@megbasham Guess who’s not on this list of nations where Christians are most persecuted?
Hint: A New Jersey sized nation who are descendants of the patriarch Jacob
I've never see Jews stringing up little girls because they wore lip gloss or jeans. I've never heard of Jewish rape gangs. I've never heard of Jews forcing their women to live every moment of their public life peering through a slit in a black sheet. Jews never blew up our buildings or beheaded Christians.
You have a problem with Israel. Fine, register your geopolitical opposition to our foreign policy with regards to Israel. But I've never been afraid of what a Jew would do to me or my daughters.
@SHEEPSLIVE These refrigerators work really well and are also quiet. When we spent summers off grid taking care of cattle we ad a Servel refrigerator and it worked really well.
@TheRealJeffMac5@Serenitee_Sam The a- holes might injure the people still sitting in the seats, so deplaning is standard to avoid other passengers being injured.
Left-wing media, angry over the convictions and sentencing of the North Texas Antifa terror cell members, claim the incident was a peaceful "protest" by activists engaging in First Amendment-protected activity.
But the jury saw the truth at trial.
Here is the body camera footage from the July 4, 2025, armed ambush attack in Alvarado, Texas by a Dallas-based Antifa cell. Read my reporting about the case and sentencing here: https://t.co/7KvehraOcs
@KarluskaP@KO888888888 I would object to the “F*ck” but agree with Trump being a great president. Did the stadium policy say what exactly they were objecting to on your shirt?
This isn’t a “mistake.” It’s a manufactured bioweapon disaster, covered up by the very people who caused it. 😱Early warnings ignored. Taxpayer dollars funneled into danger. Public debate suppressed. Lives destroyed.😡
💥Fauci belongs in prison. Prosecute the lies, the funding, the cover-up. No more immunity for the elites who played God and got caught. Americans deserve justice — starting with handcuffs for the man at the center of it all.
🔥 The full declassified files are out. Read them. Share them. Demand accountability. The truth is no longer deniable.
.@DNIGabbard just dropped the COVID nuke — full declassification exposing the deadly lies.
It’s all here. The complete 4-part document set proves a timeline of criminal deceit, backdoor U.S. funding for bioweapons research, and a ruthless cover-up that killed millions.
Fauci and his enablers knew the risks. They funded the danger at Wuhan anyway. Then they lied, censored, and orchestrated the biggest scientific fraud in history to protect themselves.
• 2016-2018: Wuhan lab ramped up synthetic biology and risky gain-of-function bat coronavirus work. U.S. diplomats sounded alarms on biosafety disasters.
• Early 2020: Fauci huddled with top officials to control the “origins” narrative and crush dissent.
• 2019-2021: WIV researchers fell ill. IC assessments split — FBI and others leaned hard toward lab leak. Fauci’s own 2012 letter eerily predicted a GOF lab accident. Internal emails show officials dodging Fauci reviews over his blatant conflict of interest. Furin cleavage site screams engineering.
Rand Paul-level bombshells: Fauci allegedly commissioned scientists to publicly trash the lab theory while they privately suspected it. CIA analysts voted 6-1 for lab leak — then flipped. Unlogged Fauci visits to CIA. Risky research approved without proper oversight. China destroyed evidence and lied for weeks.
Genetic evidence screams lab-made: suspicious S-protein tweaks and a 12-nucleotide insert. Whistleblowers say intel directly contradicted Fauci’s denials of NIH GOF funding to Wuhan via EcoHealth.
A Japanese immunologist spent 20 years proving that the chemicals trees release into the air walk into your bloodstream, hunt down your stress hormones, and arm your immune system in ways no therapist or pharmaceutical has ever matched, and most of the data has been sitting in Japanese medical journals for two decades waiting to be translated.
His name is Qing Li.
He is a clinical professor at Nippon Medical School in Tokyo and the president of the Japanese Society of Forest Medicine. The Japanese government has been funding his research since 2004, and the body of work he has produced is the reason forest bathing is now an officially prescribed clinical therapy in Japan and Korea.
The story actually starts in 1982, when the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries coined the term shinrin-yoku to describe the practice of slow, mindful walking in a forest. They did it for a practical reason.
Japan was urbanizing fast, stress-related illness was climbing, and the country had thousands of square kilometers of forest sitting unused. The idea was to give people a reason to walk into the trees... They had no idea what was actually happening to the human body during those walks until Qing Li ran the first proper experiment in 2005.
He took twelve healthy adult men on a three-day, two-night trip to a forest park. They walked for a few hours each day. Nothing strenuous. No prescribed routes or breathing exercises. They simply walked slowly through the trees, breathing the air, looking at the forest.
Li drew blood and urine samples before the trip, on the second day, on the third day, on day seven after returning home, and again on day thirty.
The numbers that came back from the lab were not what anyone expected.
The activity of a specific type of immune cell called the natural killer cell, which is the cell your body uses to hunt down cancer cells and virus-infected cells before they can spread, had jumped by roughly 50 percent during the forest trip. The actual number of natural killer cells circulating in the bloodstream had increased significantly.
Three different anti-cancer proteins that those cells produce, called perforin, granzymes, and granulysin, had all risen sharply. And the effect did not disappear when the men went home. The immune boost was still measurable on day seven and was still partially present on day thirty.
Two hours a day in a forest had upgraded the immune system for a full month.
Li ran the same experiment with women a year later and found nearly identical results. Then he ran it with a control group who took a three-day trip through an urban area with the same amount of walking, the same hotel quality, and the same diet.
The urban group showed no measurable change in natural killer cell activity at all. The forest was doing the work, not the vacation.
The mechanism turned out to be a class of airborne molecules called phytoncides. Trees produce these compounds to defend themselves against insects, bacteria, and fungi. Pine, cedar, oak, and cypress trees release them in particularly large amounts, especially in warmer weather and after rainfall.
When you walk through a forest, you are inhaling those molecules into your lungs and absorbing them through your skin, and once inside your body they appear to directly stimulate the production and activity of the very immune cells Li was measuring in his lab.
Roughly 50 percent of the health benefit of a forest walk, according to Li's data, comes from the chemistry of the air itself. The other half comes from what the forest is doing to your nervous system.
This is where it stops being only about the immune system and starts being about stress.
A separate Japanese research team measured cortisol, the body's main stress hormone, in 84 participants across 35 different forest sites. They drew samples before and after a 30-minute walk in each forest and compared them to control walks in matched urban environments. The cortisol levels of the people who walked in the forest were lower than the cortisol levels of the people who walked in the city by a significant margin. Their heart rates were lower. Their blood pressure was lower.
The activity of their parasympathetic nervous system, which is the part responsible for rest and recovery, had gone up. The activity of their sympathetic nervous system, which is the part that drives fight or flight, had gone down.
Then a researcher at the University of Michigan named MaryCarol Hunter ran the cleanest version of this experiment ever done. She recruited participants from a city and told them to take a nature pill three times a week for eight weeks.
They were free to choose the time, the place, and the duration of the nature experience, as long as it was outside, in daylight, and free of phones, conversations, and aerobic exercise. They sent her saliva samples before and after each session so she could measure cortisol changes accurately and rule out the normal daily drop in stress hormones that happens to everyone.
The result was that participants experienced a 21.3 percent drop in cortisol per hour spent in nature, with the biggest payoff happening between minutes 20 and 30 of the walk.
After that, the cortisol kept dropping, but more slowly. The threshold dose for measurable stress relief was just 20 minutes outside in something that looked and felt like nature.
What none of this means is that nature is a substitute for therapy or for medication when someone genuinely needs them. Therapy treats different things than a walk does, and Li himself has been careful in interviews to call forest bathing a complementary intervention rather than a replacement for clinical care.
But what the research has settled is that the human body has a physiological response to being among trees that operates on the same biological systems modern medicine is trying to reach with drugs and clinical protocols, and that response is fast, measurable, and free.
The strangest part of Li's work is the implication he keeps repeating in interviews. The average person now spends more than 90 percent of their life indoors. Their cortisol stays elevated. Their natural killer cells stay sluggish.
Their parasympathetic nervous system rarely gets a chance to take over. The system that was tuned by millions of years of life under a canopy of trees is being asked to run permanently inside a box made of drywall and screens.
Your body has not forgotten what it is supposed to do in a forest. It is waiting for you to walk into one.