Anonymous ID: 90b4c6 July 25, 2022, 10:56 a.m. No.16804007   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4034 >>4039 >>4091

https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/19258975/tourists-athlete-eaten-by-bears-helicopter-crash/

THE bodies of two wealthy tourists and an ex-athlete were horrifically dragged away and eaten by bears after they died in a helicopter crash.

Former biathlon star Igor Malinovskii, 25, was piloting the Robinson chopper in Kamchatka, Russia, when it plummeted to the ground.

Anonymous ID: 90b4c6 July 25, 2022, 11 a.m. No.16804035   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Experience the real Babylon Berlin of the 1920's. AI enhanced with deep learning techniques.

From dawn until dusk in three minutes. Berlin of the Weimar Republic was a multi-cultural city.

Teeming with flappers,bobbed hair,cloche hats, and the dancing girls of Berlin's infamous Cabaret scene.

 

By 1924, post WW1 Germany's economy had stabilized and crime began to decline. This era was known as the "Golden Years" of Weimar. Berlin in particular saw a cultural explosion.

The 1929 Crash and Great Depression which followed it, saw an end to democracy and the rise of fascism.

 

This is a short AI enhanced edit of the Walther Ruttmann classic silent documentary film.

Berlin : Symphony of a Great City 1927.

Anonymous ID: 90b4c6 July 25, 2022, 11:11 a.m. No.16804106   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.jewish-museum.ru/en/libraries/schneerson-library/

The Schneerson library is a unique collection of books, that belonged to the dynasty of Lubavitch tzadiks before the Russian Revolution and was nationalized by the Soviet Government in the 1920s

The Schneerson collection at the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow includes significant and once inaccessible portion of the famous library of the Lubavitcher Rebbes – leaders of the Habad movement (founded in the late 18th – early 19th century). In 1915, the Lubavitscher Rebbes fleeing from the approaching German troops moved their private library from their residence in Lubavitch to a safe storage in Moscow. After the 1917 Russian revolution, the Bolshevik regime nationalized the Schneerson Library. Thus, it became a state property and was deposited to the Lenin State Library (today's Russian State Library).