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The house with 14 folded flags

He looks a lot slimmer in recent pictures.

A recent video went viral in which Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson looks far more slender and less muscular than his signature look. This doesn’t surprise me — Johnson is 53 years old, and at this point in time he has taken massive amounts of steroids for over three decades to maintain his enormous physique. That takes a toll on one’s health.

Johnson isn’t alone in this — his fellow wrestling superstar-turned-actor, Dave Bautista, has had a similar transformation in recent years. Also around his early fifties, coincidentally…

People aren’t meant to carry around the amount of muscle The Rock carries around and expect to live until 80. The steroids and HGH (human growth hormone) that many of these behemoths are on enlarge the heart and internal organs and drastically cut down someone’s life expectancy.

A ton of bodybuilders die of a heart attack in their fifties or sixties. Few former wrestlers maintain their bulk and make it to seventy like Hulk Hogan. I think The Rock’s doctor had a serious talk with him, ran some bloodworks and advised him to cut the steroids or die within the next five to ten years. Either that, or a recent health scare. All men have their peak, and the wise get out of the game on time.

Chicken in Raspberry Cream Sauce

Yield: 8 servings

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305c8e02d271b5c4d5e25d1b79d21231

Ingredients

  • 3 tablespoons butter
  • 8 chicken breasts, skinned and boned
  • 2 tablespoons oil
  • 1/2 cup raspberry vinegar
  • 1 1/4 cups chicken stock
  • 1 1/4 cups whipping cream

Instructions

  1. Dredge chicken in flour and sauté chicken in butter and oil; remove from pan and set aside.
  2. Add raspberry vinegar to pan and bring to a boil.
  3. Remove from heat and add chicken and chicken stock. Simmer for 15 to 20 minutes.
  4. Remove chicken; set aside and keep warm.
  5. Boil liquid over high heat until it has thickness to the consistency of cream.
  6. Add whipping cream and allow to thicken over medium heat.
  7. Serve over chicken.

I’m teaching my kids to analyze how the world works.

It’s easy. Opportunities are all around us. For example, I took my 12-year-old this morning to the doctor.

We were greeted by the receptionist.

“What’s her job?” I asked him.

My boy sat quietly observing the lady’s activities.

“She receives phone calls and in charge of customers who walk in.”

“Good,” I said, “Who’s her boss?”

He used his common sense, “The doctor?” He guessed.

“Well, yes,” I answered, “She works for the doctor, but her immediate boss is the lady sitting back there,” I said while pointing to the back, “She’s the doctor’s office manager.”

A nurse opened a door and called out, “Quintanilla?”

We stood up and passed to a small room where the nurse checked my son’s vitals and his weight.

“The doctor will be with you any minute now,” she smiled as she walked out.

“What’s her job?” I asked my boy.

“She’s getting me ready for the doctor.”

“That’s right, but why does the doctor need her?”

“She’s a good helper?” he answered.

“What benefit does the doctor get with her help?

“She saves him time?” He said guessing.

“Exactly! The doctor saved 10 minutes of his valuable time by having her check all your vitals.”

The doctor walked in. He greeted us and started asking questions.

He read the nurse’s report.

A few minutes later, he said, “OK, you’re good to go now, everything looks good. Take care!”

And just like that, he was gone.

“What’s his job?” I asked my boy.

“Well, Dad, he’s the doctor. He’s the one who knows about all the medicines people need to stay healthy.”

The nurse returned. She walked us back to the main office. The office manager showed me the invoice and took my payment.

“What’s her job?” I asked my boy.

My son laughed, “You told me that, Dad! She’s the office manager.”

“Ohh, that’s true, I forgot that,” I joked as we walked out of the building.

Now, to answer your question, ‘If you only had 15 minutes to sharpen your mind everyday, what should you do?’

To sharpen your mind daily, be more curious, more analytical.

You will be surprised how much you can learn by asking yourself very simple questions every place you walk in.

In a restaurant? Ask questions!

Traveling? Ask questions!

In the supermarket? Ask questions!

Be analytical… Sharpen your mind!

3200 Ships Stranded in Persian Gulf – Running out of Drinking Water and Food

Hal Turner World March 20, 2026

Persian Gulf trapped ships large
Persian Gulf trapped ships large

3,200 ships are TRAPPED in the Persian Gulf right now. Crews are running out of drinking water.

One ship called the local port authority and BEGGED for permission to dock — just to get water.

They were DENIED.   Let that sink in.

These aren’t military ships. These are commercial vessels — carrying oil, grain, electronics — with civilian crews who are now stranded with NO supplies and NO way out.

  • – 3,200 ships STUCK
  • – Crews running out of WATER
  • – Port authorities REFUSING tolet them dock
  • – Multiple ships reporting the SAME situation

For context — the Suez Canal crisis in 2021 blocked 400 ships. This is EIGHT TIMES worse. And nobody is talking about it.

They’re showing you missile interceptions and oil price charts.

They’re NOT showing you thousands of crew members slowly running out of drinking water in the middle of a war zone.

If these ships start getting abandoned, the environmental disaster alone would be catastrophic. Thousands of tons of fuel, cargo, chemicals — just sitting there.

This is not a shipping disruption. This is a HUMANITARIAN CRISIS unfolding in real time.

Excavator Unearths Ancient Rails Embedded in Stone — Estimated to Be 12,000 Years Old

Pictures

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Sir Whiskerton and The Snoring Symphony; A Tale of Nocturnal Noise, Sleep-Deprived Animals, and One Very Upside-Down Bear


Act I: The Night the Farm Stood (Awake)

A thunderous sound shook the barnyard at midnight:

“ZZZZZZRRRKKK—BWAAAAH—snort—ZZZZRRRKKK!”

  • Doris the Hen shot upright: “IS THE SKY FALLING?!”

  • Chef Remy mistook it for “ze sound of a dying baguette.”

  • Rufus the Dog slept through it, dreaming of silent squirrels.

Sir Whiskerton, squinting into the darkness: “That’s either a bear… or a chainsaw in love.”


Act II: The Great Snore Hunt

Armed with earplugs (made of cheese) and a grudge, Whiskerton followed the sound to Tony the Bear’s cave—where the bear hung upside-down like a fuzzy bat, snoring hard enough to:

  • Vibrate the barn roof (loosening 17 shingles).

  • Startle the Yodeling Fish into an accidental duet (“SNORE-YODEL-SNORE!”).

  • Make Ditto’s fur ripple like a pond in a windstorm.

Ditto, attempting to mimic the snore: “Zzz… cough… Zzz… squeak?” *(Rating: 2/10 for effort)*


Act III: The Intervention

The farm staged an emergency sleep summit:

  • Porkchop suggested “a good whack with a turnip.”

  • Bessie the Cow offered “chamomile tea laced with honey.” (Tony drank it and snored in B-flat.)

  • Lucifer the Chipmunk declared it “performance art” and tried to sell tickets.

Finally, Sir Whiskerton proposed: “Tony, sleep right-side up.”

Tony, groggy: “But… gravity feels spicy this way.”


Act IV: The Compromise

After 37 failed attempts (including strapping Tony to a hay bale with bungee cords), the solution was simple:

  • Step 1: Stuff Tony’s cave with 500 pillows.

  • Step 2: Play lullaby versions of polka music (the only thing that drowns out snores).

  • Step 3: Relocate Ditto’s echo chamber to the opposite side of the farm.

Result: The farm slept… except Rufus, who now missed the “white noise.”


The Moral of the Story

Everyone deserves rest—even if it takes a pillow fort and a polka band.


Post-Credit Scene

  • Tony starts a “Snore Choir” (auditions: “Must vibrate windows at 50 paces”).

  • Doris markets “Earplugs for the Dramatic” (made of gossip and regret).

Best Lines

  • Chef Remy: “Zis is not snoring—zis is culinary terrorism!”

  • Ditto: “ZZZ… falls over… ZZZ… falls into bucket.”

  • Sir Whiskerton: “Next time, I’m moving to the quiet farm. Oh wait—that’s a cemetery.”

Starring

  • Tony the Bear (猫熊托尼) – Gravity-defying maestro

  • Sir WhiskertonSleep-deprived detective

  • DittoFailed snore apprentice

  • RufusUnbothered king

Key Jokes

  • The Farmer trying to record the snore as a “new scarecrow alarm.”

  • Polly the Peacock mistaking it for “a mating call” and responding with screechy passion.

  • Gnomeo using the vibrations to power his “gnome-sized disco.”

P.S. For Educators

 

The End (…until Tony discovers sideways sleeping.)


Bonus:

  • Tony’s Snore Scale:

    • 1/10: Gentle breeze

    • 5/10: Tractor engine

    • 11/10: “Call the UN”

  • Ditto’s Echo Rating:

    • Original Snore: 🌪️💥

    • Ditto’s Version: ^(…peep…)

Sleep tight… if you can! 😴🐻

Pomegranate Chicken

Yield: 4 to 6 servings

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2fdc3635486964f06eb370761952169e

Ingredients

  • 2 teaspoons olive oil
  • 1 1/2 pounds skinless, boneless chicken thighs
  • 1 tablespoon cumin
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
  • 1 teaspoon turmeric
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • 1/4 cup walnuts, ground into a paste
  • 1 cup pomegranate juice

Instructions

  1. Heat oil in a large nonstick skillet. Brown chicken thighs on both sides and transfer to a plate.
  2. Add spices and chopped onion to skillet, and cook until onion has softened.
  3. Return chicken to skillet; add walnut paste and pomegranate juice. Simmer for 20 minutes, until chicken is cooked and sauce has reduced and thickened slightly.

Nutrition

Per serving: Calories 226, Calories from Fat 84, Total Fat 9.4g (sat 1.6g), Cholesterol 94mg, Sodium 104mg, Carbohydrate 11.5g, Fiber 1.5g, Protein 23.9g

Daniel Rogers

He appeared out of nowhere, bleeding profusely. I ran to help, but he stopped me. He held a small, octagon-shaped device and motioned for me to take it. I grabbed the blood-covered object and noticed its edges contained strange, otherworldly markings.”You must stop her!” The dying man coughed up blood. “The Lion must survive!” He fell, but regained his balance. “If she succeeds. Earth will undergo a hundred-year civil war. The Earth you know will never exist.”He attempted to speak again, but started convulsing, and fell face down on the concrete sidewalk. I checked for a pulse, but he had none.Absentmindedly wiping his blood off on my suitcoat, the trauma slowly began to sink in. A man died right before my eyes—a man who appeared out of thin air, like a magician.The device in my hand grew heavier, as if it were trying to get my attention. The strange markings began to glow green, then slowly flickered in a rhythmic pattern.

 

A fog-like substance billowed in from beyond the dorms and educational buildings surrounding me, blocking out the campus from my sight. It drew closer, covering the street, then the sidewalk, before engulfing me. A metallic smell overwhelmed me, and I couldn’t breathe. Then the fog vanished, and I no longer stood in the middle of my college campus, but in an empty room.

 

The device lay at my feet, but I have no memory of dropping it, and to my shock and horror, in its place, I held a shotgun. Taking a quick look around, it became clear the device had transported me from my university to this desolate room. It didn’t have any furniture. A small kitchen sat in the corner, and next to it, a tiny walled bathroom—a typical studio apartment, but one that nobody lived in for years. Cobwebs filled the corners and windows, and a thick layer of dust covered the wooden floor.

 

I took a second look at the floor. There were footprints in the dust.

 

My adrenaline pumped as I suddenly felt a presence in the room. In the shadow of the main door stood a woman with her back to me. Had she been here the whole time?

 

“Another time-cop!” She said without turning around. “Are you going to shoot me or take me in?”

 

I’ve been aiming the shotgun at the back of her head since I arrived, like I had traded places with the dead man. I’ve never shot a gun in my life, but my finger lightly pressed against the trigger, like I knew what to do.

 

“Who are you?” I asked, as I carefully relaxed my trigger finger.

 

“You don’t know? Aren’t you a time cop?”

 

“I’m a professor at Danville University.”

 

She snickered. At least I thought I heard her snicker. “Would you mind if I turn around?”

 

Something told me to say no, but instead, I only gripped my gun tighter and said yes, but told her to raise her hands. There must be a reason I’m pointing this gun at her. She is likely the assassin the man warned me about.

 

She turned. Her black hair and bold blue eyes struck me like a slap across the face. I don’t know what I expected, but it certainly wasn’t this specimen of feminine perfection.

 

I didn’t know what to say, so I just repeated my question.

 

“I’m the good guy here,” she smiled. “Why don’t you put that gun down? No one is going to kill the Chancellor today.”

 

“The Lion?”

 

She tilted her head in surprise, “His political opponents gave him that name. Now he proudly claims it for himself.”

 

“Then you must be the one.” I stared into her eyes. How could I shoot her? Even to stop a hundred-year civil war? I’m not a killer.

 

She could see the conflict in me. “If you allow me to walk out of here, you’ll return to your time. None of this matters. Just go back.”

 

I wanted to let her go. It isn’t my fight. It’s none of my business. Or is it? What if my father fights? What if he dies before having me? I won’t exist. Even if I do exist, there won’t be a Danville University. A world at war doesn’t need higher education? Everything I know will cease to exist.

 

“I can’t let you do that.”

 

She lowered her hands slightly. “You’re not a killer. I can see it in your eyes. Just let me go, and you can return to your university like nothing ever happened. All you have to do is lower the gun, and all will return to normal.”

 

Is she correct? Could everything go back to normal? What if the time cop is wrong? I don’t want to kill her. It would be easy to lower my gun. I wouldn’t be doing anything wrong. I don’t even belong here. It’s not my responsibility.

 

She grew impatient, “I’m not going to keep standing here. Either you’ll have to shoot me, or I’m leaving. It’s your choice.”

 

The device lying on the floor lit up and began vibrating. A strong desire to ask for her name overcame me, like the device had given me the idea.

 

“Before you go, tell me your name. I want to know if I’m doing the right thing.”

 

She smiled and lowered her hands. “My name is Veronica Windmiller.”

 

That name is familiar. I’ve read about her somewhere. Then it hit me. She saw the change in my eyes and tried to dash out of the room, but she was too slow. I pulled the trigger. She lay dead at the threshold of the room.

 

The fog returned, and the studio apartment evaporated, replaced by the familiar grounds of Danville University.

 

I ran to my office, frantically searching through my collection of out-of-print history books. As a professor of history, I’ve been collecting for most of my career. I found the two-hundred-year-old textbook I wanted and flipped through the pages until I came to the chapter on Chancellor Lionel.

 

I couldn’t remember much about this little-known World Chancellor. I most certainly don’t remember anything that would make me believe his assassination would cause a worldwide civil war.

 

He died of pancreatic cancer only six months into his chancellery, but before he died, he began talks with the Landnorians, the first alien race to agree to speak with us. Almost everyone credits Lionel’s successor for leading Earth to join the Union of Systems, but Lionel actually began the process.

 

I set the book on my desk. So, if Lionel hadn’t begun the talks, his successor would have dropped the ball somehow, plunging Earth into the worst war in history.

 

The history professor in me gobbled this information up, but I still hadn’t found what I needed to sleep tonight. I skimmed around until my heart jumped. The author only made a passing reference, a mere mention that an unknown hero thwarted an assassination attempt on Chancellor Lionel by a woman named Veronica Windmiller.

 

I sighed in relief. It pays to know history.

Good question Michael Boyd.

Before long, and for the second time, Trump will have to subside farmers.

In other words, Americans will pay for Trump’s tariffs and then he’ll have to use part of it to save his supporters.

And just like last time, I bet you that he makes certain that corporate farmers get the biggest cut of any and all funding.

American farmers were told by just about anyone with half a brain that Trump would screw them again and still they listened to their Orange Oracle, the Golden Turd.

American farmers are going to be buried alive in their own soybeans. They can console themselves by drinking all that unsold bourbon.

And then they can cheer those great job figures and fabulous gasoline, which Trump says is under $2 (September 2025) in some places. I think Xanadu and Fantasy Island might have been mentioned.

The economy is so freaking fabulous that the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates.

I still think that the shit will really hit the fan in about February 2026 when the retailers are only selling the tariff ridden stock that US consumers will be paying into Trump’s federal coffers.

Don’t Republican voters love the smell of taxes in the morning?

Because you’re paying an extra tax. Tariffs are just taxes with a fancier name. And even funnier still is this lovely little tax is going to go into the bank accounts of billionaires and millionaires and shareholders. And the bottomless pockets of CEOs and executives who get their cut first.

God bless America…

I’m off to buy shares in an ICE mask factory.

CBS News Ends

CBS News Radio will end a 100 year run in May. They’ve told 700 radio affiliates they’re pulling the plug.

Among them are WINS in NYC and KNX 1070 in Los Angeles.

Feminist Goes to Male Gym and Discovers Why Men Actually Lift Weights

This is actually a very good video.

ksnip 20250903 114631
ksnip 20250903 114631

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Shartsfield

Wow, a division of marines and soldiers to invade a mountainous country the size of Europe… without reliable air cover… under continuous enemy fire…
Lmfao.
Good luck with that, Donald.
Best they can do is take a few islands… under continuous enemy fire….
And good luck, too, getting them off again.

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