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#mogul
one-time-i-dreamt · 5 months
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I was a reporter who had to take an interview from a rich mogul woman. Her maid took me to the room the interview was supposed to happen and said,
“The lady is out to buy a newspaper. Please wait outside.”
As I stood outside in a corridor full of open doors, I noticed at the end of it, where the last door was open, some black shadows twisting and moving on the walls. I thought, “Oh no, not this time,” and rushed to close all the open doors.
Once I reached the door next to the interview room, I couldn’t close it because an invisible force was holding the doorknob from the other side. I took a vase next to the door and tried to hit this invisible creature but, the creature grabbed it from me and started hitting my hands.
Then I woke up.
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luckydiorxoxo · 3 months
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Thanks for the pics @marisaloeza 💖
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motherbeysuniverseeee · 2 months
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happy CÉCRED day!
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rihrihxxlegendarih · 10 months
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𝑅𝒪𝐵𝒴𝒩 𝐹𝒪𝑅 𝐿𝒪𝒰𝐼𝒮 𝒱𝒰𝐼𝒯𝒯𝒪𝒩
🧡
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takunwilliams · 1 year
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Jay Z for black history month  2023
by 
technodrome1 
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roughridingrednecks · 11 months
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Mogul
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haydenfrmny · 2 months
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One of my biggest inspirations.
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philameangrey · 2 months
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💎Long Live The Great Hov💥💪🏾🌩🐐🌩💥
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gabrielacrystal · 4 months
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yuki.
Dressed by ☼ MOGUL
Eaun Fur Coat & Ulla Fur Mini Skirt
At @ Tres Chic https://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Tres%20Chic/24/129/74
☼ Mond
Messy Hairbase
At @ Mainstore http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Perlanera/100/64/2006
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scorchrealmdj · 1 year
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Happy Black History Month Music Lovers. #ScorchRealmDJ #MusicModel #Mogul#entrepuneur #Artist #Day18 https://www.instagram.com/p/Co0P_ktOdIUWU-Q_ieDFxY5C_2S32iNOiKdIKM0/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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luckydiorxoxo · 2 months
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Oprah Winfrey, Simone Ashley and Gemma Chan for BRITISH VOGUE, “Legendary” Edition.
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Project Mogul/Spy balloons
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Project Mogul (sometimes referred to as Operation Mogul) was a top secret project by the US Army Air Forces involving microphones flown on high-altitude balloons, whose primary purpose was long-distance detection of sound waves generated by Soviet atomic bomb tests. The project was carried out from 1947 until early 1949. It was a classified portion of an unclassified project by New York University (NYU) atmospheric researchers.[1] The project was moderately successful, but was very expensive and was superseded by a network of seismic detectors and air sampling for fallout, which were cheaper, more reliable, and easier to deploy and operate.
Project Mogul was conceived by Maurice Ewing who had earlier researched the deep sound channel in the oceans and theorized that a similar sound channel existed in the upper atmosphere: a certain height where the air pressure and temperature result in minimal speed of sound, so that sound waves would propagate and stay in that channel due to refraction. The project involved arrays of balloons carrying disc microphones and radio transmitters to relay the signals to the ground. It was supervised by James Peoples, who was assisted by Albert P. Crary.
One of the requirements of the balloons was that they maintain a relatively constant altitude over a prolonged period of time. Thus instrumentation had to be developed to maintain such constant altitudes, such as pressure sensors controlling the release of ballast.
The early Mogul balloons consisted of large clusters of rubber meteorological balloons, however, these were quickly replaced by enormous balloons made of polyethylene plastic. These were more durable, leaked less helium, and also were better at maintaining a constant altitude than the early rubber balloons. Constant-altitude-control and polyethylene balloons were the two major innovations of Project Mogul.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Mogul
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rihrihxxlegendarih · 10 months
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𝒬𝓊𝑒𝑒𝓃 𝑅𝑜𝒷𝓎𝓃
🌹
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universalcovers · 5 months
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THE LEADER UC & TS Top in Class Selection ▶ Richard Brandson Vision: A world without the death penalty is a better world
Quoted, Richard Brandson's Blog:
I’ve long spoken up against the death penalty, a punishment so cruel, inhumane, and riddled with error and malice that it should have no place in our modern world. Its proponents claim it deters crime, yet nothing could be further from the truth – and study after study refutes that claim. Look anywhere in the 55 countries that retain the practice: the death penalty doesn’t make communities safer, has no noticeable impact on crime rates, whilst wasting precious resources that could be better used elsewhere.  
The truth is that – more often than not – the death penalty is used as a tool of repression and totalitarian control. Countries like Iraq, Iran, Egypt, Nigeria, and Pakistan hold thousands of people on their death rows – most detained under bogus allegations and convicted without any regard for due process or equality before the law. Many are never executed, but that is not the point. Here, capital punishment is a convenient tool to silence any form of dissent and take inconvenient critics out of circulation.
Even in nations that take pride in the fairness and transparency of their criminal justice system, the death penalty is marred by terrifying institutional failures. In the US, 195 individuals have been exonerated and freed from the country’s death rows since 1973, often the result of new evidence or DNA testing, but also revelations of gross misconduct by investigators and prosecutors. It’s an astonishing statistic: for every eight people that were executed in the US, one innocent person has been freed, often after languishing on death row for decades. With a rate of error so egregious, it is feared that a significant number of those that were executed may have been innocent, too.
I am particularly troubled by the disproportionate use of the death penalty against those who are often already at the margins of society – ethnic and other minority groups, the poor, or people with intellectual disabilities (note that in many places, those characteristics intersect).
In Uganda, years of anti-gay hate and propaganda fuelled and funded by US evangelical groups have not only forced much of the country’s LGBT+ community into hiding, but a terrifying new “anti-homosexuality” law seeks the death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality”. The first individuals have already been charged under this legislation, and I fear that it will lead to a spiral of hate and discrimination.
Iran has seen a sharp rise in the number of those who were brought to trial in the wake of the democracy protests of the last twelve months, following the brutal killing of Mahsa Amini. Dozens have been executed, and hundreds more are feared to be sentenced to die, simply for challenging the corrupt regime and demanding human rights.
Equally disturbing is the repeated use of the death penalty to punish non-violent drug offences, whether in Iran or Singapore. Those executed are almost without exception small-scale traffickers, already at the lowest rungs of the illicit drug supply chain, and often bullied, pressured and coerced by violent drug cartels. Their senseless deaths make no difference to the global drug trade, their ranks are easily replenished by others in similarly dire circumstances.
Having followed capital cases around the world for many years, I think there is neither fairness nor justice in the death penalty. As my friend Bryan Stevenson has pointed out:
It’s an imperfect sentence administered by imperfect people.
And that alone should be reason enough to end it.
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caseyhlee · 8 months
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by zishsheikh on Flickr.A side view of the main hall of the Badsahi Mosque in Lahore, Pakistan.
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