YubNub Social YubNub Social
    #pvcwallcovering #waterproofdesign #shanghaimsd
    Advanced Search
  • Login
  • Register

  • Night mode
  • © 2025 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Install our *FREE* WEB APP! (PWA)
Night mode
Community
News Feed (Home) Popular Posts Events Blog Market Forum
Media
Headline News VidWatch Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore Jobs Offers
© 2025 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Group

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

Jobs

NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
50 w ·Youtube News & Oppinion

YouTube
If Harris cared about the border, she'd fix it now: Sen. Marsha Blackburn | America Right Now
Like
Comment
Share
Independent Sentinel News Feed
Independent Sentinel News Feed
50 w

Brave Women of Boise State Volleyball Refused to Play SJSU
Favicon 
www.independentsentinel.com

Brave Women of Boise State Volleyball Refused to Play SJSU

SJSU has a male posing as a woman on its volleyball team, and he is the best player. The Boise State Volleyball team forfeited the game and will not play against a male-dominant team. Biological men playing women’s sports are destroying the sports. The women have courage. Everyone supports their decision: the coaches, school, and […] The post Brave Women of Boise State Volleyball Refused to Play SJSU appeared first on www.independentsentinel.com.
Like
Comment
Share
BlabberBuzz Feed
BlabberBuzz Feed
50 w

Gavin Newsom Just Pulled A Shocking Move On California Reparations!
Favicon 
www.blabber.buzz

Gavin Newsom Just Pulled A Shocking Move On California Reparations!

Like
Comment
Share
Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
50 w

Mayflower Cigars Are Back In Stock After Another Round Of High Demand
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

Mayflower Cigars Are Back In Stock After Another Round Of High Demand

Mayflower Cigars is still skyrocketing in popularity. After selling four months of inventory within the first 36 hours of being on the market last November, the enthusiasm from Michael Knowles’ initial launch of the Daily Wire’s cigar company never slowed down.  Earlier this year, Mayflower Cigars’ top item — the 8-cigar assortment — hit the market again, and customers proved that the successful launch of Mayflower wasn’t a coincidence, selling out almost instantly! The 8-cigar assortment, which comes in a wooden Mayflower box, lets you sample four Mayflower Dawn cigars and four Mayflower Dusk cigars, making for the perfect gift for weddings, dinner parties, and the guys’ golf weekend. Cigar lovers can find the flavor best suited for them and rest assured that each cigar is handmade to perfection in Esteli, Nicaragua, and created along with designers at Oliva Cigar Co. in a factory known for producing some of the highest quality cigars in the world. But all the Mayflower Cigars hype isn’t just about the 8-cigar assortment. The company offers much more.   You can also get your hands on a beautifully made Mayflower XIKAR® Xi2 Cigar Cutter, which is designed to be both comfortable in your hand and well-balanced, ensuring that you’re able to get a perfect cut on any Mayflower premium handmade cigar whether you’re a connoisseur or just embarking on your voyage. Mayflower also offers a travel humidor to preserve your favorite Mayflower Cigars when you’re on the road.  Prefer a more specified sampler? We’ve got you covered with the 3- and 4-cigar assortments that make for a great gift for yourself or your loved one. The 4-cigar Assortment Toro and Robusto options give you two Mayflower Dawn and two Mayflower Dusk. If you prefer a medium-bodied cigar with notes of wood, coffee, and cream, you’ll love the 3-cigar Mayflower Dawn Assortment. But if you’re more into medium- to full-bodied cigars, the 3-cigar Mayflower Dusk Assortment has notes of cocoa, espresso, oak, and black pepper that will be right up your alley.  As the demand for Mayflower has kept growing so has the company’s desire to sell quality cigars to customers everywhere. That’s why Mayflower has recently started selling cigars in retail stores such as Smoke Inn, which has multiple locations in Florida, and House of Ferruzza in Bethel, Pennsylvania. The company also has plans to expand to more retail locations in the near future.
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
50 w

Battleground State With Few Electors May Punch Above Its Weight, Deliver ‘Big Blow’ To Harris Come November
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

Battleground State With Few Electors May Punch Above Its Weight, Deliver ‘Big Blow’ To Harris Come November

'Very few paths to victory that do not involve Nevada'
Like
Comment
Share
Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
50 w

Favicon 
www.classicrockhistory.com

10 Best Rock Songs About Sleep

When it comes to rock music, few themes are as universally relatable as sleep. Whether it’s the escape, the peace, or the struggle that sleep represents, rock artists across decades have captured these moments in ways that resonate deeply with listeners. In this list of the 10 Best Rock Songs About Sleep, we’ve deliberately left out songs about dreams or dreaming—though sleep and dreams are closely linked, they are distinct experiences, and we’ve already explored the best songs about dreams in a separate list. This time, we focus solely on the state of sleep itself—the solace, the yearning, and even The post 10 Best Rock Songs About Sleep appeared first on ClassicRockHistory.com.
Like
Comment
Share
The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
50 w

Stem Cells Reverse Woman’s Type-1 Diabetes–a World First
Favicon 
www.goodnewsnetwork.org

Stem Cells Reverse Woman’s Type-1 Diabetes–a World First

“I can eat sugar now,” said a woman from Tianjing, China, who recently became the first human to have their type-1 diabetes cured through a stem cell procedure. Using the patient’s own stem cells, the results offer hope of limitless treatment options for type-1 diabetes, where special insulin-producing cells were previously needed from a donor. […] The post Stem Cells Reverse Woman’s Type-1 Diabetes–a World First appeared first on Good News Network.
Like
Comment
Share
Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
50 w

Dear Diary, It’s Me, Jessica: Part 19
Favicon 
www.theorganicprepper.com

Dear Diary, It’s Me, Jessica: Part 19

Missed the other parts? Find them here: Check out Part 1 Part 2 is here. Part 3 Part 4 Part 5 Part 6 Part 7 Part 8 Part 9 Part 10 Part 11 Part 12 Part 13 Part 14 Part 15 Part 16 Part 17 Part 18 Dear Diary, It’s me, Jessica. Once Sean and Jack returned, Jack said he needed to do a RECON mission to get a better idea of what we were up against.   I didn’t even think about it.  Just out of habit, I went to follow Jack when he stopped, gave me a small grin, and said, “Not this time.  I need speed and stealth for this mission.  I move faster and quieter on my own.  Stay here with Rae, Billy, and the rest, and keep looking out.”  He nodded toward the other side of the barrier.   I actually felt a little disappointed as he left, but I knew he was right. Surprisingly, he was not gone long.  About an hour later, Jack reappeared seemingly out of nowhere, dirty and sweaty.  To Sean, he said, “Just as I thought he would.  Their military guy put four guys up on the hill, overlooking their position, as guards.  The terrain, there was not enough cover, I couldn’t get around them without risking them seeing me.” “How did you know he would put them there,” Rae asked. “It is what I would have done,” Jack replied simply.   “What about the hills on the far side of the bridge?” Sean suggested.   Jack looked to the West at the hills across the river. “Not sure my binoculars could make out much of use at that distance.” “Nate has a pair of high-power ones.  He says near spotting scope power.” “Those just might work.”  He then glanced at me and grinned, “Okay, Jessica.  It is going to be something of a hump.” And nodded to the hills on the other side of the river. “What else is new?” I grinned back. After nearly two hours of a fast walk and humping it up the hill, we came to a vantage point where we could view their position.  We both sat behind a tree next to each other.  Jack looked through Nate’s binoculars for a few minutes, then handed them to me.  The binoculars were so high-powered I had to steady them on my knee to see anything.   “What do you see?” Jack asked. After a few moments, I responded, “The wagons are set well back from our barrier.  It looks like they are in a line, so they could use them as their own barrier.  I can see some armed men behind the wagons.  Two groups of horses, six each on each side of the road.  Saddled and ready to ride if needed.  I can see rifles on them.  The rest of the horses have been unsaddled, and it looks like two groups picketed in two different areas.” “The one group is the rest of the horses we saw the armed men on.  The other is the horses that pull the wagons.” “There looks like one large white tent.  It has a stove chimney, smoke coming out of it.  There are two smaller white tents.  No chimney.  They have set up cooking fires, and a few women appear to be cooking.  I see what looks like barrels.” “What would they hold?” Looking through the binoculars, I thought for a moment. “Water.” “Right.  Let’s head back.” Entry two By the time Jack and I returned to Four Corners from across the bridge, it was late afternoon.  We were hot and sweaty from the long hump.  We first went to refill our canteens and took long pulls of cool water from them.   Sean, Rae, Daniel, and Savannah sat in front of Sean’s shack on the logs.  There were three children.   Sean explained about a half hour ago, there was a commotion at the Northern barrier.  These children were running full out from the cult, with six armed men in pursuit behind them on horseback.  The children were screaming,  “Help!” Once the children ran through the defensive trenches, the men on horseback reigned in, seeing a multitude of rifles aimed at them.  They turned and rode back to their camp at a gallop.   The two, a boy and a girl, looked about ten or eleven years old.  The other girl was in her early teens.  They had escaped from the cult and were shaky with relief.  Daniel and Savannah were looking them over for any medical issues.  Once done, Daniel motioned for Sean, Jack, and me to one side out of earshot. “I did not find any major issues, but they are slightly malnourished and underweight for their age.  The younger girl has head lice.  Savannah and I will ask around if anyone has Ivermectin, Permethrin, Benzyl alcohol, or Spinosad.  If we cannot find those, we just might have to use some of Jack’s industrial strength cleaner.  It might burn her scalp, though.  We can use some of the goat milk soap to help with that.” “They have experienced some kind of severe trauma.  I know.”  Savannah said with a strange look in her eyes.  “When we ask, they get quiet and look away.  They won’t make eye contact.  It may take some time, but they may come around and talk about what happened to them.  It will require long-term therapy.  They seem to trust Rae, though,” she said as she looked back at them.  Rae was talking with them and got them laughing.  “Their names are Samuel,  Abigail, and Sarah.  We need to make them feel safe and cared for.”   “Aye.  Get them a proper meal.  See to the girl’s lice.  We need to find them a proper bed for the night,” Sean said to Daniel and Savannah.  They took the children toward the South side to get them dinner and somewhere to sleep.   “I will need to talk with them,” Jack said with a stern tone in his voice.   “Agreed.  But they have needs to be tended to first,” Sean replied, looking after the children as Daniel and Savannah led them away.  “What did you and young Jessica find?” Sean asks, turning to Jack. Jack’s eyes seemed to be thinking for a long moment. “They are nomads.  The horses.  The wagons.  Tents.  They move from place to place, looking for resources, food, and water.  I don’t know if there are any other military members in the group aside from their military tactician.  But we would not stand a chance against armed mounted cavalry on foot even armed.  We do not have enough horses or enough people who know how to ride in combat. Me included,” Jack said with a sense of irony.   “Aye.  So what do we do? “Warfare is a question of economics, logistics, and manpower.  The economic equation is which side can produce the most military material at the lowest cost with the manpower to put it to use.  The logistic equation is which side can field that material to the battlefront and supply the manpower at the lowest cost.  In this case, we do not know how much material he has, but we know that with horses, he can field what material he has faster than we can.  We have the advantage of being on the defense.  Historically, it takes three on the offensive to overcome one on the defensive.  They do not have those numbers.  But they have the advantage of armed mounted cavalry.  He will try for a decisive win.  We need to fight for a draw, where neither they nor us wins.  Fighting for a draw versus a win will give us the advantage.  We still have some of the medium weapons and the grenade launchers but limited ammo.  He does not know that.  We don’t know if he has any medium or heavy weapons either.” “Jack, ole boy.  Methinks that is not a good feeling.” “No, Sean.  I don’t have a good feeling about it either.  We need to adjust accordingly to mitigate his win and cost him more economically, logistically or manpower to quit the field.  That could prove to be hard.” “When will he come at us?” “Maybe tonight.  First light, most likely.” “Aye.  Let’s get set up for watches and pull some from both the East and South defensive lines.  Then, put skeleton teams on those lines, everyone else to the Northern barrier before dawn.” But no attack came either during the night or at first light. Entry three It was nearly mid-morning, nearly everyone manned the Northern barrier and still nothing.  A sense of tension was in the air.    “Well, Jack,” Sean asked. Jack looked through Nate’s binoculars at the wagons in the distance.  There were several men behind the wagons, armed, facing Four Corners.  He could see the tops of the tents.  He could see smoke rising from their cooking fires.  He could see the two sets of saddled horses on the sides of the road, none of them mounted with riders.  He could see someone with their own set of binoculars looking back at him.  He handed the binoculars to Sean. “He is waiting for something,” Jack said.  He left the barrier at a slow walk, looking at the ground.  To no one, he said, “What is he waiting for?” Jack then stopped, looking toward the East.  Then, the South.  A number of the people of Four Corners who could not fight were tending to fires or bringing water up from the river for those standing guard.  The children who escaped the cult were there, helping the others where they could.  Jack looked to see Sarah, the teen girl, looking at him nervously.  After a long moment, he suddenly gave a rare smile, walked up to her, put a hand on her shoulder, and said, “Hi, honey.  Everything is going to be fine.  You’re safe.”   She smiled back. Jack then walked past to find Mr. Miller sitting on a log in front of one of the cooking fires, eating breakfast.  They talked for a few minutes when Jack suddenly turned and ran back to the Northern barrier. “Billy!  You and your father need to get the whole militia and march eastward!  Find a spot to set up an ambush!  They are trying to outflank us,” Jack shouted.   Billy gave me a quick glance in alarm, then, with his rifle in hand, ran to his dad. They both ran for their horses and galloped away for the east gate.   Jack swore a few times, very much unlike him.  He realized several of us were watching him and said simply,  “Pardon my French.”   He then looked at Sarah and sheepishly said, “Sorry for swearing.” “It’s okay. I’ve heard worse,” she replied with a small smile.   He sighed and said,“Thanks, kid.”  He then announced to those manning the Northern barrier, “Okay.  They are trying to flank us to the East with others we have not seen, likely another group armed on horseback.  I have dispatched the militia to the East.  But if they fail, we need to split our forces between the Northern barrier and the East gate.  They will come at us in a pincher movement.  We need to be ready.” Jack then began to give orders for who should remain at the Northern barrier and who should re-deploy to the East gate, taking a number of the medium machine guns and rifles with grenade launchers.  As people began to move, I walked up to Jack and asked, “You really think they are going to attack from the North and the East at the same time?” “Yes.  It is what I would have done.” Jack turned and walked off to see to defensive preparations when I noticed Sarah looking very concerned.  “It’s okay,” I told her, thinking on what Savannah said about making them feel safe and cared for. “Everything will be fine.  Jack has everything under control,” and gave her a reassuring smile. Sarah did not smile back. Diary, I am not sure how I felt about that. Entry four “They’re gone!” Rae exclaimed as she ran up to the Northern barrier shortly after daybreak. “Who’s gone,” Sean asked. “Samuel, Abigail, and Sarah.  The children from the cult!  Sometime during the night!” Sean turned to Jack as Jack put the binoculars down when Rae announced the news. “What do you make of it Jack?” Jack responded flatly, “They didn’t escape from the cult.  He staged it.  He sent them.  He sent them as spies.” Diary, I suddenly had a very bad feeling. About 1stMarineJarHead 1stMarineJarHead is not only a former Marine, but also a former EMT-B, Wilderness EMT (courtesy of NOLS), and volunteer firefighter. He currently resides in the great white (i.e. snowy) Northeast with his wife and dogs. He raises chickens, rabbits, goats, occasionally hogs, cows and sometimes ducks. He grows various veggies and has a weird fondness for rutabagas. He enjoys reading, writing, cooking from scratch, making charcuterie, target shooting, and is currently expanding his woodworking skills. The post Dear Diary, It’s Me, Jessica: Part 19 appeared first on The Organic Prepper.
Like
Comment
Share
Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
50 w

It's Official: Nasrallah, Top Hezbollah Commanders Killed in Israeli Strikes
Favicon 
hotair.com

It's Official: Nasrallah, Top Hezbollah Commanders Killed in Israeli Strikes

It's Official: Nasrallah, Top Hezbollah Commanders Killed in Israeli Strikes
Like
Comment
Share
The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
50 w

Are we ready for designer babies? CRISPR gene editing is about to unleash a new eugenics revolution
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

Are we ready for designer babies? CRISPR gene editing is about to unleash a new eugenics revolution

What if the technology that holds the promise to cure cancer also heralds an era of “designer babies”? This notion isn’t merely speculative; it’s a pressing bioethical concern that demands our attention.Traditionally, the medical industry focuses on healing. Antibiotics are doled out for infections, chemotherapy and radiation remain standard cancer treatments, and over-the-counter medications offer temporary relief from ailments like the common cold. This reactive approach implies a system designed to address health issues only after they emerge rather than attempting to cure the human body of what has long been deemed ultimately incurable: mortality. Can we cautiously explore CRISPR's healing possibilities without encroaching into eugenic-like enhancement?Yet, a “transhumanist” faction movement of scientists and futurists seeks to change all that. They propose a future in which biomedical technology doesn’t just react to disease but rather actively prevents it by going to the source: the human genome. Imagine viewing the human genome as a piece of software — a system ripe for reprogramming. The role of scientists and doctors can morph into that of an engineer to modify our very DNA, eradicating diseases like cancer before they can take root. Can ending death itself be far behind?At the heart of this ambition lies CRISPR-Cas9, a revolutionary gene-editing tool hailed as the “preferred method” for genomic modification by the National Institutes of Health. According to the NIH, it has the ability to “modify the genome ... in any region.” With CRISPR, scientists can target and eliminate genetic “malware” long before it manifests into illness. vchal/Getty ImagesUsing CRISPR to alter the human genome is largely banned under international law due to its unknown and potentially species-altering consequences. If you tamper with one part of the genome, there is no way to tell what effects that will have several generations down the line. However, the illegal work of a Chinese scientist, Dr. He Jiankui, gave the world a glimpse into the practical application of CRISPR in the immediate present. Jiankui made headlines in November 2018 when he announced the birth of twin girls, Lulu and Nana, whose genomes he had edited to become resistant to HIV. His announcement ignited a global firestorm, followed by his three-year jail sentence on charges of engaging in "illegal medical practices.” However, his illegal experiment had already opened Pandora’s box: Did the world just witness the cure for AIDS? Can his experiment be applied to other deadly and terminal diseases?Despite CRISPR’s seemingly miraculous potential to cure the incurable, it also has a shadowy side. The ability to manipulate human DNA is something that the 20th-century eugenicists could only dream of, and the 21st-century transhumanists appear eager to cloak their predecessors’ ambitions in a more palatable form."Dark Aeon: Transhumanism and the War Against Humanity" author and transhumanism analyst Joe Allen explains the dual ambitions of the transhumanist movement — to heal the broken and to “enhance” the human species into becoming stronger, smarter, and more beautiful through technology like CRISPR:There are two objectives [regarding the transhumanists] — healing and enhancement. The first step is healing. They seek to genetically engineer new therapies, such as mRNA "cures" and CRISPR gene therapies, to overcome suffering. Applications include everything from eliminating HIV and malaria to Tay-Sachs and cancer. The next step is enhancement. The dream is to engineer smarter, stronger, more beautiful human beings, whether after birth, or before birth through targeted germline mutations (sperm, ova, or zygotes). The latter creates a semi-permanent mutated bloodline. Allen references Nicholas Agar’s term “liberal eugenics” or “soft eugenics” to describe the transhumanist’s aims with CRISPR. He explains, “Rather than a totalitarian state enforcing genetic hygiene on the population, consumers in a free market will increasingly choose to "upgrade" their own biological abilities, and those of their children.”If this seems like a fringe movement, recent surveys from Pew, Cambridge, and Harvard indicate otherwise: Around a third of Americans are comfortable with the eugenics-like enhancement of tampering with the human genome to optimize for strength, intelligence, and beauty. As Allen poignantly concludes, “The idea is no longer radical.”Several key bioethical questions will grow both in importance and pertinence as resistance to this technology is broken down. The first concern is socio-economic: Will the current divide between the elites and “the rest of us” take on a genetic dimension? Allen describes this danger as the emergence of “a genetic elite — Humanity 2.0 — that exploits or displaces Humanity 1.0.” In a Huxleyan-like fashion, those who can afford to transform their germline into “alpha-plusses” will be perched on top of the unfortunate “gammas and epsilons.”Another concern is if the opposite takes shape: if our genetic tampering backfires. If, as Allen describes, “a critical mass of the population is genetically altered, but rather than becoming superhumans, they become a stylized breed of warped, dysgenic mutants,” then we, playing God, very well could become the instrument of our demise. Technology is always served on a razor’s edge. On one side is the possibility for unbelievable good and progress. On the other hand, there is the possibility of incredible and often unforeseeable damage. Can its good be harnessed without falling into its shadowy side? Can we cautiously explore CRISPR's healing possibilities without encroaching into eugenics-like enhancement? Unfortunately, history has proven that technology’s promise is served hand-in-hand with its dangers. We shouldn’t be too quick to open Pandora’s box, expecting CRISPR’s healing potential only to find the transhumanists’ hand extended to us instead — or irreversible damage to the human genome altogether.
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 10285 out of 56669
  • 10281
  • 10282
  • 10283
  • 10284
  • 10285
  • 10286
  • 10287
  • 10288
  • 10289
  • 10290
  • 10291
  • 10292
  • 10293
  • 10294
  • 10295
  • 10296
  • 10297
  • 10298
  • 10299
  • 10300

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund