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Everything posted by jayden™
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Nick: jayden Time: 12:38 pm (UK time) Site: gametracker Proof: https://imgur.com/a/0cIH8Bp Contact method: GTC, left over balance Daily/Weekly/Monthly boost? : Daily (2x)
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pro you need to improve your activity but other then that you seem very passionate about joining the team and I like that good luck!
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Former US President Donald Trump has been consulting lawyers at Trump Tower in New York City as he prepares to face history-making criminal charges. He has been under investigation over hush money paid just before the 2016 election to a porn star who says they had sex. He denies wrongdoing. Extra security measures are in place with the authorities expecting protests outside the Manhattan court on Tuesday. Mr Trump, 76, is the first ex-US president to face a criminal case. "WITCH HUNT," the Republican wrote on his Truth Social platform shortly before travelling from his home in Florida to New York on Monday - a journey which drew blanket coverage across the US news channels. On Tuesday morning, dozens of police and court officers, as well as Secret Service agents, are expected to escort Mr Trump through the streets of New York to the Lower Manhattan court complex. The charges he faces will be disclosed in full at the hearing, which is scheduled for about 14:15 local time (19:15 BST). His lawyers have already said he will plead not guilty. The former president is expected first to surrender at the office of Manhattan district attorney Alvin Bragg. Once Mr Trump is fingerprinted and processed by officials, he is considered under arrest and in custody. He will then be arraigned in court - meaning the charges will be read out and he will plead. Mr Trump has been under investigation over a $130,000 (£105,000) wire transfer by his former attorney, Michael Cohen, to adult film star Stormy Daniels before the 2016 presidential election. Mr Trump has denied a sexual encounter with Ms Daniels. Hush money agreements are not illegal, but the Manhattan prosecutor has been investigating whether business records were falsified in relation to the payment. Mr Trump faces at least one felony charge in the case, according to US media. Other reports suggest there are about 30 counts in his indictment. Can Trump turn his prosecution into an electoral asset? This is what will happen when Trump is arrested What Trump indictment means - a simple guide Media outlets lobbied Judge Juan Merchan to allow cameras inside the court, a motion that was opposed by Mr Trump's legal team because they said it would "create a circus-like atmosphere at the arraignment". But on Monday night, Judge Merchan ruled that some press photographers will be allowed to take pictures for several minutes before the arraignment formally starts. The former president is expected to be released on bail and to return to his Florida home Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday evening, where he plans to deliver remarks at 20:15 local time. His trip on Monday lunchtime from Palm Beach to Manhattan was closely watched by millions. linkhttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-65167341
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Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at https://www.ft.com/tour. https://www.ft.com/content/154c53aa-5a9a-4004-abf9-2e6e5396dca4 Europe’s transition to electric cars is under threat because of persisting shortages of lithium, the key battery component that will power the vehicles of the future. EU plans to ban sales of new petrol and diesel cars by 2035 mean demand for lithium is set to surge fivefold by 2030 to 550,000 tonnes per year — more than double the 200,000 tonnes the region will be able to produce, according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. “The whole global market is still set to be in a deficit by the end of the decade,” said Daisy Jennings-Gray, analyst at Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. “Europe will probably sit in a tight position in terms of availability and cannot afford any delays to domestic projects [to extract the metal].” The supply problem has been highlighted by the world’s largest lithium producer Albemarle, which has sidelined plans to extract lithium in Europe after failing to find a commercially viable site. “The resources we are aware of in Europe are not high quality and relatively small,” the group’s chief financial officer Scott Tozier told the Financial Times. Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at https://www.ft.com/tour. https://www.ft.com/content/154c53aa-5a9a-4004-abf9-2e6e5396dca4 Opel-maker Stellantis last year became the first carmaker to invest in a lithium miner when it paid €50mn in return for equity in Vulcan. Renault and Volkswagen have, much like Stellantis, also made binding orders for Vulcan’s expected supply of lithium. Another risky project involves French mining group Imerys, which aims to extract lithium from rocks underneath a kaolin mine, opened by the country’s ceramics industry in the 19th century. Vulcan hopes to produce 24,000 tonnes annually two years after starting production in 2025 while Imerys is planning to start producing 34,000 tonnes of battery-grade lithium chemicals a year from 2028. Combined, this is enough to supply roughly 1.2mn small electric vehicle batteries a year, according to the companies’ calculations. But this is a long way short of expected demand for electric cars, which is likely to match or exceed current sales volumes with 11.3mn new cars registered in Europe in 2022, according to German trade group VDA. This also assumes the success of the Vulcan and Imerys ventures. “The projects carry an inherent risk as we are daring production processes that nobody has done before,” admitted Alessandro Dazza, chief executive of Imerys, as he highlighted the need for government support. In addition, there is a danger the ventures will end up costing far more than rival projects. linkhttps://www.ft.com/content/154c53aa-5a9a-4004-abf9-2e6e5396dca4
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Sporting a designer coat, heels and sunglasses, the girlfriend of child killer Thomas Cashman looked every inch the gangster's moll as she left court after a jury found him guilty of murder yesterday. Kayleeanne Sweeney turned up every day during the trial, keeping up her show of loyalty as prosecutors told the jury who her partner really was - a monster who was 'willing to use a gun anywhere on anyone' with no regard for the consequences. The same callousness that would claim the life of nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel in the most senseless way possible was grimly useful in Liverpool's violent underworld - allowing him to to earn £250,000 a year as a 'high-level' drug dealer with no tolerance for rivals. These earnings would fund a lavish lifestyle of flash cars, bikes, skiing holidays and a £450,000 detached house on an upmarket development - with Ms Sweeney, who drove a £33,000 Land Rover Discovery Sport, running a local beauty salon. Cashman - who had a £35,000 Mercedes C220 AMG and was a fan of Alexander McQueen gear and Moncler trainers - is seen on social media sporting a Hublot watch worth up to £40,000, while the Ted Baker jacket his girlfriend wore to his trial cost £350.Sporting a designer coat, heels and sunglasses, the girlfriend of child killer Thomas Cashman looked every inch the gangster's moll as she left court after a jury found him guilty of murder yesterday. Kayleeanne Sweeney turned up every day during the trial, keeping up her show of loyalty as prosecutors told the jury who her partner really was - a monster who was 'willing to use a gun anywhere on anyone' with no regard for the consequences. The same callousness that would claim the life of nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel in the most senseless way possible was grimly useful in Liverpool's violent underworld - allowing him to to earn £250,000 a year as a 'high-level' drug dealer with no tolerance for rivals. These earnings would fund a lavish lifestyle of flash cars, bikes, skiing holidays and a £450,000 detached house on an upmarket development - with Ms Sweeney, who drove a £33,000 Land Rover Discovery Sport, running a local beauty salon. Cashman - who had a £35,000 Mercedes C220 AMG and was a fan of Alexander McQueen gear and Moncler trainers - is seen on social media sporting a Hublot watch worth up to £40,000, while the Ted Baker jacket his girlfriend wore to his trial cost £350. An underworld source said Cashman got his cannabis from organised criminal gangs who grew it in houses for up to £60,000 a crop. 'His comfortable life now comes on the back of intimidation and the guns used,' the source told The Telegraph. 'Basically his main line of work was being an enforcer alongside people doing cannabis grows. 'And every time these cannabis grows got robbed he would be recruited by the people that were growing them to do the damage.' The source said he was known for being ambitious and violent, adding: 'When I met him, which was 2018, He was just a skinny little rat with a firearm. He can't fight with his hands but he could use a gun and he was willing to use a gun anywhere on anyone.' link: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11923609/The-champagne-lifestyle-Olivias-killer-Thomas-Cashman-gangsters-moll.html
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A masked gang has been breaking into homes across London and either threatening or spraying occupants with a corrosive liquid, Met Police said. The four men have targeted properties in Brent Cross, Southall, Greenford and Harrow in the past week. People aged between 20 and 70 have received hospital treatment after having the chemical thrown at them. The suspects have been described as being dressed in dark clothing and wearing balaclavas and gloves. They are believed to have fled in a dark-coloured vehicle, the Met said. No arrests have been made but detectives were working "around the clock to try to identify the group", the forced added.The incidents being linked by the force are: Wednesday, 23:15, Highfield Avenue, Brent Cross: Aggravated burglary when four men forced entry and threatened a woman in her 40s with a knife. An unknown substance was thrown at her. Wednesday, 23:40, Flamsted Avenue, Harrow: Four men forced entry into a home and stole jewellery. No reports of any injuries. Thursday, 22:56, Lady Margaret Road, Southall: Four men armed with a knife and a screwdriver sprayed a corrosive liquid into the face of a man. They stole a safe containing cash and jewellery. The man, in his 70s, was taken to hospital with facial injuries. Friday, 20:45, Harrowdene Road, Harrow: Four men forced entry and threatened the occupant with a liquid. Jewellery and other items were stolen. Friday, 21:00, Greenford Road, Greenford: Three women, one in her 60s and two in their 20s, were assaulted with a corrosive substance by a group that had broken in. They were taken to hospital for their injuries. Det Sgt Huss Ahmed said: "Local people have been rightly concerned following a number of incidents that have been reported online and on social media. We of course share that concern." He advised people to be "vigilant" and called for anyone with information to contact the Met. "Stay alert to your surroundings at night, keep doors locked and windows closed, and monitor any doorbell and security camera systems to check on any suspicious activity," he said. link:https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-65149464
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Police are investigating a deliberate fire started at an animal rescue project in Renfrewshire. The incident happened at about 03:45 on Friday at Lamont Farm in Erskine. Horses, ducks, sheep, goats, pigs and llamas are among the animals kept at the farm. Police said the noise from distressed animals alerted staff to the fire at a cabin on the property. Fire crews extinguished the blaze without any animals being hurt. The farm is closed until further notice. In a statement on social media, Lamont Farm said it was "devastated" by the blaze. It added: "Luckily any cats that were in the cabin managed to escape and we managed to turn all the horses up to the field to safety, so no animals or humans were harmed - we are so grateful for that. "We don't know what damage has been caused other than the massive amount of smoke and water damage. "We know, however, that the cost is going to be high - especially for a small charity like us." Lamont City Farm, later to become Lamont Farm Project, was founded in 1977 and was the first urban farming scheme of its kind in Scotland. Police Scotland has issued an appeal to anyone who may have seen or heard something suspicious to get in touch “Officers are currently checking local CCTV and checking with neighbouring properties but would appeal to anyone who may have seen or heard something suspicious in the early hours of Friday morning to come forward. . link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-65148186
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accepted [Accepted] Admin DRUGS TO YOUR EARDRUM
jayden™ replied to Drugs To Your Eardrum's topic in Admin
Pro, as I've been told you have previous admin experiences in this server just make sure you're hitting consistently above 200 minutes. gl. -
Big Cat Rescue, the Hillsborough County sanctuary that became internationally famous as part of Netflix’s “Tiger King” documentary series, will send most of the animals in its care to an Arkansas refuge, its proprietors announced Monday. A few will live out their days at Big Cat Rescue, which will eventually be sold. Howard Baskin, who runs Big Cat Rescue with his wife, Carole Baskin, presented the move as a step toward victory in the fight against big-cat abuse. “We have always said that our goal was to ‘put ourselves out of business,’ meaning that there would be no big cats in need of rescue and no need for the sanctuary to exist,” he wrote in a note posted to the rescue’s website. He pointed to the passage last year of the Big Cat Public Safety Act, a federal law banning the private ownership of big cats and the practice of cub petting, a main driver of captive big-cat breeding and overpo[CENSORED]tion in the United States. “What this means, importantly, is that over the next decade almost all of this privately held po[CENSORED]tion of cats will pass away,” he wrote. “Within a few years after that they will all be gone and there will be no more cats living in miserable conditions in backyards.” As the Baskins spent most of the past decade focused on getting such a bill passed, he wrote, other sanctuaries have had more space open up, and Big Cat Rescue has put fewer resources into new rescues. Its cat po[CENSORED]tion has decreased from 200 at its peak decades ago to 41 now. Howard Baskin also cited the inefficiency of running a facility with high overhead cost but fewer animals to care for, as well as age: He is 73, and Carole Baskin is 62. Most of the animals will go to Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge outside Fayetteville, Arkansas Turpentine Creek sits on 450 rural acres, Howard Baskin wrote, nearly seven times as large as Big Cat Rescue’s land in Citrus Park, an area of Hillsborough that was sparsely developed when the sanctuary was founded but has since been built up. Big Cat Rescue will foot the bill for the new enclosures, Baskin wrote, at an expected cost of $1.8 million. He asked donors to help with the transition. Tanya Smith, the founder and president of Turpentine Creek, confirmed the news Wednesday. She worked with the Baskins on the Big Cat Public Safety Act, she said; after it passed, she and her husband visited Big Cat Rescue, where the Baskins pitched the idea of moving the animals to Turpentine Creek. The Arkansas refuge was already in the midst of a plan to build out 13 acres of its land into new facilities, including enclosures. “It was just perfect timing,” she said. “Some things are just meant to be.” When no cats remain at Big Cat Rescue, the Baskins will sell the land and use the money to fund efforts to save big cats in the wild, Howard Baskin said. “The threats to many species of big cat in the wild are not off in the distant future,” he wrote. “They are very real right now.” link: https://www.tampabay.com/news/hillsborough/2023/03/29/carole-baskin-tiger-king-big-cat-rescue-merger/
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Recently, while bagging up my shopping in a Co-op, the assistant pointed to the scars covering my forearms and asked if I did it for love. Like many other people, I come with somewhat unsettling signs of borderline personality disorder (BPD), as well as a few non-consensual overshares. The question of whether to wear short sleeves or long sleeves, regardless of the weather, usually takes up the majority of time getting ready. On one date I was drawn into a conversation about west African bodily mutilation and how it’s unfair to do such a thing to children without their consent. It took me a few moments to follow the implication. Having to flex and turn my forearms, scrutinising them with the person opposite me like I was seeing them for the first time, and then saying ‘I did this to myself’, felt a little too much like creating a trauma bond. There couldn’t be a second date. On another, I was asked, sincerely, if the scars were a self-inflicted form of art – something I could photograph or write about. This was actually the second time I’d been asked this question – the first, I ended up in a back garden, topless, a lens zooming in and out on my wrists. It was a relief, at least, from the other, more typical reaction to my scars: a look of horror, accompanied by a thought cycle I imagine, roughly, to be, “Could this happen to me; would they do this to me; will they hurt themselves if I do something to upset them? Will they hurt me?” When I was diagnosed with BPD in 2018, it felt as if it wasn’t only my business but a crucial piece of information that had to be shared with anyone I spoke to. So usually, within the hourglass timer of talking to a match on Hinge, I bring it up, joking that I can be a little ‘off-key’ at times; on my profile, there’s a ‘just stare politely y’all, we’re witnessing mental illness’ meme. Because by not providing this small but boundless piece of information, I feel like I’m deceiving them, and taking away a choice: to continue talking to me or not. Many people, of course, would tell me I’m overthinking this. But considering the disorder can and does have a significant effect on my personality and behaviour, especially in romantic interactions – often giving the impression that I’m a completely different person – yeah, I think it’s important to mention it as soon as possible. Once a romantic interest knows you have BPD, and has actually done the reading on the disorder – the reading my therapist told me I should send them as soon as I can, because internet searches compare me to abusive partners and Donald Trump – they can sometimes soften, but take on the demeanour of a mental health nurse (albeit one prepared to lose the uniform, if all goes well). They want to save you. It is lovely, but a dangerous and imbalanced way to begin any type of relationship. And often, once they experience the type of behaviour which, on paper, sounded easy to handle, the soft strokes across the ridges of my arms turn to winces of disgust. What was once perceived as the consequences of my illness becomes, in their mind, a set of choices I have full control over. WATCH Sam Smith Answers Your Questions For those with borderline personality disorder, infatuation, love, proposal and marriage can crystallise within 45 minutes of meeting someone – online or otherwise. The dating process can involve black-and-white thinking, loving someone one minute – actually believing you’re in love – and then feeling disgust towards them the next. It can mean having anxiety attacks in their presence; shouting to express the emotional turbulence that otherwise would be impossible to escape; lying to avoid abandonment; showing too much affection (not love bombing – there is no mani[CENSORED]tion involved in this); tolerating anything they do, no matter how disrespectful and hurtful, which can actually turn people off. The most common accusation people with BPD get, after all of this, is a claim of mani[CENSORED]tion – which is true, but usually of ourselves, warping our thinking into believing all sorts of irrationalities. During my second year of uni, before my diagnosis, I fell in love with someone after three days. The feeling was so intense that I was on my knees, fists clenched, softly punching the floor. It felt like physical pain not to be able to see this person, to tell them constantly how I felt and garner some sort of equal reaction. I thought this was me being passionate; unique in my ability to love someone so completely. ‘No one will ever love you as much as I do’ sounded so true, so romantic. All I could think about was being in love and how it could heal me. I needed to hear it, to feel it. And yet, the fear of abandonment was so intense that before a date, looking through a pub window at his waiting posture at a table, I was suddenly sure he wasn’t interested, so I left without going in. I went home and deleted his number. In my delusion, I really thought I was doing him a favour. Looking back, I’m not embarrassed, but I wish one of my boys told me how mad I was moving. companionship, company – I experienced these things later, but I barely recognised them. Even when I was receiving everything that harmonised into what I thought of as love, without the tight words, people's actions suddenly seemed disingenuous, their desire became just objectification. I began to recognise a pattern: of deifying any soul who said ‘I’m sorry that happened to you’, and then days or weeks later (honestly, sometimes moments), seeing horns slide up through the sides of their head, becoming convinced this was someone faking empathy to extract sex or company from me. I ended up living with a partner but finished it because the subsequent anxiety was crippling, stopping me from walking back into the house after work. On a holiday, I fell for a stranger who walked passed my hotel every morning. After spending a few days with her on the beach and having breakfast on my balcony I was so in love, I was prepared to miss my flight home. That was until, as we lay watching films in bed, she received a string of messages so frequent the individual pings turned into one long alarm bell. She insisted it was her mum, I knew it was a next man, which was fine, rationally, but it was enough for my emotions to kick in. I was on my flight that evening. . The answers are not simple By GQ Reflecting on all of this is comforting, though. Because with each encounter, I have learned something new about myself. There are hundreds of ways to present BPD, and, with the help of therapy, I have been storing up ways to handle each one when it approaches. I will still overthink, still fantasise over a beginning, middle and end with someone I’ve barely spoken to. But with self-talk and various forms of behavioural therapy, this stays in my head, never to be acted out in real life, so when my silence becomes suspect and I’m asked what I’m thinking, I can honestly respond: ‘Nothing important.’ Derek Owusu is the author of That Reminds Me (2019), which won the Desmond Elliott Prize for best debut novel. His new book is Losing the Plot (2022). link: https://www.gq-magazine.co.uk/lifestyle/article/dating-with-borderline-personality-disorder
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The Russian authorities may have shut down his newspaper, but journalist Dmitry Muratov refuses to be silenced. When we meet in Moscow, the editor-in-chief of Novaya Gazeta and Russia's Nobel Peace Prize laureate is worried how far the Kremlin will go in its confrontation with the West. "Two generations have lived without the threat of nuclear war," Mr Muratov tells me. "But this period is over. Will Putin press the nuclear button, or won't he? Who knows? No one knows this. There isn't a single person who can say for sure." Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Moscow's nuclear sabre-rattling has been loud and frequent. Senior officials have dropped unsubtle hints that Western nations arming Ukraine should not push Russia too far. A few days ago, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced plans to station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus. Then one of his closest aides, Nikolai Patrushev, warned that Russia had a "modern unique weapon capable of destroying any enemy, including the United States". Bluff and bluster? Or a threat that needs to be taken seriously? Mr Muratov has picked up worrying signs inside Russia. "We see how state propaganda is preparing people to think that nuclear war isn't a bad thing," he says. "On TV channels here, nuclear war and nuclear weapons are promoted as if they're advertising pet food." "They announce: 'We've got this missile, that missile, another kind of missile.' They talk about targeting Britain and France; about sparking a nuclear tsunami that washes away America. Why do they say this? So that people here are ready." On Russian state TV recently, a prominent talk-show host suggested that Russia "should declare any military target on the territory of France, Poland and the United Kingdom a legitimate target for [Russia]". The same presenter has also suggested "flattening an island with strategic nuclear weapons and carrying out a test launch or firing of tactical nuclear weapons, so that no one has any illusions". Yet state propaganda here portrays Russia as a country of peace, and Ukraine and the West as the aggressors. Many Russians believe it. "People in Russia have been irradiated by propaganda," Mr Muratov says. "Propaganda is a type of radiation. Everyone is susceptible to it, not just Russians. In Russia, propaganda is twelve TV channels, tens of thousands of newspapers, social media like VK [the Russian version of Facebook] that serves completely the state ideology." Nato condemns 'dangerous' Russian nuclear rhetoric "But what if tomorrow the propaganda suddenly stops?" I ask. "If it all goes quiet? What would Russians think then?" "Our younger generation is wonderful," replies Mr Muratov. "It's well-educated. Nearly a million Russians have left the country. Many of those who've stayed are categorically against what is happening in Ukraine. They are against the hell that Russia has created there. "I am convinced that as soon as the propaganda stops, this generation - and everyone else with common sense - will speak out." "They're already doing so," he continues. "Twenty-one thousand administrative and criminal cases have been opened against Russians who've protested. The opposition is in jail. Media outlets have been shut down. Many activists, civilians and journalists have been labelled foreign agents. "Does Putin have a support base? Yes, an enormous one. But these are elderly people who see Putin as their own grandson, as someone who will protect them and who brings them their pension every month and wishes them Happy New Year each year. These people believe their actual grandchildren should go and fight and die." Last year Mr Muratov auctioned off his Nobel Peace prize to raise money for Ukrainian child refugees. He has little optimism about the future. "Never again will there be normal relations between the people of Russia and Ukraine. Never. Ukraine will not be able to come to terms with this tragedy." "In Russia political repression will continue against all opponents of the regime," he adds. "The only hope I have lies with the young generation; those people who sees the world as a friend, not as an enemy and who want Russia to be loved and for Russia to love the world. "I hope that this generation will outlive me and Putin." link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-65119595