In military situations not everything is shown, and that includes just how bad the situation really is. Claims of genocide are sometimes or usaully a stretch of the imagination. Also a people that experienced a genocide are unlikely to commit one themselves, especially when people seem to be craving this to happen.

Trump had a plan and he is doing it, while Liberals just hit him with false poll numbers and snake tounges.

It then comes to serving God more than self, and then watching the ego get smaller and smaller.

When you feel like you are the one to do an important job online, that only you can do it given your skills and such, and then you outperform your own expectations everyday. You know God exists.

In the case of Mandani people seem to have mixed feelings about him, and that is exactly what democracy needs more of.

Yes I have been horrified by the "Pro Palastinian Movement" but strangely it has not been a pogram. After almost two years I watched things in Canada with new eyes. This could be right out of the bible. You would think they might have read a few chapters?

๐Ÿ•ฐ️ Why 1955–1985 Feels Like a Modern Golden Age ๐Ÿ“บ Cultural Coherence - Shared media rituals: Everyone watched the same nightly news, hit sitcoms, and summer blockbusters. - Music as communal pulse: From Elvis to The Beatles to Prince, music moved culture in waves—not algorithms. - Narrative clarity: Stories felt linear, mythic, and moral—even complex ones. Ambiguity was an artistic choice, not a default. ⚙️ Technological Harmony - Analog warmth: Radios, film cameras, LPs—technology felt tactile and emotionally textured. - Innovation with mystery: Space travel, computers, and science were promising yet mystical—not yet domesticated. - Human-centered design: From the Ford Mustang to Sony’s Walkman, objects were stylish, intuitive, and built to last. ๐Ÿง  Emotional Rhythm - Time felt spacious: Fewer distractions, slower communication, more in-person connection. - Identity was embodied: You lived life unrecorded, without digital performance pressure. - Memory felt organic: Stories passed from people and photos, not platforms. This was postwar confidence blossoming into cultural expression—before speed and saturation dissolved its narrative. It wasn’t perfect, of course—many struggles were brewing—but temporally, it felt like the modern world knew itself for a while. If you’re building a temporal theory, 1955–1985 could be the center of gravity, flanked by two ruptures: one at the dawn of media acceleration, and one at the collapse into digital fragmentation. Would you like to sketch an art piece, a film, or a philosophy manifesto that uses this as its core?

into the 1950s. While early B movies were almost exclusively black and white due to budget constraints, the rise of affordable color processes like Cinecolor and Eastmancolor made it possible for low-budget productions to dabble in color. ๐ŸŽจ Color in B Movies: A Timeline - 1940s: A few B films began experimenting with two-color processes like Cinecolor. These were cheaper than Technicolor but had limited color range. - 1950s: As color technology improved and costs dropped, more B movies—especially in genres like sci-fi, horror, and Western—started using full color. - Drive-In Era: Color became a selling point for exploitation films. Posters screamed “IN COLOR!” to attract teens and thrill-seekers. - Examples: - The Blob (1958): A cult B horror film in vivid color. - Attack of the 50 Foot Woman (1958): Low-budget sci-fi with eye-popping visuals. - Roger Corman’s films: Many of his 1960s B movies used color to enhance their appeal despite tight budgets. ๐Ÿงช Why It Mattered - Color gave B films a competitive edge in crowded markets. - It helped them stand out in double features and drive-in theaters. - Even if the stories were cheesy, the visuals could be striking. So yes, while B films started in monochrome, they embraced color as soon as it became economically viable—and often used it to great effect

In my version of physics nothing might happen at faster speeds if it resembles a film at x2.

Polls Lie!

Time to warp and bend around the large protruding professor's forehead causing alarm in academic circles.