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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

Civil War 2.0 - This Time, It's Personal
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prepping.com

Civil War 2.0 - This Time, It's Personal

In this thought-provoking video titled "Civil War 2.0 - This Time, It's Personal," we delve into the complex and often contentious issues that are dividing our society today. As tensions rise and ideologies clash, we explore the implications of a potential civil conflict in contemporary America. What are the underlying causes? How do personal beliefs and experiences play a role in this modern-day divide? Join us as we analyze various perspectives, historical parallels, and the potential consequences of a society at odds with itself. From political polarization to social unrest, we aim to foster a deeper understanding of what it means to be united or divided in today's world. Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe for more insightful discussions on pressing social issues! ❱❱❱ Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcw07-5iLuW1I1Zx-jVvspA/join ❱❱❱ PREPSTOCK 2024: https://www.prepstock.net/ ❱❱❱ PREPSTOCK 2024 SPONSORS: https://www.prepstock.net/copy-of-speakers ❱❱❱ LOCALPREPPER OFFICIAL: https://www.localprepper.net ❱❱❱ PREPPER STORE: https://www.amazon.com/shop/localprepper ❱❱❱ Snail mail: LocalPrepper P.O. Box 12 Onancock, VA 23417 ❱❱❱ We should all have preparedness focused homes that are ready for the lock downs, empty shelves, inflation and recession.❱❱❱ ❱❱❱ DISCLAIMER: - The opinions stated in this video are my own. I AM AN AMAZON AFFILIATE and SOME links are AFFILIATE LINKS also know as "Paid Links" where I make, what I think are, about two cents for every dollar you spend. It costs you nothing extra. donald trump, hoi4, heart of iron napoleon total, war life liberty and the pursuit #survival #prepper #shtf #prepardness #offgrid #nuclearwar #war #economy #survival #prepper #shtf #prepardness #offgrid #conflicted #localprepper #wwiii #russia #china #ukraine #survival #prepper #shtf #nuclear #martiallaw #wrol #newsnuclear #martiallaw #wrol #news #localprepper
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

EMERGENCY!! ? Thousands of Migrants Arrive in Small Pennsylvania Town - Dozens of Buses in City
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prepping.com

EMERGENCY!! ? Thousands of Migrants Arrive in Small Pennsylvania Town - Dozens of Buses in City

Email Signup Just in Case https://www.sustainableseasons.com/ Follow me on Twitter X Just in Case https://twitter.com/PatrickHumphre Charleroi Pennsylvania is experiencing a migrant crisis as thousands of asylum seekers arrive in the small borough. Watch Patrick Humphrey prepper news updates. “Stand firm, and you will win life.” Luke 21:19
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Don't Miss Tonight's Harvest Moon And Final Lunar Eclipse of 2024! Here's When to See It.
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www.sciencealert.com

Don't Miss Tonight's Harvest Moon And Final Lunar Eclipse of 2024! Here's When to See It.

A complicated celestial affair.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y News & Oppinion

rumbleRumble
Trump Assassination Plot: Real or Staged?
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Comedy Corner
Comedy Corner
1 y ·Youtube Funny Stuff

YouTube
30 Minutes of Maria Bamford: Special Special Special!
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Comedy Corner
Comedy Corner
1 y ·Youtube Funny Stuff

YouTube
Online Dating Is Not A Party You Want To Go To. Meghan Hanley
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

The Man Involved In Every American Conspiracy. Gov. Crimes and Conspiracies Exposed
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The Man Involved In Every American Conspiracy. Gov. Crimes and Conspiracies Exposed

The Man Involved In Every American Conspiracy. Gov. Crimes and Conspiracies Exposed - Government Crimes and Conspiracies Exposed By Firsthand Witness Directly Involved in Many of Them Personally - Globalist Banksters Brown Brothers Harriman Behind the Creation of the CIA - Who is Behind the JFK Assassination? - 464,653 views Aug. 22, 2024 Jesse Michels - Daniel Peter Sheehan is a Harvard trained constitutional and public interest lawyer, public speaker, political activist and educator: he’s been a public defender in about half of the major American Conspiracies in the last 50 years. He knows more mind blowing names, dates and timelines than anyone when it comes to: The JFK assassination, Watergate, Pentagon Papers, Iran Contra etc. - He is a walking encyclopedia. And also incredibly deep on UFOs, having represented all of the biggest whistleblowers. It was an honor to speak to him. Please enjoy this bombshell interview where he reveals the true political history of the last 50 years! - Timestamps: 0:00 - Intro 4:15 - Government UFO Disclosure 22:15 - Alien Encounters 31:53 - Remote Viewing & Scientology 45:47 - Internal Government Psy-Ops 50:37 - John Mack & Alien Abductions 53:50 - UFO's & Nukes 56:40 - UFO's, Religion, Experiencers & Psychic Ability 1:13:15 - UFO Photo for President Carter Investigation 1:29:28 - JFK and UFO's 1:36:00 - JFK Assassination 1:51:00 - Brown Brothers Harriman, FDR, Nazi Germany, and the CIA 1:59:33 - JFK Continued 2:12:20 - MK Ultra 2:15:00 - UFO's & Consciousness 2:19:20 - Watergate 2:45:20 - Karen Silkwood 2:48:15 - Epistemology and Truth 2:56:47 - Eric Walker and Robert Sarbacher - Take your personal data back with Incogni! Regain your online freedom/anonymity. It's crucial if you want to explore the truth! Use code AMERICANALCHEMY at the link below and get 60% off an annual plan: http://incogni.com/americanalchemy - Protect UFO/UAP Whistleblowers: https://newparadigminstitute.org/acti... Demand Public Hearings with UFO/UAP Whistleblowers: https://newparadigminstitute.org/acti... Urge Congress to Pass the UFO/UAP Disclosure Act: https://newparadigminstitute.org/acti... Donate to the New Paradigm Institute: https://newparadigminstitute.org/donate/ - *** AMERICAN ALCHEMY is an original series hosted by Jesse Michels that explores the frontier of science and tech. Each week, we bring you exclusive interviews with some of the leading thinkers of our time. INSTAGRAM ➤   / jessemichels   TWITTER ➤   / alchemyamerican   EMAIL/BOOKINGS ➤ usa.alchemy@gmail.com SUBSCRIBE TO OUR CHANNEL:    / channel   original music: https://open.spotify.com/artist/6LlLR... Track : Biohazard by Lesion X - mirrored - FAIR USE FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES - Mirrored From: https://www.youtube.com/@JesseMichels
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Rescue dog saves her blind sister from drowning and it was caught on video
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www.upworthy.com

Rescue dog saves her blind sister from drowning and it was caught on video

Who's a good dog? That's a question dog owners ask often just because their dogs merely exist. Of course, the answer will always and forever be, "You are!" to whatever dog you're speaking to. But some dogs take their status of good girl or good boy to a whole new dimension, elevating them from just a good dog to the goodest dog. Yes, I know goodest isn't a word, but dogs don't know that. Dogs don't speak our language and certainly don't understand the rules of grammar, but that doesn't stop them from being the best full-body-wagging companions there are, and it doesn't stop them from claiming their "goodest dog" title. Today that title goes to Caipirinha, the rescue dog who saved her blind sister after she fell into the pool.Luna is a 14-year-old blind dog who recently started to become disoriented according to her owner, Dustin. While the family was inside the house, Luna lost her orientation and fell into the pool. If you've never had a blind dog, it may be surprising to know that they can get around pretty well so long as you don't change the layout of your home or backyard set up often. When my senior dog went blind, I was shocked to see him still able to get around just fine without bumping into things, but just like Luna, as he got older he started to become disoriented and often needed to be led around by my other dog. (Sort of like a seeing-eye dog for a dog.) Thankfully, Luna also had a four-legged sister looking out for her when she lost her bearings and took an unexpected swim. Caipirinha immediately knew her big sister was in trouble and worked tirelessly to get her to the steps of the pool so she could get out. "And then when Luna gets close to the edge, Caipirinha nudges her towards the stairs, knowing that that's going to be the only way she could get out," Dustin is heard saying in the video shared by Sassy on Facebook. Caipirinha goes as far as to pull on Luna's collar once she's on the steps to help her the rest of the way out of the pool. After the terrifying incident, Luna and Caipirinha's dad installed a barrier to prevent the elderly dog from falling into the pool again. But it should be officially stated that Caipirinha wins the goodest dog award. What a good girl. The entire rescue was caught on surveillance. Watch it below: This article originally appeared on 2.9.23
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

A mother's letter on the passing of her young daughter is a must-read on grief, love and loss
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www.upworthy.com

A mother's letter on the passing of her young daughter is a must-read on grief, love and loss

Upworthy is sharing this letter from Myra Sack on the anniversary of the passing of her daughter Havi Lev Goldstein. Loss affects everyone differently and nothing can prepare us for the loss of a young child. But as this letter beautifully demonstrates, grief is not something to be ignored or denied. We hope the honest words and feelings shared below can help you or someone you know who is processing grief of their own. The original letter appeared on 1.20.22. It begins below: Dear Beauty,Time is crawling to January 20th, the one-year anniversary of the day you took your final breath on my chest in our bed. We had a dance party the night before. Your posse came over. Aunts, uncles, grandparents, closest friends, and your loving nanny Tia. We sat in the warm kitchen with music on and passed you from one set of arms to another. Everyone wanted one last dance with you. We didn’t mess around with only slow songs. You danced to Havana and Danza Kuduro, too. Somehow, you mustered the energy to sway and rock with each of us, despite not having had anything to eat or drink for six days. That night, January 19th, we laughed and cried and sang and danced. And we held each other. We let our snot and our tears rest on each other’s shoulders; we didn’t wipe any of them away. We ate ice cream after dinner, as we do every night. And on this night, we rubbed a little bit of fresh mint chocolate chip against your lips. Maybe you’d taste the sweetness.Reggaeton and country music. Blueberry pancakes and ice cream. Deep, long sobs and outbursts of real, raw laughter. Conversations about what our relationships mean to each other and why we are on this earth.This is grief in our home.We lost our first-born daughter, Havi Lev Goldstein, on January 20th, 2021, at 9:04am. She died peacefully in our bed, in our arms. She died from a cruel disease called Tay-Sachs, that strips your mind and body of every function over 12-18 months. Havi was two years, four months and sixteen days old when she died.My husband, Matt Goldstein, and I underwent preconception genetic testing for Tay-Sachs disease. We are both Ashkenazi Jewish, a population that has a higher risk for having a mutation in the gene that causes Tay-Sachs. We took our genetic testing very seriously. My testing results came back showing that I was a carrier; Matt’s results said he was not. Given the autosomal recessive nature of the disease, both parents need to be carriers for the fetus to be at risk of inheriting the disease. Months later, we were pregnant with our first child.Tragically, Matt received the wrong test, and his carrier status was mis-reported. Matt was in fact, a carrier for Tay-Sachs. 15 months into her life, we learned that our daughter, Havi, was now a victim of this fatal, progressive neurodegenerative disease. In an instant, we were transformed from being not only first-time parents, but now first-time parents of a dying child.From the date of Havi’s diagnosis, December 17th, 2019, to her death on January 20th, 2021, we followed her lead. She never spoke a word, never walked a single step. But she communicated powerfully through smiles and tears, through the brightness of her eyes and the back-and-forth movements of her head. She loved, deeply. And when you closed your eyes and listened closely, her voice was clear.Havi taught us that life can be even more beautiful and painful than we ever imagined. And when we live at the edge of that deepest beauty and deepest pain, then everything—our hearts, our world view, our community—will deepen and expand.We honored Havi’s life every Friday night with family and friends in a celebration that we called Shabbirthday. The word is a combination of Shabbat and Birthday. Havi’s favorite food, the only food that she ever crawled toward, was challah, the braided Jewish bread that we eat every Shabbat. And we knew that her birthdays would be limited to two. That was not enough. We wanted more. So we threw Havi 57 Shabbirthdays before she died. Balloons, cakes, beach walks, fancy dinners, always a challah, and beautiful songs and prayers. We didn’t pretend to be happy on these Shabbirthdays. We weren’t. We were heart broken. We didn’t throw parties to distract or numb the pain. We found moments of beauty and celebration embedded in and between our deepest pain. We knew we needed the love and support of our closest people right there with us, too. And we treated every moment as sacred, not scary. As holy, not superficial.This is grief in our home.Since Havi’s death, we continue to honor Shabbirthdays every Friday. Now, we read poems, listen to Cole Swindell’s, ‘You Should Be Here’, and close our eyes tightly to try and recall the feeling of her wrapped tightly in our arms. Sometimes it’s hard to breathe. Sometimes I don’t want to open my eyes at the end of the song. And sometimes, I feel okay. Sometimes I can even smile through the song and cuddle with our beautiful younger daughter, Kaia. Whatever the feelings are, however the anguish of grief is manifesting, I pay attention.Havi’s story is for anyone who has lost the person they love most in this world; for anyone who has watched someone they love lose their beloved; or for anyone who has yet to be touched by their own tragic loss and is open to learning about what it might feel like for them one day.For me, Havi’s death is not a one-time event. It happens over and over again every moment she is not where she is supposed to be: Picking out a mismatched set of clothes that look adorable anyway; walking into preschool with her little hand gripping my index finger; pausing between the slides and the swings for a few bites of fig bar at the playground; playing with her little sister who looks up in admiration at her god given best friend. The losses are layered and constant. And they will accrue, every day, and on every missed milestone until the day I die. I’m not sure people understand that about losing a young child.I think that the only way to be okay is to keep inviting our dead into those spaces, to keep them present in those moments where they should be. And not in a delusional way, either. Only in a way that helps us to create new memories and experiences with them since their life on this earth was so tragically short. Relationships don’t have to end when the physical ends. We don’t need to relegate them to the margins. As our therapist, Dr. Joanne Cacciatore puts it: We keep them right in the front row. From that place, they can participate actively in the life they were meant to have. And we can be proud to include them in it. And they can continue to encourage us to live a life of fullness and in service to others.Even after only one year on this earth without Havi, my relationship with her has undergone profound and deepening changes. In the same way that relationships in the world of the living require immense attention and constant adjustments, so too, do our relationships with our dead. There are moments when I can still feel the touch of Hav’s softest cheeks against mine and there are also moments when I feel far away from her. There are times when I can hear her voice in my head and in my heart and times when the silence is everywhere even though I’m begging for her to show up.A lot of this journey is a solitary one but it’s made so much easier when other people in our lives keep Havi present. This looks like so many beautiful things: Havi’s name written in the sand; outfits in the color purple; beautiful sunsets over mountains filled with wild flowers; a glass raised ‘To Hav’ before dinner begins; photographs on a bookshelf; text messages on important dates; acts of kindness in the spirit of a beautiful little girl. We do not need to ‘move on’ and we never will. We want to be joined in existing in the space where love and pain coexist for that is the space where we are closest to Hav. We, we all, can be changed forever by the power of loss. Falling into its embrace can make us more powerful, more productive, more alive, and more human. But that growth is ours to discover and cannot be rushed, or forced.I wish we were kinder to grieving people. I wish we understood that grief is not scary. Losing Havi is the worst possible thing I could have ever imagined as a new mother. It is tragic and unnatural. But what is natural is to want to keep her close to us, to want to make her proud, to want to make the world better in her name, to want other people to know and love her. Those are all natural, quite beautiful, instincts that keep grieving people feeling like they can be okay and maybe even that they can become bigger and better versions of themselves.I know my relationship with grief, and with Havi, is going to change many more times in my lifetime. I only hope that there will be more safe places to inhabit my suffering when it does.Children are not supposed to die before their parents. But they do. And they do in this country, they do in all of our neighborhoods. And there are thousands of children, and their parents, who deserve a dance party filled with deep soulful sobs, uncontrollable laughter, and the rhythm of the music keeping us all on our feet for one more day. Most importantly, they deserve to be remembered. This article originally appeared on 1.20.22
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Ryan Reynolds filmed his colonoscopy after losing a bet—it turned out to be 'lifesaving'
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www.upworthy.com

Ryan Reynolds filmed his colonoscopy after losing a bet—it turned out to be 'lifesaving'

Cancer is serious. Ryan Reynolds is not. Luckily his characteristic sense of humor—along with being true to his word—has helped shine a light on a sobering topic in a fun way. After apparently losing a bet to friend and “Welcome to Wrexham” co-star Rob McElhenney of “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” Reynolds agreed to get a colonoscopy … while broadcasting it to the entire world, of course. Reynolds is an actor famous for hilarious hijinks. From his intense fictional feud with Hugh Jackman to performing epic pranks on talk shows, he is often the best thing on the internet for a good laugh. However, he is also not one to shy away from difficult conversations, particularly when it comes to health. So raising awareness about the importance of colonoscopies was, as he quipped, “enough motivation for me to let you in on a camera being shoved up my ass.” Reynolds might have lost the bet, but his actions paid off. The procedure turned out to be lifesaving. The video shows the “Free Guy” actor getting the news that an “extremely subtle” polyp was discovered and cut out. Reynolds had previously shown no symptoms.“I’m not being dramatic,” his doctor told him. “This is exactly why you do this. You are interrupting the natural history of a disease, of something of a process that could have ended up developing into cancer and causing all sorts of problems. Instead, you are not only diagnosing the polyp, you are taking it out.”Ever the expert marketer, Reynolds smoothly slid in a quick plug for his alcohol brand, joking that “I can’t believe you pumped all that Aviation Gin into my IV. I was out like a light” before thanking the doctor. Reynolds got his colonoscopy at 45, which is the recommended age to begin routine screenings. Though it’s a preventable cancer, colorectal cancer is the third most common cause of cancer-related deaths for men and women combined, and it is predicted to be the top cancer killer for people under 50 by the year 2030. Because of the inherent invasiveness of the procedure, many people feel uncomfortable even talking about colonoscopies, let alone getting one, despite early detection being so vital. But now, thanks to Reynolds hilariously riffing on his experience, the whole thing might not seem so daunting after all.Thanks for the delightfully silly PSA, Ryan. This article originally appeared on 9.16.22
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