#Unhingedpit#f#mg
An agent's guide to Rewitched featuring:
✨A dyslexic witch
✨A magical coffee shop
✨A school of dark academia
✨Sea monsters, and
✨Family secrets
#Questpit#f#mg
An agent's guide to Rewitched featuring:
✨A dyslexic witch
✨A magical coffee shop
✨A school of dark academia
✨Sea monsters, and
✨Family secrets
The Earth was fully stocked: water to drink, soil to grow food, forests to shelter us, a sun that rises every day, a moon that moves water, and oceans that regulate the climate. Then, men invented war, debt and capitalism.
I think it's very important that we remember that it wasn’t the CEOs and billionaires who saved us during COVID-19. It was the janitors, nurses, cleaning crews, grocery and food workers with their hard, often invisible labor.
En el partido de esta noche entre Congo y Colombia en el Mundial, un hombre congoleño se quedó inmóvil durante los 90 minutos imitando el saludo del líder anticolonial congoleño, Patrice Lumumba.
Lumumba fue descuartizado y disuelto en ácido por EEUU y Bélgica en 1961 por conseguir la independencia del Congo ante el colonialismo y negarse a que los imperialistas siguieran saqueando los recursos de su pais.
Aunque los imperialistas disolvieron su cuerpo, no pudieron borrarlo de la historia, 65 años después, Lumumba sigue presente para millones de personas.
Hong Kong lawmaker Dominic Lee brilliantly exposes the hypocrisy and decay of the West:
“What moral authority does the U.S., a country ruled by the Epstein class, have over my country which has lifted 800 million people out of poverty?
What moral authority do NATO countries have who preach human rights while turning a blind eye to the Zionist genocide in Gaza?
We will not accept lectures by governments that use human rights as weapons while their own hands are stained with the blood of Palestinians and Iranians they choose to forget.”
A Black man created ranch dressing — and most people never knew.
Kenneth “Steve” Henson, born in Nebraska in 1918, was a plumber who cooked for his crew in Alaska. One day he mixed buttermilk, mayo, herbs, and spices… and ranch was born.
In 1954, he and his wife bought land near Santa Barbara and named it Hidden Valley Ranch. Guests loved the dressing so much they begged to take jars home. By 1957, stores were selling his dry mix. Orders exploded. Factories followed.
In 1972, Clorox bought the recipe and the name for eight million dollars. Ranch went nationwide. By 1992, it was America’s #1 dressing.
But the man behind it? Nearly erased.
Every salad, every wing, every fry dipped in ranch — that’s his legacy. He mattered. He was the blueprint.
. ❤️💛💚🖤
Sophie Mathibela holds her twins, Mpho (left) and Mphonyana, who made medical history when they were separated at Baragwanath Hospital on May 24, 1988. Image Source: University of the Witwatersrand, Cape Times