View allAll Photos Tagged superpowers
Karachi, PAKISTAN, RIGHTS-PAKISTAN, May 20, 2010. Unmindful of his disability, Talib Hussain (far left) is now a proud breadwinner of his family. Kulsum Ebrahim/IPS
Dulcie: "Uh, no."
Sadie: "Can you shoot lasers out of your eyes?"
Dulcie: "No."
Sadie: "Ugh. This interview is terminated."
"It annoys me that the burden of proof is on us. It should be 'You came up with the idea. Why do you believe it?' I could tell you I've got superpowers. But I can't go up to people saying 'Prove I can't fly.' They'd go, "What do you mean 'Prove you can't fly'? Prove you can!'" - Ricky Gervais
. . . lightening quick comebacks
. . . telepathy
. . . super speedy cleaning abilities
. . . germ detection
. . . teleportation
. . . time travel
aki mostramos a mi primo predilecto el cris, levantandome sobre sus hombros ( notan su gran FUERZA de SuperCris ?? )
;););)
= temrinó con dolor de espalda depue de levantarme a mi y al nacho a kaa ratop ajkajkjakajka
This is my first portrait that I have ever done and our first week on a year journey with Life Book by Tamara Laporte at willowing.ning.com/
An amazing art class.
Sign: Aries/Cock
Superpower: Power to mimic or steal other people's abilities
Prized possession: his Gretsch guitar (college graduation gift from his mother)
Coveted possession: Gibson ES-339
How we met: "We met at Atrio through Ken Sanchez. You didn't like me...like most people."
The blue one gives you X-ray vision, the yellow one makes you fly, the green one turns your stomach.
How to Con a Superpower and Make the Media Your Accomplice
Jeff Pearce
May 13, 2021
The idea of a proxy war is fairly basic, and you don’t need to have a degree in International Studies to grasp the concept. You’re the U.S., Russia or China, and you back a side fighting a civil war or insurrection in a foreign country, supplying arms, military advisors, whatever’s needed. Syria comes to mind. Then there’s hybrid war, which uses a combination of conventional military resources with propaganda, cyber-attacks and proxies. Russia has used all of these in Ukraine, backing its separatist elements.
What is truly scary about Ethiopia is that maybe in the first time in history, the tangible stakes for a war happening in the real world might be decided, or at least severely affected, by the narrative progressing on the digital battlefield.
The Russians screwed with perception in terms of Ukraine, but ultimately what decided things in the real world was still military might. But in Ethiopia, the federal army crushed the conventional forces of the TPLF and humiliated their supposedly “battle-hardened troops” in under a month. And yet as we all know, the digital warriors — or, as I like to call them now, the Zombie Army (rising from Debretsion Gebremichael pathetically flat-line remnants) — insist that the conflict isn’t over.
In this horrible scenario where a nation’s fate is at risk, a terrorist oligarchy is using the United States and EU as its proxies.
As