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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
47 w

Calm Amidst the Storm: Why This Might Not Be WW3 (Yet)
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prepping.com

Calm Amidst the Storm: Why This Might Not Be WW3 (Yet)

Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBjZVaONuP2M0DTnTON7GQQ/join Support the channel: paypal.me/everydayprepper www.everydayprepper.net #ukpreppers #prepping #survival #breakingnews #israel #worldnews #middleeast
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
47 w

TEST: How much radio time will I get with 30 seconds of hand cranking?
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prepping.com

TEST: How much radio time will I get with 30 seconds of hand cranking?

Get the Leehoos emergency weather radio: https://amzn.to/3TRIZdk Patreon: http://www.Patreon.com/rulethewasteland Subscribe on Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/RuleTheWasteland Get the Oupes Mega 1 to stay powered after the collapse: https://oupes.com/products/oupes-mega-1-home-backup-portable-power-station-2000w-1024wh?ref=bjvazoab Extra 5% off discount code: Rule5 The best survival fishing kit on the market: https://amzn.to/3I8OBXT Get an antibiotics pack to prepare for SHTF: https://jasemedical.com/?rstr=4315 High quality CBRN Gas Masks and filters: https://alnk.to/eDMlXLt Eric English 8550 W. Desert Inn Rd. St. 102-473 Las Vegas, NV 89117 Rate comment and subscribe...or the terrorists have won! As an affiliate seller, I earn from qualifying purchases made through my links at no cost to you
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
47 w

Lewandowski Breaks CNN’s Jim Acosta With Migrant Murder Data, Ends Interview Oddly [WATCH]
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www.rvmnews.com

Lewandowski Breaks CNN’s Jim Acosta With Migrant Murder Data, Ends Interview Oddly [WATCH]

Lewandowski Breaks CNN’s Jim Acosta With Migrant Murder Data, Ends Interview Oddly [WATCH]
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
47 w

Situation Takes A Deadly Turn After Suspect Pulls Out Baseball Bat! LEO Round Table S09E197
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Situation Takes A Deadly Turn After Suspect Pulls Out Baseball Bat! LEO Round Table S09E197

Situation Takes A Deadly Turn After Suspect Pulls Out Baseball Bat! LEO Round Table S09E197
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
47 w

Will This Be An October Surprise Could Spell Trouble For Both Kamala And Trump, Sean Parnell
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Will This Be An October Surprise Could Spell Trouble For Both Kamala And Trump, Sean Parnell

Will This Be An October Surprise Could Spell Trouble For Both Kamala And Trump, Sean Parnell
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
47 w News & Oppinion

rumbleRumble
EMERGENCY! US Government is MURDERING THOUSANDS of Americans! WE NEED HELP!
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Bikers Den
Bikers Den
47 w ·Youtube General Interest

YouTube
Lamborghini Brake Checks Biker | @Phantom_rides
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
47 w

The Great Taking: How Banks Could Legally Seize Your Assets - David Webb 9-24-2024
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The Great Taking: How Banks Could Legally Seize Your Assets - David Webb 9-24-2024

The Great Taking: How Banks Could Legally Seize Your Assets - David Webb 9-24-2024 - 9,909 views • Premiered Sept. 24, 2024 David Webb - Eddie Hobbs - Counterpoint 13 - This eye-opening conversation explores the historical roots of these changes, dating back to the 1970s, and the coordinated efforts to implement them globally. Webb shares insights from his testimony before state legislatures and the pushback he's encountered from the banking lobby. - David Webb, author of "The Great Taking," in conversation with Eddie Hobbs, discusses the alarming vulnerabilities in the global financial system and how your investments could be at risk. Expect to learn about the legal changes that have quietly transformed property rights in securities, how banks can use pooled client assets as collateral for their own trading, and the explosive growth of the derivatives market. - Webb explains the concept of "entitlement holders" versus direct ownership, and how central clearing counterparties concentrate risk in the financial system. - Get in touch: X (Twitter):   / realeddiehobbs   Newsletter: https://1215tribes.com/subscribe - FAIR USE FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES Mirrored From: https://www.youtube.com/@RealEddieHobbs
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
47 w

It’s sad, but you never know when these 15 special moments will happen for the last time
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It’s sad, but you never know when these 15 special moments will happen for the last time

As the old saying goes, there is a first and last time for everything. The sad thing is that while we often recognize when we are doing something for the first time, we usually don’t know we’re doing something for the final time until much later.You can only move forward in life, and sometimes, when you look back, you remember people, places, and things you will never experience again. It can be depressing to realize that you will never have specific experiences again or didn’t fully appreciate them when they happened. But it’s also an invitation to embrace everything you have in your life right now that one day will end.A Redditor named OK-Reporter-8728 posed a question to the AskOldPeople subforum that got many people thinking about the last times in their lives. “What’s something most people don’t realize they will never experience again in life?” the Redditor asked. The responses were a mix of bittersweet memories people shared about the last time they enjoyed the joys of childhood or spent time with a loved one.They also discussed that they never fully appreciated it when their bodies were young, strong, and beautiful or when they were parents of young children.Here are 15 things people didn’t realize they will never experience again.1. Last time that you played with your friends"Like when they live across the street and you go over to knock on the door and her mom comes to answer and you ask, can ______ come out to play? Sure you can text and call people and drive over and pick them up and go do something, but it’s not the same as asking their mom if they can come out to play.""I don't remember my last time playing with friends, but this one makes my heart ache. Whenever I watch 'Stand by Me,' the last scene when Gordie is watching all his friends walk away as you hear how their lives turned out makes me tear up every time."2. Last call from a parent"Mine was a voicemail, so I still have it since 5 years ago, and I will never delete it. Mom called to say she thought she was having a stroke.""I was the last family member to speak to my dad before he passed from cancer. Spoke to him on the phone for 20 minutes one night and he was gone the next morning."3. Pain-free movement"Enjoy your healthy young bodies while you can, because they do not last forever, no matter how well you take care of yourself."4. When time is unlimted"The feeling that time is unlimited. You reach a certain age and you realize that though you don’t know what’s left, a lot of the sand in the hourglass must be gone.""I'm 70. My dad died when he was 84, same with his father, so I'm anticipating my last year on earth will be 2038. And yes, when I was young I felt eternal and invincible. No longer. The clock is ticking and every morning I wake up, I'm grateful for another day."5. Last time you pick up your child"One day you will pick up your little boy/girl and carry them l for the very last time. Broke my heart when I heard it cause I realized it was true and I couldn't remember the last time I picked up and carried my now 24 yr old son. The night of my daughter's 13th bday, I decided I would pick her up and carry her to bed for the last time in my life. That way I would always remember it. Afterwards, I ran to my room and cried in the bathroom. Enjoy it while it lasts.""They say by the time your kid goes away to college, you will have spent 90% of the time in your life you will ever spend with them. Even typing that makes me cry - the two people I love more than anything in this world and my time with them on this earth is basically over. And I am only 50 years old. Makes carpool days of long ago seem so much more important than it seemed at the time."6. Picking up kids from school"Dropping off and picking up my kids from school. When the last time happens, you don't realize it,and that's sad.""They will never be as young as they are today. Your body and experiences will change you. Innocence will be lost and you will realize that sometimes ignorance really is bliss."7. Last time you hugged your parents"I will never get to hug my mom or my dad again. Even tho it’s something I realize, it’s still a little hard to believe."8. Making out with someone new"I was just thinking about this the other day.'Honeymoon period/new relationship energy hormones are extremely unique and as far as we know, impossible to truly replicate in a long term relationship, even a happy one with great sexual chemistry. The drug addicted feeling that makes teenagers cry and artists create is very specific. And best case scenario, in a happy death-till-us-part marriage, it’ll never come again."9. The beauty of your 20s"When I see old photos of myself, I think of what I could’ve done better if I’d had the confidence that I have now. I have no regrets, life is what it is, but to have had the confidence and be handsome and fit… My partner says I’m more handsome now though so I don’t dwell on it."10. Going to the park"The last time you take your kids to the park to play. I loved seeing them so happy and making friends at the park. Then one day they just don't want to go anymore."11. Kissing dad"Kissing your father if you’re a boy. I don’t remember the last time I kissed him, but I vividly remember the last time I almost did. I was leaving the house one day when I was around 13. I kissed my Mom as I usually did. I then turned to my Dad and started to kiss him. He prepared to receive my kiss. But then I caught myself. I smiled sheepishly, patted his face, and turned and left the house. I never kissed him again after that day."12. Seeing without glasses"Yes. The time I could read the smallest of print by simply focusing my eyes on the subject."13. Summer anticipation"Joy of summer vacation with nothing to do but hang out with friends all day and have other people feed you every meal and pay for nothing. That sweet last day of school. Few joys in the world compare to the exhilaration and possibilities of the upcoming summer."14. Feeling close to someone"At this stage in my life, after losing my wife to small cell lung cancer two years ago, I realize that I may never feel intimacy with a partner again. I know it’s possible to meet someone new after 70, but I can’t see that happening again for me. It’s a hard pill to swallow, but I guess that’s just life. You get old and things of your youth are long gone."15. The last time seeing a friend"The last time you see an old friend that becomes an acquaintance once girls enter the picture. That even though they moved to another country, you assumed that you would see them again. And you hear that they died, and you're not 100% sure that was the last time you saw them."
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
47 w

Cemetery captures a bluebird couple's beautiful family life with camera-equipped birdhouse
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Cemetery captures a bluebird couple's beautiful family life with camera-equipped birdhouse

A cemetery is usually a place we associate with the end of life, not the beginning of it, but a Pennsylvania cemetery has flipped that script entirely with a sweet 2-minute video.The Historic Easton Cemetery in the small town of Easton, Pennsylvania, has built a huge fan base with its viral footage of two bluebirds building a nest and raising a family over the course a month and a half. The cemetery shared that it had installed a birdhouse equipped with a solar-powered camera in the spring, and soon a bluebird couple showed up to check it out. Clearly deciding that the house had good bones, the couple began building a nest, bringing in twigs and arranging them in a circular pattern, with the female creating a round spot to lay her eggs. On Day 13, she laid her first egg, then another, then another and another. On Day 30, the eggs began to hatch, and for the next couple of weeks we see the mom and dad take turns bringing the babies food. It's so simple, yet completely engaging to see the nesting cycle in its entirety—48 days edited down to just a few minutes. Watch: See on Instagram The reel cut off due to time, so the cemetery posted the Part 2 video showing the fledglings leaving the nest as well: See on Instagram The birdhouse was the brainchild of Mike Pearsall, whose grandmother loved bluebirds and had birdhouses. She's buried in Historic Easton Cemetery and he built the camera-enabled birdhouse in her honor. He told WFMZ that he assumed sparrows would primarily use it, so he was thrilled when the bluebird pair showed up and claimed the house first. People can't get enough of the bluebirds and their little familyBluebirds tend to mate for life, which makes seeing this pair setting up house and caring for their babies extra special. The first day, it's almost as if they were genuinely house hunting—you could almost hear the, "What do you think, hon? Should we get it?" And then to see them working together to build their nest and feed their young was truly heartwarming.People found the videos delightfully riveting. "Thank you for sharing. This is heart happiness right here! ??""I didn't realize how fast the eggs hatch! Neat :) Beautiful birds.""How sweet they work together ??""Thank you for your beautiful reel… made me smile. I feed my cardinals and jays everyday. Never thought to do anything like this.""It’s just amazing how animals/birds instinctively know how to care for their babies." See on Instagram "I never knew they laid 1 egg each consecutive day like that… idk why but I thought it would be an all at once scenario??""I love that new life is being born in a cemetery."Birds are surprisingly fascinating to watchThere's a reason birdwatching is a thing. Humans have always found birds intriguing (they can FLY, for the love), but when the birdwatching bug gets you it can take you by surprise. The world saw a big birdwatching boom during the COVID-19 pandemic, when social distancing gave us the time and the desire for such outdoor activity. People who always wondered how "watching birds" could possibly be considered a hobby found out why people who do it love it so much. In fact, according to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 35% of Americans age 16 and older now identify as birdwatchers. @wbupalospark #springmigration2023 #wbupalospark #birdnerd But you don't even have to be an avid birder to appreciate seeing the natural cycle of a bird family. Bird's nests are usually built where it's hard for humans to see them, and even if we can, none of us have the time to sit and watch for a month and a half to see how the nest gets built, the eggs get hatched and the babies get taken care of. Stationary cameras like the one in the top of the birdhouse allow us to observe bird behavior without disturbing their habitat. Similar cameras are sometimes set up near hawk or eagle nests to help facilitate wildlife research and conservation as well as to educate the public. The more connection we have with nature, the more we understand the importance of protecting the environment and the more responsibility we tend to take to care for the Earth. Connection with nature might look like hiking through the woods, getting to know the squirrels in your backyard or witnessing the nesting cycle of bluebirds at a cemetery in Pennsylvania, but it all leads to the same place—an appreciation of the beauty and wonder of the natural world and an urge to see it thrive. You can follow Historic Easton Cemetery on Instagram.
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