Virtual Ministry Archive

oh everything is ok lmao


 

did not know your husband likes to be called a squaw in bed!!


 

hahaha lil fuck making sure your balls are not so heavy


 

oh nice of subway to be involved now


 

crazy the rag doll was around back then for the twink


 

did not know your husband gets super turned on by basic chips


 

nice of a guy to be so spiritual about things around him


 

its great the regal black cat let you borrow his credit card for a few days hahaha


 

seems ok is all


 

nice your new boyfriend who is an advanced plumber is into the buddha


 

nice you found these guys to garden your estate


 

did not know this is what super hockey is like but with jockstraps


 

Martín Ramírez was 36 when they locked him up. 1931. California. He had been picked up off the streets the day before. Homeless. Hungry. Confused. He spoke no English. Couldn't tell the doctors his name. Couldn't tell them where he was from. He just kept repeating one sentence in Spanish. "Me no loco. Me no loco." I am not crazy. I am not crazy. There was no translator. No investigation. No family to call. The doctors wrote: catatonic schizophrenic. He was committed to Stockton State Hospital. He would die there 32 years later. Without ever speaking English. Without ever going home. Here's how he got there. 1895. Rincón de Velázquez. A village in Jalisco, Mexico. Martín was born to a Catholic farming family. Poor. Rural. No school. He grew up watching gauchos ride the hills. Trains cross the valleys. Saints painted on church walls. By his twenties he had a small ranch. Some cattle. Some land. In 1918 he married a woman named María Santa Ana Navarro. They had three children. She was pregnant with a fourth when his world fell apart. The Mexican Revolution had bled the country dry. Then came the Cristero War. Catholics versus an anti-Church government. Soldiers burned villages. Took land. Killed priests. Martín lost his ranch. Lost everything. 1925. He kissed his pregnant wife goodbye. Took a train north. He was 30 years old. He never came back. He found work on the California railroads. Laying track in the desert. Hauling rock. Sleeping in labor camps. He couldn't speak English. Couldn't read English. Had no one to teach him. For five years he worked. Sent money home when he could. 1929. The stock market crashed. The Great Depression hit Mexican immigrants first and worst. The US deported hundreds of thousands. The ones who stayed lost everything. Martín lost his job. Couldn't find another. By 1931 he was sleeping on the streets of Northern California. Homeless. Cold. Confused. Speaking a language no one around him understood. Then the police picked him up. Once committed, leaving was nearly impossible. The diagnosis followed him forever. He had no lawyer. No advocate. No family who could come. He stopped speaking. The hospital labeled him "chronic mute." He cut off contact with Mexico. The letters home stopped. His wife thought he had abandoned them. His children grew up without a father. He grew old behind the asylum walls. Sometime in the 1930s he started to draw. He had no supplies. No paper. No paints. So he made his own. He saved everything he could find. Paper bags. Used envelopes. Postcards. Pages from books. Sheets torn off examining tables. He glued them together with potato starch from his meals, mixed with his own saliva. For paint, he chewed colored newsprint into pulp. Mixed it with mashed potatoes from his lunch. For color, crayon stubs and pencils he found in the day room. He drew the same things over and over. Mexican gauchos on horseback. Madonnas with raised hands. Trains entering long dark tunnels. The trains were huge. Dozens of cars long. Always going through tunnels. He had built tracks he would never ride. The trains in his drawings always made it through. The staff didn't know what to make of him. Most thought he was just another patient making strange marks. One nurse said later: "Many of his paintings ended in the garbage cans. None of us saw the value. It was a TB ward. He used a lot of sputum in his paintings." Most of his work was thrown out. In 1948 they moved him to DeWitt State Hospital in Auburn. Put him in the tuberculosis ward. A visiting psychology professor named Tarmo Pasto walked through one day. He saw one of Martín's drawings on the wall. He stopped. Pasto studied art made by mental patients. He recognized something nobody else had. He started collecting Martín's drawings. Brought him better paper. Crayons. Pencils. For the next 15 years, Pasto saved everything Martín made. In 1952 Pasto organized a small show at the Crocker Gallery in Sacramento. The drawings were labeled as the work of an anonymous schizophrenic patient. Not an artist. Not Martín Ramírez of Jalisco. A patient. In 1955 Pasto sent 10 drawings to the Guggenheim Museum in New York. The Guggenheim accepted them. The man who made them was still in a TB ward in California, mixing oatmeal with chewed paper to make new colors. Martín Ramírez died on February 17, 1963. Tuberculosis. The disease that filled the ward where he had drawn for 15 years. He was 68. He had been locked up for 32 years. He had never seen Mexico again. Never seen his wife again. Never met his fourth child. Buried in California. Unmarked grave. His wife died in Mexico a few years later. She never knew what had happened to him. Ten years after his death, two Chicago artists named Jim Nutt and Gladys Nilsson came across his work. They were stunned. Took the drawings to a New York gallery. 1973. First major show. With his actual name on the wall. The art world finally saw what they had. The prices climbed. 2007. American Folk Art Museum in New York. Major retrospective. Broke attendance records. 2008. US Postal Service released five commemorative stamps with his drawings on them. Only one other Mexican artist had ever been honored that way. Frida Kahlo. By the 2010s, individual drawings were selling for half a million dollars each. His grandchildren in Mexico eventually learned what had happened. He had been dead almost 50 years before his own family knew his name. Martín Ramírez. Born 1895. Died 1963. Mexican rancher. Husband. Father. Railroad worker. Patient. Painter. Drew with chewed paper and mashed potatoes on salvaged paper bags. Now in the Guggenheim. The Smithsonian. The Met. The Museum of Modern Art. Face on a US postage stamp. His crime? Being poor, brown, and unable to speak English in a country that wouldn't listen in Spanish. His legacy? Some of the most important art of the 20th century. And every drawing that ever made it out of the garbage. #MartínRamírez #OutsiderArt #MexicanArt #ForgottenStories ~Forgotten Stories


 

🍁 🍁🍁🍁🍁 Monsanto wanted its growth hormone in every glass of Canadian milk. One government scientist stood in the way and his own bosses spent 14 years trying to destroy him for it. His name was Dr. Shiv Chopra. Born in India, 1934. Came to Canada in the 1960s. PhD in microbiology. Senior scientist at Health Canada's Bureau of Veterinary Drugs. 35 years reviewing drug applications. Approve the safe ones. Reject the unsafe ones. Protect the public. For 20 years he did it quietly. Then Monsanto came knocking. A new drug. Bovine growth hormone. Brand name Posilac. Inject it into dairy cows, get 10-15% more milk. Bigger profits for the industry. Far bigger profits for Monsanto. The FDA had rubber-stamped it in 1993. Monsanto expected Canada to follow. The file landed on Chopra's desk. He started reading the science. He started finding holes. The data was thin. Long-term safety studies were missing. The cow studies that did exist showed lameness, mastitis, reproductive failure, shortened lifespans. If it was doing that to the cow, what was it doing to the milk? His recommendation: reject it. Demand real safety data. His managers had a different idea. Approve it. The Americans approved it. Why are you holding it up? Just sign off. He refused. So the pressure started. Closed-door meetings. Attempts to pull the file and hand it to someone friendlier. Gag orders don't talk to the media, don't talk to anyone. Suspensions. Reprimands. Demotions. Dead-end reassignments. He kept refusing. Two other scientists refused with him. Dr. Margaret Haydon. Dr. Gérard Lambert. Same data. Same alarm. Same answer. In 1998 the Canadian Senate launched an investigation into what was happening inside Health Canada. Chopra and his colleagues did something almost nobody does. They walked into the Senate and testified under oath. Said managers were pressuring them to approve unsafe drugs. Said industry was running the regulator. Said the system was broken. It made headlines around the world. In 1999, Health Canada rejected Monsanto's application. rBGH would not be approved. Europe banned it next. Then most of the developed world. Sit with that. One immigrant scientist in Ottawa beat one of the largest chemical corporations on Earth — and won. Then his own government fired him for winning. July 14, 2004. After 35 years of service, Health Canada fired Chopra, Haydon, and Lambert on the same day. Official reason: insubordination. Real reason: he embarrassed them in front of the country. The same year, the Prime Minister mailed him a gold watch for "illustrious service." While they were firing him. He called it comedy. He sued to clear his name. The fight took 13 years. He lost appeal after appeal. The final ruling came down in 2017. Three months later, in January 2018, he died. 83 years old. Never reinstated. Never given his pension back. Never owed an apology by anyone. But here is what they could never take back. rBGH is still banned in Canada today. Every glass of Canadian milk is still hormone-free — because one man refused to sign. And the United States? Never banned it. It's still legal there. Right now. He kept it out of Canada and they fired him. The system he fought is still pouring it into glasses across the border. So tell me below was Shiv Chopra a hero, or just a troublemaker who got what was coming to him? Pick a side. Because someone in those meetings is still telling scientists to "just sign off."


 

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The US government just ordered Anthropic to shut down its two most powerful AI models - for everyone - because of national security concerns. On Friday evening, the Trump Administration's Commerce Department issued an export control directive blocking all foreign nationals from accessing Fable 5 and Mythos 5, Anthropic's most capable AI systems. Because complying with that order while keeping the models running for everyone else was impossible to guarantee, Anthropic had to disable both models for all users worldwide. The directive arrived at 5:21pm on a Friday. No specific details were provided. Anthropic learned about it the same time everyone else did. The government's concern centres on Mythos - an AI system so capable at detecting software vulnerabilities that it has been used by US authorities to find and fix security gaps that had gone unnoticed for decades. The fear is that the same capability in the wrong hands becomes a cyberweapon. Anthropic disputes the reasoning. The company says it reviewed the jailbreak technique that triggered the order and found the same capability is already available in OpenAI's GPT-5.5 and other public models. It also warned that if this standard were applied industry-wide, it would effectively halt all new frontier AI model deployments across every company. This is the furthest-reaching government action ever taken against a commercial AI model.