We already have a process for determining whether accusers are credible. It’s called a trial. And a jury already decided they believed E Jean Carroll. THIS is weaponization.
https://t.co/wKl1B9YX4v via @NYTimes
In 2007, a 26-year-old actor from New Delhi walked onto a Hollywood set with almost no experience.
His name was Kunal Nayyar.
He had only two acting credits to his name.
No major fame.
No guarantee of success.
Just a role in a new sitcom called The Big Bang Theory.
He played Rajesh Koothrappali — a painfully shy astrophysicist who could not speak to women without alcohol.
At first, almost nobody knew the show would become a cultural phenomenon.
Then it exploded.
Twelve seasons.
279 episodes.
Global syndication.
One of the most successful sitcoms in television history.
By the final seasons, Kunal and his original co-stars were reportedly earning around one million dollars per episode.
Forbes later ranked him among the highest-paid television actors in the world.
The kind of money most people cannot realistically imagine.
And with that kind of success usually comes a familiar transformation:
Bigger houses.
Luxury cars.
Public excess.
A life carefully curated for magazines and social media.
Kunal Nayyar went in a very different direction.
Years after The Big Bang Theory ended, he quietly revealed something unexpected during an interview.
Late at night, after dinner, when the world becomes quiet…
he opens GoFundMe.
He scrolls through fundraising pages posted by strangers.
Children needing surgery.
Families drowning in cancer bills.
Parents begging for help with treatments they cannot afford.
And sometimes, anonymously, he pays.
A chemotherapy bill disappears.
A surgery gets funded.
A debt vanishes from someone’s life overnight.
The families never know it was him.
He called it his “masked vigilante thing.”
The phrase sounded almost shy when he said it.
Like he was slightly embarrassed to even mention it publicly.
That detail matters.
Because genuine generosity rarely performs itself loudly.
And Kunal does not stop there.
Alongside his wife, Neha Kapur, he quietly funds scholarships for students from disadvantaged backgrounds.
Young people whose families could never afford university otherwise.
They also support animal charities because, as he once explained simply:
“We love dogs.”
No giant publicity campaigns.
No celebrity-branded foundation demanding attention.
No gala dinners centered around his own image.
Just quiet help.
Quietly given.
And perhaps the most revealing thing Kunal Nayyar ever said about kindness was this:
“Right now people are not happy because we are all expecting someone else to be kind.”
Then he continued:
“We are expecting a president or a politician, some leader, to come and bring us world peace. But there is no world peace if your neighbour comes to your door wanting some sugar for their tea and you lock it against them and say, get away.”
That may be the entire philosophy underneath his life.
Be the neighbor.
Open the door.
Hand over the sugar.
Because to Kunal Nayyar, money is not proof of superiority.
It is responsibility.
A tool.
A chance to reduce suffering quietly when you can.
And there is something deeply moving about the fact that he does it anonymously.
Because anonymous generosity removes ego from the equation entirely.
No applause.
No recognition.
No gratitude directed back toward him personally.
Only relief.
Somewhere tonight, a family may refresh a fundraising page and discover their child’s surgery has suddenly been paid for.
They may cry.
They may hold each other in disbelief.
They may whisper thank you into an empty room without knowing who heard them.
And somewhere else, Kunal Nayyar may already be asleep.
Not waiting for praise.
Not checking headlines.
Not needing credit.
Because for him, the point was never to be seen doing something good.
The point was simply that someone needed help…
and he could help them.
That is a very rare kind of wealth.
The kind that leaves the world lighter instead of louder.
Every single Canadian should watch this video.
CBC has uncovered YouTubers who are being paid to promote Alberta separatism.
I am angry 😡
Exposing 'faceless' YouTubers pushing Canada to join the U.S. | https://t.co/OAUocPb65G https://t.co/e7Z0jw4VxE
Canada for March recorded a merchandise-trade surplus of C$1.78 billion, the equivalent of about US$1.31 billion, Statistics Canada said. https://t.co/pDWHFl3kkd
BREAKING NEWS 🆘The daughter of U.S. Republican Senator Jay Block: 🆘
"Israel pays money to my father, and he spreads propaganda.
I am deeply ashamed of this situation. I believe my father has sold his soul to the devil.
I hope his career ends!"
The Hilton donated the ~2600 dinners that went unserved at WHCD. They freeze dried the steak and lobster for longer shelf life before giving them to 2 shelters for abused women and children. HUGE thank you to the staff that worked through the night under terrible circumstances.
Ben Cohen, co-founder of Ben & Jerry's, was arrested after confronting Robert F. Kennedy Jr. about Gaza during a hearing on Capitol Hill: “Congress sent the bombs that kill children in Gaza and paid for them with cuts to Medicaid,” he shouted before his arrest.
🚨 BREAKING: Toronto Police just seized “SMS Blasters” fake cell towers never seen before in Canada.
These portable devices hijack thousands of phones at once, blast fake bank/Canada Post texts, and knock out real service (even 911 calls).
Tens of thousands of phones hit.
Over 13 MILLION disruptions.
Three men charged 🇨🇳
• Dafeng Lin, 27, of Hamilton
• Junmin Shi, 25, of Markham
• Weitong Hu, 21, of Markham
This is next-level cyber crime on our streets. Stay alert. Never click surprise links.
#Toronto #CyberCrime #ScamAlert
The most promising longevity drug isn't a peptide or metformin. It's the Shingles vaccine.
New data shows it slows biological aging and lowers systemic inflammation for 4+ years post-shot. We are seeing a 20% reduction in new dementia diagnoses and a 25% lower risk of stroke.
Stop waiting for a magic pill. One is already on the shelf.