YubNub Social YubNub Social
    Advanced Search
  • Login

  • Night mode
  • © 2026 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
© 2026 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

Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
2 yrs

TRUMP WOUNDED, ASSASSIN DEAD: YET ANOTHER ENGINEERED DEEP STATE STAND DOWN?
Favicon 
www.sgtreport.com

TRUMP WOUNDED, ASSASSIN DEAD: YET ANOTHER ENGINEERED DEEP STATE STAND DOWN?

from SGT Report:  TRUMP GRAZED IN THE EAR AFTER ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION AT A RALLY IN BUTLER, PENNSYLVANIA, THE WOULD BE ASSASSIN, A SNIPER ON A ROOFTOP, IS DEAD. EYE WITNESSES REPORT POSSIBLE SECRET SERVICE, LAW ENFORCEMENT STAND DOWN- JULY 13, 2024
Like
Comment
Share
RetroGame Roundup
RetroGame Roundup
2 yrs ·Youtube Gaming

YouTube
Commodore Amiga -=Grind: PvP=- Multiplayer v0.1
Like
Comment
Share
RetroGame Roundup
RetroGame Roundup
2 yrs

Heber MultiPi Raspberry Pi CM Kit
Favicon 
www.retrorgb.com

Heber MultiPi Raspberry Pi CM Kit

Heber, the creators of the MiSTer MultiSystem, have just opened pre-orders on a Raspberry Pi Compute Module-based kit.  The price starts at about $130 for a PCB-only version, up to about $260 for a fully completed unit that includes a 3D-printed case and the CM4, Model number CM4104000; Power supplies are sold separately.  There’s also […]
Like
Comment
Share
Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 yrs Politics

rumbleRumble
Ari Shaffir: The Comedian Who Gets the Most Death Threats
Like
Comment
Share
Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 yrs

Trump's Would-Be Assassin Is Identified, Here's What We Know
Favicon 
www.westernjournal.com

Trump's Would-Be Assassin Is Identified, Here's What We Know

In the wake of former president and presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump being shot at Saturday at a Pennsylvania rally, there were more than a few questions that needed to be answered. One shouldn't have been whether this was an assassination attempt -- although, President Joe Biden being President Joe Biden,...
Like
Comment
Share
The People's Voice Feed
The People's Voice Feed
2 yrs

Kremlin: Biden’s Latest Putin Insult Is ‘Absolutely Unacceptable’ For A Head Of State
Favicon 
thepeoplesvoice.tv

Kremlin: Biden’s Latest Putin Insult Is ‘Absolutely Unacceptable’ For A Head Of State

US president Joe Biden called his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin a “murderous madman” during this weeks NATO summit in Washington. On Friday Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists: “We continue to consider it absolutely unacceptable [...] The post Kremlin: Biden’s Latest Putin Insult Is ‘Absolutely Unacceptable’ For A Head Of State appeared first on The People's Voice.
Like
Comment
Share
Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
2 yrs

“There was a crunching noise, as the plane hit the tarmac, and the propellers and engines flew off, along with the odd bit of wing”: the epic life and mad musical journey of Rick Wakeman, keyboard wizard and Knight Templar
Favicon 
www.loudersound.com

“There was a crunching noise, as the plane hit the tarmac, and the propellers and engines flew off, along with the odd bit of wing”: the epic life and mad musical journey of Rick Wakeman, keyboard wizard and Knight Templar

The epic life and mad musical journey of Rick Wakeman, keyboard wizard and Knight Templar
Like
Comment
Share
The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
2 yrs ·Youtube News & Oppinion

YouTube
MUST-SEE: Glenn Beck's Instant Reaction to Trump ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT
Like
Comment
Share
The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
2 yrs

Full Circle Moment: “We Gave Their Daughter A Seat At Our Dinner Table, So They Gave Our Daughter A Seat At Theirs”
Favicon 
www.inspiremore.com

Full Circle Moment: “We Gave Their Daughter A Seat At Our Dinner Table, So They Gave Our Daughter A Seat At Theirs”

Rachel and Tom Sullivan are local celebrities around Raliegh, North Carolina. Their route to celeb status began in 2021 when they invited a college student to enjoy a home-cooked meal with them. Kevin Gallagher was seen on a viral Instagram post as he grabbed food with the Sullivans. When other students commented they wanted food too, Tom and Rachel said bring it on. They had no clue then that their generosity would lead to a wedding invitation, including their daughter. @rachsullivan__ were so happy for you Crista ! Thanks for including sutton on your special day ♬ house song – searows The Sullivans and their daughter Sutton were treated like family at Christa’s wedding. The bride’s mother ran and got the bride’s old booster seat for Sutton! On the TikTok post about the event, they posted, “We gave their daughter a seat at our dinner table, so they gave our daughter a seat at theirs.” Image from TikTok. Over the years, the Sullivans have fed thousands of college kids monthly home-cooked meals. After the first video with Kevin went viral, they put out an open invitation and had four college kids show up. Things grew from there. Any student with a college ID is welcome. They can eat there and take food to their dorms. One student even traveled ten hours from Ball State University for a meal! View this post on Instagram A post shared by Tom Sullivan (@mealssheeats) Kevin has now graduated, but the meal tradition will continue. What began as an act of generosity during COVID shutdowns has become an almost monthly event. The Sullivans will keep cooking as long as the students keep coming. The Sullivans have also written a cookbook, “Meals She Eats.” The book outlines a diet that helps patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) because Rachel has PCOS. You can follow the couple on TikTok, Instagram, and their website. Please share this with students. You can find the source of this story’s featured image here. The post Full Circle Moment: “We Gave Their Daughter A Seat At Our Dinner Table, So They Gave Our Daughter A Seat At Theirs” appeared first on InspireMore.
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
2 yrs

China’s ‘Reform’ Gathering Will Disappoint Investors Hoping for a Lifeline
Favicon 
www.dailysignal.com

China’s ‘Reform’ Gathering Will Disappoint Investors Hoping for a Lifeline

Investors have had a bumpy ride in China recently, and Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s policies have made things only worse. Some are looking to an upcoming meeting of the Chinese Communist Party leadership to set things straight, but they’ll almost certainly be disappointed. The CCP Central Committee, consisting of some 370 senior officials, will meet Monday through Thursday for their third plenary session since taking office in 2022. Since 1978, third plenum meetings have been associated with economic reforms. That year, Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping used the third plenum to advance his “reform and opening” agenda, which helped turn what was then an economic basket case into the powerhouse China is today. Although most subsequent third plenums have been less game-changing, these meetings usually focus on long-term economic priorities, making them the natural setting to present any major course correction. That’s unlikely to happen. The upcoming plenum may be consequential, but not for the reasons some hope. Rather than announcing major policy adjustments aimed at reinvigorating the private sector and spurring a new era of economic growth, this meeting probably will serve to further institutionalize Xi’s longstanding agenda. This is clear from the official communication about the event. Last month, after finalizing the agenda of the rubber-stamp plenum, China’s ruling Politburo revealed that one key deliverable will be “a resolution on comprehensively deepening reform and advancing Chinese modernization.” For those unfamiliar with party parlance, “comprehensively deepening reform” is a name that has been given to Xi’s policy agenda for over a decade. It was also the theme of his first third plenum in 2013. That plenum resulted in formation of what was called the Central Leading Group for Comprehensively Deepening Reform. This itself was a power grab, as it gave Xi policymaking powers that previously belonged to China’s premier. (In 2018, the body was strengthened and renamed the Central Commission for Comprehensively Deepening Reform.) To most observers, Xi’s approach to governance is the antithesis of reform. Indeed, while he has advanced liberalization in some economic sectors, most of the changes he’s implemented over the past decade are far from the liberal reforms desired by private businesses. But that’s not the metric by which the Chinese Communist Party gauges its success. Xi’s “reforms” arguably have made the party more powerful than ever, and the CCP views its growing influence over business as a good thing. Not only does the party see powerful corporations as threats to its monopoly on power. Decades of lax regulatory enforcement while the Chinese government focused entirely on rapid economic growth enabled risks and imbalances to fester. Left unresolved, they could spark a crisis and threaten China’s leadership. Since coming to power, Xi has sought to restructure the economic model away from a focus on quantitative growth toward what he calls “high-quality growth” that is slower but more aligned with Beijing’s strategic interests and, in the CCP’s view, more sustainable in the long term. This growth model is characterized by a focus on technological innovation, high-end manufacturing, supply chain security, and evening out the wealth gap, among other long-term efforts. This isn’t just Xi’s agenda. The leadership of the Chinese Communist Party recognized the risks inherent in their growth model long before Xi took the helm. But Xi’s consolidation of power and ruthlessness have uniquely enabled him to break through vested interests and institutional roadblocks to change the economy’s trajectory. Many of these efforts hurt businesses and depress growth in the near term, but the party leadership is willing to pay that price in hopes that it will help China escape the middle income trap and prevent even bigger problems in the future. This is where the upcoming plenum comes in. Based on what has been reported so far, a major focus will be China’s efforts to achieve technological self-sufficiency and transition into a world-leading technology power by 2035. This is an especially urgent task for the Chinese Communist Party amid tightening measures by the U.S. and other key suppliers that aim to deny Beijing access to sensitive technologies it deems essential for its economic interests and military modernization. The plenum likely will result in significant measures to promote China’s technology goals. However, like other outcomes, these measures will be light on specifics. What they mean in practice will become apparent only as they are implemented over the next several months. The plenum likely will also address risks related to China’s struggling real estate sector and heavily indebted local governments. Fiscal and tax reforms may be presented to address these problems. Among other possible developments are rural land reform, further loosening of China’s household registration system, and better integration of the country’s disparate regions into a unified market by breaking through local protectionism. These are all deep-rooted problems for which the Chinese Communist Party lacks easy solutions. If decisions announced at the plenum manage to fix some of these issues, that will be significant. But they’re not the reforms that businesses want and need. Of course, the CCP can’t afford to ignore the private sector’s plight. The party likely will announce a slew of measures aimed at improving the business environment and attracting foreign investment, which hit a 30-year low last year. The party is concerned about China’s acute economic challenges and fears that if conditions become too dire, civil unrest could result. China also needs moderately high growth to continue in order to reach its goal of becoming a “moderately developed economy” by 2035. But the Chinese Communist Party doesn’t believe a crisis is imminent. Maintaining growth and placating investors are secondary to fixing longer-term structural challenges that could eventually result in an even more serious crisis for the CCP. Thus, attempts to sweeten the deal for China’s private businesses likely will be limited and take a back seat to the “tough love” treatment the party has dealt out in recent years. Investors can hope for change, and they may even receive some pleasant surprises at the plenum. But the CCP believes it’s on the right path. And that makes a fundamental course correction highly unlikely. The post China’s ‘Reform’ Gathering Will Disappoint Investors Hoping for a Lifeline appeared first on The Daily Signal.
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 20571 out of 56670
  • 20567
  • 20568
  • 20569
  • 20570
  • 20571
  • 20572
  • 20573
  • 20574
  • 20575
  • 20576
  • 20577
  • 20578
  • 20579
  • 20580
  • 20581
  • 20582
  • 20583
  • 20584
  • 20585
  • 20586

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