Itโs wildโฆ a few years ago everyone was so adamant about not falling for the lies and propaganda from man stream media, just to turn around and fall for even dumber lies and propaganda from idiotic podcasters.
After two weeks of being active on X, I understand now why our world is imploding.
Humanity was never meant to receive 10,000 strangers' half-baked thoughts before breakfast.
๐จ โI appoint my wife to run Turning Point USA if something happens to me. Erika would do a great job.โ -Charlie Kirk
Video dropped just now at the Womenโs Conference.
Take that you, demons. We have just begun to fight. ๐ฅโ๏ธ
A former CIA officer should know that there is publicly documented evidence of U.S. intelligence collection against Israel.
The "non-geologist"-"non-geographer," I suppose knows exactly as much about espionage as one would expect a non-geologist, non-geographer to know.
KIRIAKOU: โThe Israelis have always spied on the United States.โ
THEO: โDo we spy on them also?โ
KIRIAKOU: โNo, that's written in stone at the CIA.โ
THEO: โWhy can't we spy on them?โ
KIRIAKOU: โIt's a political decision that's been made in the White House.โ
@nick_matau@JohnKiriakou Operation Anarchist was revealed through the Snowden leaks. According to the leaks, U.S. National Security Agency and the UK's Government Communications Headquarters intercepted video feeds and communications from Israeli drones, aircraft, and related military systems for years.
@naflasco There are few reasons:
Folklore - some cultures have stories about circles offering protection from animals or spirits
Marking sleeping area - helps you notice tracks in the morning
Psychological comfort - humans like boundaries. A circle can make an exposed campsite feel secure
@naflasco The viral answer is: to keep scorpions, snakes, or insects away.
The less exciting reality is that a simple line in the sand doesn't reliably stop most desert animals. Scorpions can climb over it, snakes can cross it, and insects generally don't care.