After the 9/11 attacks, the Maasai tribe of Kenya gave 14 of their most important cattle to America as aid. Read more: https://t.co/Apc0i1VNfv pic.twitter.com/vZISwku14e
— Fascinating (@fasc1nate) January 31, 2023
Wednesday, February 1, 2023
After the 9/11 attacks, the Maasai tribe of Kenya gave 14 of their most important cattle to America as aid.
Government making a Dairy Farm in Southern Ontario dump 30,000 litres of milk because they have gone over quota.
Government making a Dairy Farm in Southern Ontario dump 30,000 litres of milk because they have gone over quota.
— Bushels Per Acre (@BushelsPerAcre) February 1, 2023
Can’t donate it to a food bank, or to a hospital, or to a homeless shelter. Right down the drain so we can pay $7 per litre for milk. pic.twitter.com/xMtgv0leQx
Former FBI agent breaks down body language pet peeves
1:23 to 2:43
Some people are pacers, you know, waiting for the baby to be born, or they're waiting for the next flight, and they are pacing back and forth. What happens is the fluid inside our ears, as we move, those little hairs that are inside are sensitive to the movement of that fluid. And this is why we rock a baby to sleep. That rocking motion is then transferred as adults into walking behaviors and under stress that helps us to calm down. One of the things that happens when we pace is that we compel the feet to touch a surface over and over again. That in and of itself creates a form of novelty. The gastrocnemius muscles of the legs, the calf muscles, is also known as the second heart. When it squeezes, it's forcing blood up. This is beneficial for thinking because now you have both the real heart and the secondary heart both working together to force that blood upward. So there are actually some benefits to this, and a lot of creative people find themselves pacing because it contributes to that process.
"We are living in a CIA pharmaceutical war game."
Robert Kennedy Jr:
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 1, 2023
"We are living in a CIA pharmaceutical war game." pic.twitter.com/IDZyLKGvfL
Tuesday, January 31, 2023
Women are aggressive through non-physical means
My question is when is enough enough for a woman scorned? It was William Congreve who said, "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned." Or perhaps it was an idiom that is adapted from a line in William Congreve’s play, The Mourning Bride (1697). The line from which it came is ‘Heaven has no rage like love to hatred turned, nor hell a fury like a woman scorned.”
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