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ExtraBall
I know you just started your relationship and that you want to be fucking her at all hours... but you have to let her work. Today luck smiled at you, but the next time she could lose her new job...
If weapons didn’t exist, this wouldn’t be necessary. But since they do, we have to build something that can withstand them. And so we keep going—always one step ahead, or maybe just one step back.
It begs the question: are we really progressing, or just caught in an endless cycle of attack and defense?
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Trump has once again sparked controversy by deporting 238 alleged members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua and 23 from El Salvador’s MS-13, despite an attempt by a U.S. judge to block the move. To justify his decision, he invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, an archaic law that allowed him to send them directly to El Salvador.
There, they were transferred to CECOT, a maximum-security prison infamous for its extreme treatment of inmates. Additionally, the U.S. will pay El Salvador $6 million to house them for a year.
This decision has ignited a legal and ethical debate over whether Trump can use such an outdated law to push his agenda and whether these deportations were conducted lawfully. One thing is certain: for these 261 individuals, the "American Dream" is over, and their new reality behind bars won't be pleasant.
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Remember those chemistry classes where you'd mix things, secretly hoping something would explode? Today we've got something similar—but with an artistic twist.
We start with a single magnified water droplet, then add substances like hydroxides, salts, and minerals—things with strange names like "sodium hydroxide and cobalt chloride," "potassium iodide and lead acetate," or "luminol solution and potassium ferricyanide." And that's when the magic happens.
Each combination triggers an amazing chemical reaction within that tiny droplet: bursts of color, mesmerizing textures, and patterns that look straight out of a microscopic galaxy. It's like painting without brushes—creating art without knowing exactly what you'll get.
Get ready, because this chemistry lesson is nothing like high school. This is pure scientific beauty.
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In this video, Atlas, the crown jewel of Boston Dynamics, demonstrates policies developed through reinforcement learning, incorporating references from human motion capture and animation. This work was conducted as part of a research collaboration between Boston Dynamics and the Robotics and AI Institute (RAI Institute).
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The latest chapter in New Line Cinema’s blood-soaked franchise takes audiences back to where Death’s twisted sense of justice began—Final Destination: Bloodlines.
Haunted by a violent recurring nightmare, college student Stefanie heads back home to find the one person who might be able to break the cycle and save her family from the chilling fate that’s inevitably coming for them all.
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This girl tries to imitate the sound of a sports car revving. And she nails it—not with precision, but with attitude. There’s something about the way she does it, that mix of sexy and innocent, that feels like a car engine purring just before it gets serious. Like those seconds right before the climax, when everything’s shaking but hasn’t exploded yet.
The roar of a V8 isn’t that far from the moan of a woman enjoying herself. That deep, growling, savage sound—or that gentle idle whispering in your ear: "Get ready for what’s coming."
Machines that stir things up. Women that raise your pulse. And sounds that turn you on without laying a finger on you.
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