A heroica Ilana Gritzewsky confronta a ONU
"...Eles me tocaram e me abusaram sexualmente.
Fui espancada e mutilada antes de desmaiar.
Acordei seminua com sete terroristas de pé ao meu redor, sem saber o que aconteceu comigo naqueles momentos perdidos..."
Brazil has officially entered it’s Russian joke moment.
A man is on a street corner in Moscow yelling “The president is an idiot “
Police surround him and handcuff him. They say “it is illegal to insult President Putin”
He says “You don’t understand I mean the Ukrainian president, Zelensky, he is the one I was insulting “
The police captain says “you can’t fool us, everyone knows who the idiot is”
@fpagropecuaria Sou fã do agro mas neste ponto ele está errado. Prova disso é que o preço do álcool nunca fica em 70% do preço da gasolina. Sempre muito maior.
This is one of the most incredible animations I’ve seen on X that tells the story of the Islamic ambition and mission to build their global caliphate. It is so so brilliantly done.
Whoever made this is a genius
🚨 Say “goodbye” to fertilizers.
Dr. Mariangela Hungria, a distinguished researcher at the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (EMBRAPA), has been named the 2025 World Food Prize laureate for her pioneering work in soil microbiology. Often described as the "Nobel Prize for Food," this honor recognizes her development of over 30 biological technologies that utilize natural bacteria to nourish crops. By harnessing the power of Biological Nitrogen Fixation through specific bacterial strains, Hungria has successfully replaced heavy reliance on synthetic fertilizers, drastically improving the sustainability and yields of soybean and other vital crops across South America.
The scale of Hungria’s impact is staggering, with her methods currently applied to more than 40 million hectares in Brazil alone. This agricultural revolution saves farmers an estimated US$40 billion annually while preventing the release of over 180 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions each year. Her career-long dedication at EMBRAPA has not only solidified Brazil’s status as a global agricultural leader but also provided a low-cost, eco-friendly blueprint for global food security. Her work proves that the most powerful solutions for feeding the world can be found within the soil itself.
source: World Food Prize Foundation. Dr. Mariangela Hungria Named 2025 World Food Prize Laureate for Revolutionary Work in Soil Microbiology.
Elon Musk just identified the next crisis in AI. It’s not a shortage. It’s an unusable surplus.
Musk: “By the end of this year, chip production will outpace the ability to turn chips on.”
For three years the world was starved for silicon. Every lab, every government, every company racing to secure the chips that determine who wins the AI era.
That bottleneck is ending. A new one is replacing it.
Musk: “The chips are going to be piling up and not be able to be turned on.”
Billions of dollars of the most advanced AI hardware ever built. Sitting dark. Not because the chips don’t work.
Because there isn’t enough electricity to run them.
You can’t print a power plant the way you print a chip.
The fabrication plants scaled. The grid didn’t. And now the most valuable hardware in history is about to hit a wall that no amount of capital can instantly solve.
Compute is about to become abundant. Electricity is about to become the most valuable commodity on earth.
Three years obsessing over silicon yields. Physics doesn’t care about your chip architecture if your data center can’t pull enough megawatts.
The war isn’t about who can manufacture the most silicon anymore.
It’s about who has the raw power to plug it in.
Whoever solves energy first doesn’t just win. They own the infrastructure everyone else needs to compete.
The losers stack useless chips in warehouses waiting for power that never arrives.
We built a trillion dollar engine and forgot the fuel.
That’s the AI race right now.
Another amazing Brazilian scientist, Dr. Mariangela Hungria, a microbiologist at Embrapa's soybean research center, spent decades studying bacteria that pull nitrogen from the air and feed it to plants.
The result: Brazil went from importing nitrogen fertilizer to becoming the world's largest soybean exporter — using microbes instead of chemicals.
Her work won the 2025 World Food Prize. But the real prize is the 40% reduction in synthetic fertilizer use across Brazilian agriculture.
This isn't just about soybeans. It's about a different model of agriculture: partner with biology instead of dominating it.
The Global South has something to teach the world here
Laís Vitória tem 12 anos e nasceu com surdez profunda. Desde os primeiros meses de vida, é acompanhada por uma equipe inteira que cresceu junto com ela — exames, tentativas…até que, neste ano, veio a chance do implante coclear.
A cirurgia foi feita no dia 15 de outubro e, um mês depois, no momento da ativação, algo muito esperado aconteceu: Laís ouviu a voz da mãe pela primeira vez.
Primeiro a surpresa, depois o sorriso, e logo as lágrimas — dela, da mãe e de todo mundo que estava ali.
É impossível não se emocionar com uma história que envolveu tantos anos de espera e tanta força.
Hoje, Laís segue descobrindo sons que nunca tinha conhecido, e cada reação dela lembra a beleza desses encontros que a vida entrega!
Via: razoesparaacreditar
#saude #medicina #crianca #familia #video #3os