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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Chris Salcedo: The bureaucracy is anti-American
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www.brighteon.com

Chris Salcedo: The bureaucracy is anti-American

Follow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos: https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Bikers Den
Bikers Den
1 y ·Youtube General Interest

YouTube
Biker Almost Taken Out by a Police Officer
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Tom Homan – Trump’s Nominee for the Border
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conservativefiringline.com

Tom Homan – Trump’s Nominee for the Border

The following article, Tom Homan – Trump’s Nominee for the Border, was first published on Conservative Firing Line. Former Director of ICE Tom Homan is the Trump Nominee for “Border Czar.” But he isn’t the only nominee being named on this Veteran’s Day. Homan is one tough cookie- he will be charged with overseeing the deportations of criminal migrants, as well as the Northern border, aviation security, and maritime security. It’s a tall … Continue reading Tom Homan – Trump’s Nominee for the Border ...
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Illuminati Call Girls (Models) Exposed
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api.bitchute.com

Illuminati Call Girls (Models) Exposed

UTL COMMENT- No comment just watch....
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

BOMBSHELL DR MIKE YEADON ADDRESS - VACCINE VICTIMS SUMMIT!
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api.bitchute.com

BOMBSHELL DR MIKE YEADON ADDRESS - VACCINE VICTIMS SUMMIT!

Dr Mike Yeadon, former Vice President of Pfizer addresses the Impfopfer Victim Summit in Vienna Austria (09/11/24), introduced by Fiona Rose Diamond of Covileaks. UTL COMMENT:- AND, THE MSM / GOVERNMENT / MEDICAL SYSTEM / DOCTORS KNOW ALL OF THIS TO BE TRUE…AND THEY STILL GO ALONG WITH IT...... CANCER ANYONE??
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

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Gavin Newsom's defiant Trump video goes viral: "We will stand firm"

California Governor Gavin Newsom's defiant message to President-elect Donald Trump has gone viral on social media. Trump's victory in Tuesday's election means Newsom, a Democrat who may have ambitions on the national stage, is once again poised to be a leading figure in his party's resistance campaign against Trump's presidential agenda. "I want our president to succeed," Newsom said in a video posted on X, formerly Twitter, on Saturday. "And our job, my job, is not to wake up every single day...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

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Gavin Newsom to meet with Biden after vowing to protect state’s progressive policies against Trump admin

California Gov. Gavin Newsom is headed to Washington this week to meet with President Biden after calling for a special session of state lawmakers to "Trump-Proof" the state’s progressive policies. A spokesperson for Newsom’s office said the Democratic governor is traveling to Washington, D.C. for a series of meetings with the Biden-Harris administration and the California congressional delegation. "Building on the progress made since President Biden took office, the Governor will advocate for...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom will spend part of week in DC as he tries to Trump-proof state policies

California Gov. Gavin Newsom plans to meet with the Biden administration this week to discuss zero-emission vehicles and disaster relief — issues that have been targeted in the past by President-elect Donald Trump. The Democratic governor is leaving for Washington on Monday and will return home Wednesday, his office said. Newsom will also meet with California’s congressional delegation. He is seeking federal approval for state climate rules, a $5.2 billion reimbursement for emergency...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

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Spirit Airlines flight attendant injured after gunfire strikes plane to Haiti

Gunfire hit a Spirit Airlines flight to Haiti on Monday, injuring a flight attendant, as the State Department warned of "gang-led efforts" to stop travel to the country. Spirit confirmed in a statement that one of its flights from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, was diverted to the Dominican Republic on Monday. It said an inspection of the aircraft showed damage consistent with gunfire. "One Flight Attendant on board reported minor injuries and is being evaluated by...
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Why didn't people smile in old photographs? It wasn't just about the long exposure times.
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Why didn't people smile in old photographs? It wasn't just about the long exposure times.

If you've ever perused photographs from the 19th and early 20th century, you've likely noticed how serious everyone looked. If there's a hint of a smile at all, it's oh-so-slight, but more often than not, our ancestors looked like they were sitting for a sepia-toned mug shot or being held for ransom or something. Why didn't people smile in photographs? Was life just so hard back then that nobody smiled? Were dour, sour expressions just the norm? Most often, people's serious faces in old photographs are blamed on the long exposure time of early cameras, and that's true. Taking a photo was not an instant event like it is now; people had to sit still for many minutes in the 1800s to have their photo taken. Ever try holding a smile for only one full minute? It's surprisingly difficult and very quickly becomes unnatural. A smile is a quick reaction, not a constant state of expression. Even people we think of as "smiley" aren't toting around full-toothed smiles for minutes on end. When you had to be still for several minutes to get your photo taken, there was just no way you were going to hold a smile for that long. But there are other reasons besides long exposure times that people didn't smile in early photographs. Why so serious? Public domainThe non-smiling precedent had already been set by centuries of painted portraitsThe long exposure times for early photos may have contributed to serious facial expressions, but so did the painted portraits that came before them. Look at all of the portraits of famous people throughout history prior to cameras. Sitting to be painted took hours, so smiling was out of the question. Other than the smallest of lip curls like the Mona Lisa, people didn't smile for painted portraits, so why would people suddenly think it normal to flash their pearly whites (which were not at all pearly white back then) for a photographed one? It simply wasn't how it was done. A smirk? Sometimes. A full-on smile? Practically never. "Mona Lisa" by Leonardo da Vinci, painted in 1503Public domain Smiling usually indicated that you were a fool or a drunkardOur perceptions of smiling have changed dramatically since the 1800s. In explaining why smiling was considered taboo in portraits and early photos, art historian Nicholas Jeeves wrote in Public Domain Review:"Smiling also has a large number of discrete cultural and historical significances, few of them in line with our modern perceptions of it being a physical signal of warmth, enjoyment, or indeed of happiness. By the 17th century in Europe it was a well-established fact that the only people who smiled broadly, in life and in art, were the poor, the lewd, the drunk, the innocent, and the entertainment […] Showing the teeth was for the upper classes a more-or-less formal breach of etiquette." "Malle Babbe" by Frans Hals, sometime between 1640 and 1646Public domain In other words, to the Western sensibility, smiling was seen as undignified. If a painter did put a smile on the subject of a portrait, it was a notable departure from the norm, a deliberate stylistic choice that conveyed something about the artist or the subject. Even the artists who attempted it had less-than-ideal results. It turns out that smiling is such a lively, fleeting expression that the artistically static nature of painted portraits didn't lend itself well to showcasing it. Paintings that did have subjects smiling made them look weird or disturbing or drunk. Simply put, painting a genuine, natural smile didn't work well in portraits of old. As a result, the perception that smiling was an indication of lewdness or impropriety stuck for quite a while, even after Kodak created snapshot cameras that didn't have the long exposure time problem. Even happy occasions had people nary a hint of joy in the photographs that documented them. Even wedding party photos didn't appear to be joyful occasions.Wikimedia Commons Then along came movies, which may have changed the whole pictureSo how did we end up coming around to grinning ear to ear for photos? Interestingly enough, it may have been the advent of motion pictures that pushed us towards smiling being the norm. Photos could have captured people's natural smiles earlier—we had the technology for taking instant photos—but culturally, smiling wasn't widely favored for photos until the 1920s. One theory about that timing is that the explosion of movies enabled us to see emotions of all kinds playing out on screen, documenting the fleeting expressions that portraits had failed to capture. Culturally, it became normalized to capture, display and see all kind of emotions on people's faces. As we got more used to that, photo portraits began portraying people in a range of expression rather than trying to create a neutral image of a person's face.Changing our own perceptions of old photo portraits to view them as neutral rather than grumpy or serious can help us remember that people back then were not a bunch of sourpusses, but people who experienced as wide a range of emotion as we do, including joy and mirth. Unfortunately, we just rarely get to see them in that state before the 1920s.
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