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Showing posts from November, 2022

FEATURED STORY

Inside the Feeder Fetish House Fueling Online Debate

Ballistic briefcase

  This is type of discreet VIP protection solution. It looks like a normal briefcase in the hands of security guards which makes it look like they are carrying official documents & files in them, camouflaging its actual purpose. When the VIP comes under attack, the Security Guards (SPGs in this case) can quickly “unfold” the briefcase into 3 or 4 panels to form a layer of protection. The outer material of a ballistic briefcase is made up of bullet resistant material like Aramid, Kevlar or Dyneema which provides multi hit protection. It is an ingenuous, unsuspecting but a quickly deployable system used for the protection of VIPs & VVIPs.

Ancient Nazca Skull

The hair is still attached to the skull and measures 2.80m in length. It belonged to a priestess who died around 200 BC at the age of 50. National Museum of the Archaeology, Anthropology, and History (Archeology Museum UNT), Trujillo, Peru.

Mind-blowing court hearing

  May it please the court” In 1983, judge David Demers in Pinellas County was presiding over a trial of three exotic dancers charged with violating Pinellas' anti-nudity ordinance. During the trial, a dancer bent over in front of the bench to show the judge that her outfit did not expose anything too anatomical. Exotic dancers said that their shorts were too big to show what the undercover officers said they saw. The judge agreed with the dancers after they bent over.

Zambia's Tallest Building

 Did you know THE HISTORY OF FINDECO HOUSE Findeco House is the tallest building or skyscraper in Zambia with it’s 23 floors. It’s construction started in 1977 and ended in 1979. Findeco house was initially owned by a parastal company with the same name FINDECO (Finance Development Company), a parastatal under UNIP government involved in matters of Financing projects. Findeco House was one of the projects in Africa and Middle East designed by Yugoslav architects. Yugoslavia was one the 120 countries in the world that formed the Non-aligned movement – NOT in direct support to the two world blocs headed by the USSR and USA. Yugoslavia through it’s President Josip Broz Tito was a major player and exerted a lot of influence  in many countries in Africa that were fighting for independence or needed economic help. Yugoslavia was involved in a project in which structures and complexes with Yugoslav architecture were built across Africa and the Middle-East. In Zambia it was the Mulung...

Who can explain this culture to me?

 A mindblowing culture Apparently, some Faroese people have this tradition of killing thousands of dolphins in one day. They justify it as their legal rights and culture. It is about to get graphic so the viewer discretion is highly advised. It looks to me that all those European animal activists have no business coming to preach what we already do best in Africa, especially in East Africa. We preserve our biodiversity in the region of great lakes ( Rwanda, Kenya, and Tanzania). Western Europeans and their NGOs should stay home and teach their Faroese brothers about animal cruelty and poaching. They sure need help solving these issues better than we do.

Strength of a woman

 Heroin Meet the mother who held her baby out of the window of a burning apartment so the baby could breathe. Her name is Vanessa Scott, during the fire, she had slid her baby out of a fifth-floor window through the child guard bars so that she could breath and not suffocate on smoke. Firefighters scaled a ladder to pluck the 7-month-old baby and saved everyone.

World's oldest pupil dies

  World's oldest primary school pupil dies Priscilla Sitienei: 'World's oldest primary school pupil' dies aged 99 in Kenya (BBC) A 99-year-old woman, believed to be the world's oldest primary school pupil, has died peacefully at home in Kenya, her grandson has told the BBC. Priscilla Sitienei started developing health complications after attending class on Wednesday. She, and her 12-year-old classmates, had been preparing for final exams set to start next week. Ms Sitienei's story inspired a film and praise from the UN's culture and education agency, Unesco. She grew up in a Kenya occupied by the British and lived through her country's struggle for independence. She told Unesco last year that she wanted to motivate young mothers to return to school. "I wanted to show an example not only to them but to other girls around the world who are not in school, without education, there will be no difference between you and a chicken," she said. She join...