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The Fourth Amendment protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures…. ICE agents don’t get to kidnap someone, from a coffee shop parking lot, without reasonable suspicion or probable cause. The Fifth Amendment guarantees due process…. Holding someone against their will while refusing to tell them why, or denying them access to contact anyone, is a constitutional violation
Virtual Ministry Archive
traffic is like insane lately a few days ago clocked 44k in ONE DAY and today its already at like 10k and has only been counting for about 6 hours lol it does not really affect me much its so one sided like I just carry on I dont like strut around or anything not like full of myself I always knew it would be popular at some point its called faith
LGBTQ+ Americans are fleeing the US in record numbers because of Trump
LGBTQ+ Americans are fleeing the US in record numbers because of Trump: The world's leading LGBTQ+ asylum assistance group is increasingly helping queer refugees avoid the U.S. too.
While nobody was looking, an octopus escaped its enclosure for the first time in three years and crawled all the way back to the ocean. On June 2, 2025, an aquarium known for its fish, seahorses, and colorful tanks had one main attraction people always came to see. The octopus. Visitors loved him because he would reach out, grab onto people, and sometimes refuse to let go until a worker offered him a snack to return to the tank. For years, everyone thought it was amazing. But after CCTV footage showed the same octopus slipping out of his enclosure and crawling across the floor toward the dock, people started looking at those old moments differently. Maybe he wasn’t being playful. Maybe every time he held onto someone, he was trying to leave. Staff used to lure him back with food, and people online began saying the snacks may have been the only thing keeping him from chasing the one thing he really wanted. Freedom. One day, while the aquarium was quiet, the octopus found a way out, slipped past the tanks, and made it all the way back toward the water. The clip went viral because it didn’t look like a random escape. It looked like something he had been waiting three years to do. Months later, the aquarium faced heavy backlash after visitors started raising concerns about the way the animals were being kept. But by then, the octopus was already gone. For three years, people thought he was reaching for attention, but maybe he was reaching for the ocean. #wholesome #animals
BREAKING: Trump’s ballroom scandal EXPLODES as Sen. Blumenthal launches official probe into alleged $352 million Secret Service money raid. The walls are closing in on Trump's gaudy and unapproved ballroom scheme. Senator Richard Blumenthal has issued an official memo to the U.S. Secret Service announcing a formal investigation into "waste, fraud, and abuse" in Donald Trump's White House ballroom project — demanding the agency hand over ALL records on the $352 million in Secret Service funds that were allegedly REDIRECTED to pay for it. This is a big deal. Blumenthal isn't some random critic — he's one of the most respected oversight voices in the Senate, and he knows the Secret Service inside and out. Remember that $352 million was specifically allocated to the Secret Service AFTER two assassination attempts on Trump. It was meant for agent training, recruitment, technology, and retention bonuses — the very resources that keep the president and his protectors safe. Instead, Trump's budget office quietly funneled it to his vanity ballroom. And it directly exposes Trump's lie. He has repeatedly claimed the ballroom would cost $400 million and be funded ENTIRELY by private donors. But reporting revealed the real cost is $600 million — with more than HALF coming from taxpayers, including this raided Secret Service money. Blumenthal's credibility on this issue is ironclad. He led the bipartisan investigation into the July 2024 assassination attempt against Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania — the probe that found a "perfect storm of stunning failure" in the Secret Service, citing systemic breakdowns in planning, communication, and coordination. He's spent years demanding the agency get MORE resources and reform, not less. So when the same senator who fought to protect Trump from assassination now discovers that Trump is RAIDING the agents' budget to build himself a ballroom — that's a five-alarm fire. The man who survived two assassination attempts is stealing from the people who saved his life to build a party room. And lying about who's paying for it. Blumenthal wants answers. The American people deserve them. Please like and share!
THE DRAG QUEEN INTERNATIONAL COURT SYSTEM IS FUCKING EVIL AND BREEDS RAPISTS IN DRESSES
I AM NOT ANTI TRANS IN ANY WAY I AM ANTI TRANSVESTITE so men that get a fetish from dressing in the opposite genders clothing all the freemasons do this once per month at their dinner clubs this is simply because I was sexually assaulted by her at age 15 in a nightclub on the dancefloor this differs drastically from people that surgically alter themselves to be their true gender for example
ALL freemasons have to be passable transvestites once a month at the grand lodge fetish and urine parties
everyone is starting to see the lies you have to be fucken so dumb to believe this shit anymore this whole fucken system is collapsing all around us and all they got is the fear of jail over everyone the masons lost this fight miserably they had the opportunity to own every one of our souls for aLL of eternity it tempted them but they fucked it all up lol were too smart this go around and too driven
He turned down $1,000,000. He said no to the Fields Medal. He walked away from Princeton and Stanford. In 1982, at age 16, he scored a perfect 42 out of 42 at the Math Olympiad. He spent 7 years alone on a problem that had defeated humanity for 98 years. Then he disappeared. His name is Grigori Perelman. And his story will leave you speechless. He was born on June 13, 1966, in Leningrad now Saint Petersburg, Russia. His father was an electrical engineer who spent evenings giving young Grisha logic puzzles and brain teasers. His mother, Lyubov, was pursuing a graduate degree in mathematics. When she saw what her son was becoming, she made a choice. She gave up her graduate studies. Entirely. To raise him. That sacrifice would echo through history. By age 10, his teachers were whispering to each other. By age 14, he was the star of a local mathematics club, an outlier even among prodigies. At 15, he attended his first summer camp run by legendary teacher Sergei Rukshin and it was the first night he had ever slept away from his mother. In 1982, at age 16, Perelman stood on a stage in Budapest, Hungary, representing the Soviet Union at the International Mathematical Olympiad. He didn't just win. He scored 42 out of 42. A perfect score. He received a gold medal and a special prize that had rarely been given before. He entered Leningrad State University that same autumn, placed immediately into advanced geometry courses. His professor, Yuri Burago, would later say: "There are a lot of students of high ability who speak before thinking. Grisha was different. He thought deeply. His answers were always correct." But here is what most people miss. Perelman was not just brilliant. He was principled in a way that made the mathematics world deeply uncomfortable. In the early 1990s, he came to the United States. He worked at NYU. He earned a prestigious Miller Research Fellowship at UC Berkeley. After proving the "soul conjecture" in 1994 — a problem that had been open for 20 years — Princeton and Stanford both offered him faculty positions. He turned them both down. He was reportedly offended that Princeton asked him for a CV. He felt his work should speak for itself. In 1995, he returned to Russia. He moved into his mother's apartment in Saint Petersburg. He took a quiet research post at the Steklov Institute of Mathematics. Then, for 7 years, he disappeared from the mathematics community entirely. Nobody knew what he was working on. He told no one. On November 11, 2002, without announcement or fanfare, a man in a small apartment in Saint Petersburg uploaded a paper to an online archive called arXiv. The title was dense and technical. The paper was short, missing huge explanations. One colleague said he seemed to believe anyone genuinely interested could simply figure it out themselves. It was the proof of the Poincaré Conjecture. The problem had stood unsolved for 98 years. Proposed by French mathematician Henri Poincaré in 1904, it asked a deceptively simple question about the shape of 3-dimensional space. Generations of the world's greatest mathematical minds had tried and failed. In 2000, the Clay Mathematics Institute had listed it as one of 7 "Millennium Prize Problems" — each carrying a reward of $1,000,000. Perelman solved it alone. In a small apartment. In 7 years of silence. It took 4 more years for the world's mathematicians to fully verify his work. One explanatory paper written by two researchers at the University of Michigan ran to 473 pages — just to explain what Perelman had already proven. In 2006, the International Mathematical Union voted to award Perelman the Fields Medal — the highest honor in mathematics, equivalent to a Nobel Prize. The president of the IMU, Sir John Ball, flew personally to Saint Petersburg to convince him to accept it. They spoke for 10 hours over 2 days. Perelman refused. He later said: "It was completely irrelevant for me. Everybody understood that if the proof is correct, then no other recognition is needed. I'm not interested in money or fame. I don't want to be on display like an animal in a zoo." On March 18, 2010, the Clay Mathematics Institute announced that Perelman had won the $1,000,000 Millennium Prize. On July 1, 2010, he rejected it. He said that mathematician Richard Hamilton, whose earlier Ricci flow work had laid part of the foundation, deserved equal credit. He refused to accept the prize alone. As of the last confirmed reports, Grigori Perelman lives quietly in Saint Petersburg with his elderly mother. He has given no interviews since 2006. A journalist who called him was told through the phone: "You are disturbing me. I am picking mushrooms." In a world that screams for attention, validation, and recognition — this man solved the greatest mathematical problem of the 20th century, refused $1,000,000, and went to pick mushrooms in the woods. His mother gave up her graduate degree so he could exist. He gave up fame and fortune so that truth could exist on its own terms. Some people change the world quietly. Then they go home.
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