed during a rescue excavation in Antioch (modern-day Turkey) and received widespread media coverage. According to archaeologist Demet Kara of the Hatay Archaeology Museum, the piece belonged on the floor of a triclinium - the banquet or dining room - of a residence in Late Antique Antioch. Based on coin finds, the house's construction dates between 276 and 337 AD. (The 3rd-century BC dating found in many online sources is wrong.)