I would buy 4 bumper stickers and do just that, for IRL Keks
>>17257463
>https://twitter.com/JackPosobiec/status/1538522371325317127
SHOW THE FUCKING MILITARY YOU ABSOLUTE FUCKING RETARD
Highest ranking. God bless you and your family little patriot.
Anons, your work has paid off.
Social media is now theming heavily towards pro-masculinity, anti-feminism, pro-Trump, pro-conservative, pro-unity and MASSIVELY anti-Biden. As an avid social media user, there is DEFINITELY a shift going on and it is huge. Black content creators now defending whites. Female creators now defending men. Videos being posted of the damage liberals are doing to the world - on and on. This was sudden, too. Now this could very well be because the algorithms may be keying on how long I spend watching certain videos, but they are there none the less and the content itself proves a cultural shift towards conservatism.
So thank you with all our hearts: America.
existential juw hoax wants to stroke your fake history and spread satanic gibberish
SPAM
Very nice, thank you.
Who bricked the ocean's floor???
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TID2kc8yb9Q
>Q
Follow the 'Yellow Brick Road' to Geologic Features of Liliʻuokalani Ridge Seamounts | Nautilus Live
What may look like a "yellow brick road" to the mythical city of Atlantis is really an example of ancient active volcanic geology! Our Corps of Exploration have witnessed incredibly unique and fascinating geological formations while diving on the Liliʻuokalani Ridge within Papahānaumokuakea Marine National Monument. At the summit of Nootka Seamount, the team spotted a "dried lake bed" formation, now IDed as a fractured flow of hyaloclastite rock (a volcanic rock formed in high-energy eruptions where many rock fragments settle to the seabed). The unique 90-degree fractures are likely related to heating and cooling stress from multiple eruptions at this baked margin. Throughout the seamount chain, the team also sampled basalts coated with ferromanganese (iron-manganese) crusts from across different depths and oxygen saturations as well as an interesting-looking pumice rock that almost resembled a sponge.
Our exploration of this never-before-surveyed area is helping researchers take a deeper look at life on and within the rocky slopes of these deep, ancient seamounts. Scientists are studying the microbial communities residing within the ferromanganese crusts found over rock surfaces and how the characteristics of the crusts vary from region to region in ocean basins as well the microorganisms that live on and within them. These studies will help provide baseline information on the living communities of seamounts which can inform management and conservation measures.
And of course, it just looks like human-made, but it's just a coincidence.
nitrates
At ease kitty, today we celebrate and grammar poorly.