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drefanzor memes @drefanzor - Mueller Meme
https://x.com/drefanzor/status/2035411089215901851
Dr. Lemma @DoctorLemma - Video: Sixteen years ago, one man stood alone on a grassy hill at a music festival in Washington State, USA, and started dancing by himself. People glanced over and looked away. Some laughed. His roommate leaned in and warned him people were filming him.
He did not stop.
Then one stranger got up and joined him.
Then another.
Then the hillside tipped. Within minutes, hundreds of people were sprinting from across the field to be part of something that, thirty seconds earlier, had been one man being laughed at in a field.
Someone filming from higher up the hill said quietly: "See what one man can do. One man can change the world."
The clip spread across the internet in 2009. Entrepreneur Derek Sivers played it at a TED conference to explain how movements actually begin. Not with the first person brave enough to start, he argued, but with the first person willing to join them.
Collin Wynter, the man dancing alone, later said he had no idea he had done anything special. He was just tired of watching everyone sit still.
https://x.com/DoctorLemma/status/2034958327055020168
Dr. Marty Makary @DrMakaryFDA - Video: We’re delivering for cancer patients who have been waiting for game-changing therapies.
https://x.com/DrMakaryFDA/status/2035124202886267148
Dr. M.F. Khan @Dr_TheHistories - A small town in West Virginia asked the Soviet Union and East Germany for help with replacing a bridge after being ignored by the West Virginian government. The Soviets sent a journalist to investigate and within one hour the state finally agreed to pay for it.
In Vulcan West Virginia, a broken bridge became an unlikely Cold War flashpoint.
After years of being ignored by state officials, residents made a bold move, they reached out to the Soviet Union and East Germany for help. In the 1970s, when the U.S. and USSR were locked in a global rivalry, even the suggestion of Americans turning to communist states carried serious political weight.
The Soviets didn’t send money or materials. They sent a journalist.
Within one hour of that visit, with the story on the verge of becoming international news, state officials suddenly approved funding to replace the bridge. What years of requests couldn’t accomplish, the threat of global embarrassment did, almost instantly.
It’s a striking example of how, during the Cold War, image and perception could move faster than policy.
During this era, both superpowers spent billions annually on propaganda and international broadcasting, understanding that winning public opinion was often as critical as winning battles.
https://x.com/Dr_TheHistories/status/2034988278093685240
DrOzCMS @DrOzCMS - Video: The 1980s called, and they want their fax machines back.
CMS is slashing wasteful spending and antiquated paperwork by swapping out faxing and mailing
https://x.com/DrOzCMS/status/2035091225049801032
Dudes Posting Their W’s @DudespostingWs - Video: Average date night planned by a guy:
https://x.com/DudespostingWs/status/2035891277338902956
Dudes Posting Their W’s @DudespostingWs - Video: You know he cooked when he has the lifeguard clapping
https://x.com/DudespostingWs/status/2035937081499713539
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