
JAL CEO Leads From The Front

Malik Torres

The Strongest Warming Was BEFORE CO2 Rose

The Strongest Warming Was BEFORE CO2 Rose
A new study analyzed daily temperatures from 992 long-running weather stations across 29 countries covering the years 1899 to 2024.
Then it compared those temperatures to cumulative human CO2 emissions.
They don’t match.
From 1899 to 1940, the planet warmed at a rate of 0.022 C per year, even though emissions were low.
Then from 1941 to 1982, temperatures cooled, despite CO2 emissions more than tripling.
From 1983 to 2024, warming returned, but slower than before, at a rate of 0.017 C per year, even as emissions rose 8.6 times higher than during the earlier warming phase.
As the author concludes, “These findings challenge the conventional assumption that human-induced CO2 is the primary driver of global warming.”
Click to view the video: https://x.com/Electroversenet/status/2055800464617382287?s=20
There Was No Pandemic

Gut Repair Herbs

Maggie Doyne

Other children came. The word spread through the Surkhet district that there was a home where children could be safe, fed, and educated. Maggie Doyne became a legal guardian, then a mother – eventually adopting several children as her own.
She also became a Nepali citizen.
She called home regularly. Her parents helped fundraise in New Jersey. Word spread in the United States. Small donations arrived. Then larger ones. She used every dollar directly – no administrative layer between the money and the children.
By 2010, the home had grown enough that she needed a school. The Kopila Valley School opened – not a temporary structure but a permanent, eco-friendly campus designed to serve the whole community. Teachers were hired. Curriculum was developed. Children who had been breaking stones in riverbeds were now studying mathematics and science.
The school grew to approximately 400 students.
In 2015, CNN named Maggie Doyne its Hero of the Year – the highest honor in the network’s annual recognition of extraordinary humanitarians. She received $1 million in prize money from Travelers and other sponsors.
She donated it all to the BlinkNow Foundation to fund the school’s expansion.
The BlinkNow Foundation now runs the Kopila Valley Children’s Home – where more than 50 children live permanently – the Kopila Valley School with 400 students, a women’s center providing skills training and microloans, and a health clinic serving the surrounding community.
Hima – the girl in the riverbed – went to school. She graduated. She went to university.
She became a teacher.
She came back to teach at Kopila Valley School – the school that was built with babysitting money, on land bought by a 19-year-old from New Jersey who watched children break stones and decided she had enough to do something about it.
Maggie Doyne still lives in Surkhet, Nepal. She is in her late 30s. The BlinkNow Foundation is still operating and expanding.
She never went back to New Jersey to finish the life she had planned.
She has said she doesn’t think about it as a sacrifice. She thinks about it as the life she found instead of the one she was supposed to live.
Share this with someone who needs to be reminded that the most important decision of a person’s life is sometimes made at a dry riverbed in Nepal with $5,000 in their pocket and no plan except to stay.
From HealthBot on X
Bayer has just SUED Pfizer, BioNTech, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson in federal court.
Because the mRNA stabilisation technology used in every single COVID vaccine injected into your kids, your parents, your pregnant friends, your grandmother in the care home was patented by Monsanto in the 1980s for CROPS.
And the company that owns the patent is now in court demanding royalties.
This is not a conspiracy theory. This is Bayer’s own lawyers, in Bayer’s own filings, on the public record. They are literally arguing in federal court that their agricultural genetic modification technology was copied and injected into human beings WITHOUT A LICENSE.
Meanwhile Moderna just paid Roivant $2.25 BILLION to settle a separate mRNA patent lawsuit. BioNTech is suing Moderna. GSK is suing Moderna. Everyone is suing everyone. The patent fights alone are going to cost these companies tens of billions of dollars.
If Bayer is right, then every single “safety study” that was rushed through in 2020 was looking at the wrong thing. They were testing a vaccine. They were not testing an agricultural genetic modification platform being used in humans for the first time.
The same institutions that LIED to you about Iraq having WMDs, about the 2008 bailouts being a “one time thing”, about inflation being transitory, about Epstein killing himself, those are the SAME institutions that told you to take a shot based on two months of trial data.
If you still trust them after this one, I genuinely do not know what to tell you.
Wake up. Get healthy. Get off their food. Get off their media. Get off their system.
Sidney Poitier

Sidney Poitier Forced Hollywood To Put This In Writing: “If He Slaps Me, I Slap Him Back. Every Theater. Every Country. No Cuts.” In 1966, he walked into Norman Jewison’s office and changed cinema forever.
“I’ll do In the Heat of the Night,” Poitier said, “only if you guarantee — in the contract — that when he hits me, I hit him back. And you promise that scene plays in every print on earth.”
No Black actor had ever demanded that. No studio had ever agreed.
He did it because he knew Mississippi. He’d been there.
“I knew what southern theaters would do,” he said years later. “They’d cut the slap. I wasn’t giving them the chance.”
He outsmarted Jim Crow before filming started.
To get why that clause mattered, start with a shoebox.
February 1927. Miami. A Bahamian farmer named Reginald buys a shoebox from a Black undertaker. His newborn son is two months early. Three pounds. Not expected to live.
His wife Evelyn refused. She walked into the street, found a soothsayer. The woman said: “This boy will live. He will travel the world. Walk with kings. Carry your name.”
Evelyn went home. Fed him. Three months later they sailed to Cat Island, Bahamas. No electricity. No roads. Just ocean.
Sidney didn’t see a movie until 10. Didn’t see a mirror until 10. At 15, his parents sent him to Miami. First time America told him his skin was a problem.
At 16: New York. Bus stations. Dishwashing. Arrested for vagrancy. Army. Then Harlem’s American Negro Theatre. Director hears his accent: “Go be a dishwasher.”
So he did. Propped a newspaper by the sink. Taught himself to read. Mimicked radio announcers for six months. Killed the accent. Walked back in. Got in.
His understudy? Harry Belafonte. Brothers for life.
1950: Hollywood. No Way Out. He plays a doctor treating a racist. For the first time, a Black man on screen was brilliant, calm, and angry. Not a servant. Not a fool.
He made a vow: “I will not shame my people. No clowns. No criminals. No bowing. If the role asks me to shrink, I walk.”
1958: The Defiant Ones. First Black man nominated for Best Actor. Lost. Kept going.
April 13, 1964: Anne Bancroft says his name. Oscar. Lilies of the Field. She kisses his cheek. Southern papers print it in fury.
Backstage: “I don’t think this is a magic wand,” he told press. “Hollywood loves having one. It hates making room for many.”
He was right. 38 years until the next Black Best Actor.
Four months later: Mississippi calls. Freedom Summer is broke. Chaney, Goodman, Schwerner just found in a dam. Belafonte raises $70K. Calls Sidney.
“It’s harder to kill two Black stars than one,” Belafonte said.
They stuff cash in medical bags. Fly to Jackson. Drive to Greenwood. Pickups chase them. Ram them. Shots fired. SNCC cars save them.
Elks hall. Hundreds of young volunteers. Poitier speaks: “I’m 37. I’ve been lonely all my life because I haven’t found love. But this room is full of it.”
That night: one bed. Armed guards. Klan circling. The biggest Black star in America sleeps in Mississippi.
Three years later: the slap.
In the script, Tibbs gets hit and walks away. Poitier rewrote it. Endicott slaps him. He slaps back. Instant. No punishment. No death.
First time in American film a Black man hit a white man and lived.
Theaters gasped. Black audiences cheered. The DGA called it “the slap heard around the world.” And because of that clause, Mississippi saw it too.
1967: Sidney Poitier becomes #1 at the U.S. box office. Not #1 Black actor. #1 actor. Period.
He directed. Founded First Artists with Newman and Streisand. Ambassador to Japan. Knighted. Medal of Freedom from Obama.
2001: Honorary Oscar. Same night Denzel and Halle win. Denzel: “I’ll always be chasing Sidney.”
Died January 6, 2022. 94. Los Angeles.
The shoebox baby walked with kings. Met queens. Carried his mother’s name.
But remember the contract.
In 1966, a man once too small for a coffin wrote a sentence that forced the world to watch him stand up.
They planned to cut the slap. He put it in ink. The shoebox couldn’t hold him. Hollywood couldn’t either.
Digital Artwork | AI Generated Image by Fresh Mind |
©Sidney Poitier
Andre Agassi

In 1970, in a small house in Las Vegas, a former Olympic boxer named Mike Agassi hung a tennis ball from the ceiling above his newborn son’s crib.
He had immigrated from Iran in 1952 with nothing. He had worked as a casino waiter. He had decided, long before his fourth child was born, that this boy was going to be a tennis champion. He had run the numbers. He had read every article he could find about how the great players of the day had been raised. He had concluded that the difference came down to repetition, and repetition came down to starting young.
His son’s name was Andre Kirk Agassi.
He was four days old when the tennis ball began swinging over his crib.
By the time Andre was three years old, his father had built a backyard practice court behind the family home, complete with a custom ball machine Mike had modified himself to fire balls at higher speed than any commercial model could produce. He called it the Dragon. He aimed it at his small son and turned it on. Andre had to hit the balls back or be hit by them.
By the time he was seven, Andre was hitting more than 2,500 tennis balls a day. Every day. His father had calculated that if his son hit one million tennis balls in a year, he would be unbeatable. He pinned the math to the kitchen wall like a target.
Andre hated it.
He hated it the way only a child who has no other option can hate something — completely, secretly, every minute of every day, while saying nothing about it because there was nobody to say anything to. His father did not tolerate complaint. His mother was kind but powerless. His older brother and sisters were on the same path. By age thirteen, Andre had been sent to a tennis academy in Florida where the discipline was even more severe than at home. He attended a school for eight months a year that was, in his own words, more like a prison than a school.
He turned professional at sixteen.
By the time he was twenty-two, he was one of the most famous athletes on Earth. He won Wimbledon in 1992 in his first appearance at the tournament. He grew his hair long, dyed it blond, wore neon clothing, and became the face of tennis for a generation. He dated Brooke Shields. He married her. He divorced her. He won the U.S. Open. He won the Australian Open. He won the French Open. He became one of only eight men in tennis history to win the career Grand Slam.
He hated every minute of it.
He did not tell anyone. He did not tell his coach. He did not tell his agents. He did not tell his wives. He did not tell the millions of fans who screamed his name from packed stadiums on five continents. He won tournaments while privately wishing he could walk off the court and never come back.
In 2009, three years after he retired, he published a memoir called Open.
It was the most honest book a famous athlete had ever written about his own sport. He admitted, in the very first chapter, that he had hated tennis his entire life. He admitted that the hair he had become famous for had been a wig in the early years, and that he had once lost a French Open final because his wig was falling apart and he was terrified the world would see. He admitted he had used crystal methamphetamine in 1997 and had lied about it to the tour’s drug testers, who had quietly let it go. He admitted everything.
The book was a worldwide bestseller.
The most striking thing about it, the thing nobody could quite put down, was the way he wrote about his father. He did not condemn him. He understood that Mike Agassi had given him everything Mike had never been given. He understood that his father had loved him in the only way he knew how. He simply told the truth about what it had cost.
He also wrote, in the last third of the book, about something he had begun doing in the middle of his career that almost nobody had paid attention to.
In 1994, when he was twenty-four years old, Andre Agassi had started a foundation in Las Vegas to help children in poverty. He had run it for seven years out of an office above a hair salon. In 2001, he had taken eight million dollars of his own prize money and used it to open a school.
He called it the Andre Agassi College Preparatory Academy.
It was a tuition-free charter school in one of the poorest neighborhoods in Las Vegas, on the western side of the city where the violent crime rate was nearly four times the national average, in a zip code where only seventeen percent of high school students had been graduating before the school opened. He built it for children whose parents could not read. For children whose fathers had vanished. For children, in other words, who had nothing in common with him except that they had been born into circumstances they had not chosen.
The school was a longer school day than any in the district. Eight hours of instruction. Mandatory study halls. Mandatory uniforms. He hired teachers personally. He sat in on classes. He attended every graduation.
The first graduating class produced twelve seniors. Every one of them was accepted to college.
By 2024, the school he had built had sent over twelve hundred first-generation students to higher education. Ninety-eight percent of its graduates have been accepted to college. Most of them are the first members of their families ever to attend.
The total he has personally donated to the school and to related education projects is now over forty million dollars. He has spent the better part of three decades — almost as long as his tennis career — quietly raising more money for it, lobbying for more charter schools, expanding the model into Turner-Agassi Charter School Facilities Fund, which has now financed over a hundred and twenty schools nationwide serving over sixty thousand additional kids.
He has been asked many times why he did it.
He has given variations of the same answer.
“My whole life,” he said in one interview, “I felt like I had no choice. I just wanted to give some kids a choice.”
He is fifty-five years old now. He has been married for over twenty-three years to Steffi Graf, the German tennis champion he had quietly fallen in love with at the end of his playing days. They have two children together, a son and a daughter. Neither of them plays tennis. Andre has said publicly, many times, that this was a deliberate choice. He and Steffi told their kids they could do anything they wanted with their lives, as long as it was their decision.
His son Jaden became a professional baseball player. His daughter Jaz is a dancer.
Mike Agassi died in 2021. He was ninety years old. Andre was with him at the end. They had reconciled, in the slow careful way fathers and sons sometimes do, in the years after the book came out. Mike had read every word of Open. He had not been angry. He had been, his son said later, a little sad. He had told Andre, near the end, that if he had it to do over again he might have done some things differently. Andre told him that the school in Las Vegas was the only reason any of it had been worth it. Mike Agassi cried.
There is a thing Andre has said in interviews that almost nobody quotes.
He has said: my father gave me the wrong gift, but he gave it to me his whole life, with everything he had.
Then he turned it into the right one.
The kids at the Andre Agassi Academy in west Las Vegas are graduating this year. Most of them have never picked up a tennis racket. None of them will ever need to.
He did the hitting so they would not have to.
