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Super Galaxy?

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Everything posted by Super Galaxy?

  1. OMG I removed my rank omg why i remved ?? what reason ops my acc was hack i want my rank bnack @Roselina ✾ @robila @verisoruL ? @Amaranth @-Dark iwant oerwatch back

    1. Show previous comments  5 more
    2. robila

      robila

      NOOOOOO MAN I'M SORRY, YOU WERE THE BEST OVERWATCHER IN MY LIFE

       

       

      sorry but we don't want people like you, bye?

    3. Super Galaxy?

      Super Galaxy?

       

      AS I TOLD I SERIOUSLY I AM NOT ABUSE MY AC HACK USER IF I DONT GET OVERWATCH BACK SO SORRY I SEE U ALL LAST TIME GOOD BY 
      I MISSU ALL LEAVE ? 

    4. CYBERCUR4
  2. Good Morning A||  CSBD

  3. Nickname: Super Galaxy? Age: 21 Link with your forum profile: https://csblackdevil.com/forums/profile/78627-super-galaxy?/ How much time do you spend on our channel ts every day?: 12 hrs ScreenShot as you have over 30 hours on CSBD TS3 Server (type ''!info'' in CSBD Guard) : https://www.zinguard.net/user/5e7510f3bb2f1d26184f6a3f/info Link with your last request to join in our Team:this is my 3 req Last 5 topics that you made on our section:
  4. Good Night All CSBD ?

  5. inker, tailor, blacksmith, barber, butcher, baker, mason, candlestick maker and carpenter; all old trades that served the seafarers of the 18th century on the trade route to India and the sugar plantation owners of the 19th century in Mauritius, may soon be facing extinction like the doomed dodo. Scene depicting tradesmen in Mauritius. Taken from “The Dodo and its Kindred” (1848) (Public Domain) Scene depicting tradesmen in Mauritius. Taken from “The Dodo and its Kindred” (1848) ( Public Domain ) Spanning the Dutch occupation from 1598, including the French occupation lasting from 1715, until the British colonisation from 1810, the island was a slave owning society. Slave labour was used to build settlements, forts, docks, a shipyard, canals, expanded roads and always, like a ravenous beast, the sugar cane fields consumed slave labour at a never-ending pace. But slaves were not the only workforce in Mauritius. Under French governorship of Mahé de Labourdonnais from 1742 to 1746 many free Indians were allowed to settle and trade in Mauritius. Tinsmiths, jewellers, wig makers, tailors and cobblers catered to the needs of the well-to-do haut monde . Governor Mahé de Labourdonnais, Midas of Mauritius. (Image: L’Aventure du Sucre.) Governor Mah é de Labourdonnais, Midas of Mauritius. (Image: L’Aventure du Sucre.) The Birth of Port Louis Labourdonnais was the visionary governor who decided to move the capital from the Dutch site of Vieux Grand Port in the east, to the more natural harbour of Port Louis in the west. Around the port he designed the emerging town, and divided it into sections for commerce, administration and residential areas. Merchants’ warehouses, fresh produce markets and pungent reeking meat markets were located adjacent to the harbour to serve the ships. In the alleys and back streets around the warehouses the shopkeepers, tradesmen and artisans set up shop. The outer circle of development, the residential areas, comprised a white city for the aristocracy and a black city, demarcated into camps for state owned slaves, freedmen, Indian, both Hindu and Muslim and Chinese. Today, none of the segregation exists and Mauritius is a peaceful state, drawing cultural nourishment from its multi-racial ancestral roots. The derelict ruins of the Labourdonnais Hospital, awaiting restoration. (Image: Courtesy of the author) The derelict ruins of the Labourdonnais
  6. good evening CSBD ?

  7. It has been a month since Wuhan was locked down because of the novel coronavirus outbreak. Like a big push on a swing, the epidemic tips the balance in the world, and China is making efforts to keep standing. The challenge lies in the country's size. China is a big country with a large span, and the virus hit the center, literally. The epicenter is a metropolis of 16 million people in the middle of the country. To make matters worse, it is surrounded by many cities, also with millions of inhabitants. Wuhan is a transport hub, and the virus is threatening to infect the whole surrounding area. The size of the country is a significant obstacle. But that's only half the story. Because of its continental size, all the parts feed off each other. When Wuhan fell, the other provinces came to its aid. As we speak, one-tenth of the intensive care doctors of the entire country is in Wuhan. A total of 40,000 medical staff moved to the center in a wartime fashion. China plans to take the virus full on. Structure matters. Another weight on scale is messaging. China has two-way traffic of communication: top-down and bottom-up. China needs to do better bottom-up. When doctors in Wuhan sounded alarms of the new virus, the message got lost. An investigation is still ongoing on why. But one reason is obvious: there are too many layers, too much red tape, and too little incentives to send the messages up. But China is strong when it comes to top-down messages. When the leadership is on top of the problem, it has the willpower, and wherewithal to make the call. And the grassroots answer. China launched a people's war. That was exactly what was needed to deal with a traveling threat like an epidemic. China built two hospitals in 10 days, thousands of wards in a week, and shook the po[CENSORED]tion into action. Top-down is fast and sharp. Nobody should argue against such an efficiency, especially when what's at stake is a plague spreading. But keeping the balance is hard. Every decision is a trade-off when it affects the lives of thousands and the livelihood of millions. We need to slow the spread. Draconian quarantines are being enforced in many parts of the country. Maintain a large network of isolation and a low rate of rogue behavior is the answer; the question is that we still don't know the exact extent of the infection. Isolating the infected while not infringing on people's rights and decency is not an easy task. Our economy relies on human transaction, but epidemic control depends on social distancing. We need to keep a distance, and yet we need to work together. So how do we balance saving lives and saving economy? This is an issue that requires hard decision-making. But the hardest is when to draw the line, with so little information on an adversary like the virus and so few weapons at our disposal, without treatment or vaccines, we are not able to answer the public's question: when does it end? Before the end of the Second World War, Winston Churchill described the war like this: Victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory however long and hard the road may be, for without victory, there is no survival. Now, we are at war with a virus. And victory is still ahead of us. Luckily, we still have a big country to fall back on, a world that lifts us, and a system that delivers results. There will be more hard decisions to be made. In the end, we hope those will be the best choices, and we should be proud of them.
  8. HELLO Come TeamSpeck

    1. Aysha

      Aysha

      No, it's late and I'm going to sleep

    2. Super Galaxy?
    3. Super Galaxy?

      Super Galaxy?

      give me 1000 points send me 

  9. Guardians of Gaming 

    zs0S2hd.gif 

     

    @Super Galaxy?

  10. Nick: Super GalaxyName Of Server: ZmDarkNight Picture of Score :
  11. Good Night ?

     

    me onlyline 2 Hrs

  12. TO BLAME social media for an alleged demise in the art and historically rich practice of yoga seems pretty far-fetched. There is no question that as an Indian physical, mental, and spiritual practice, the broad varieties of yoga have been embraced by Western culture as one of the best forms of physical maintenance and exercise. But according to Australian National University yoga teacher and PhD student Gina Woodhill, it’s our culture of social media and narcissism, as well as a lack of regulation, that will make the practice of yoga in Australia a challenge. “There are people who go and do their 200 hours of teacher training and become very arrogant,” Ms Woodhill said. “A lot of people get caught up in ego and showing off on social media. To be a yoga teacher requires more humility than anything else.” It’s International Yoga Day. Shouldn’t we all chill out? Ms Woodhill was venting her Shiva spleen ahead of International Yoga Day today, saying that for some people who take up yoga because it’s cool, social media can be very negative. “Contorting your body into a pretzel on Instagram doesn’t mean you are doing yoga, that’s just your body type,’’ she says. Hang on a minute. Here we go. Let’s blame social media. Again. Let’s get something right here. With social media, you can choose to opt in. Or opt out. Be part of it. Not be part of it. Or just cruise in and out of it when and if you like. Anyone who continues with an us-and-them attitude toward social media needs to get over it. It is here. It is vital. And it can’t be wholly and solely blamed for any evil that someone may think it is doing. Can the humble art of yoga and the self expression of social media coexist?
  13. Mystical underground settlement in the Alps In the Italian part of the Alps is a mystical religious settlement The Vital Alps is a mystical eco-village that lies underground. It was created as a cult of the deities and creatures of Egyptian mythology. In the Italian Alps, between Turin and Aosta, lies the underground village of Damanhur, a mystical place declared by the UN as the best model for a self-sustaining community in the world. There lives a po[CENSORED]tion that has its own currency and sacred language. Hundreds of residents do everything they need to live on their own and without the latest technology and amenities. The complex is located on three underground floors. It was dug using tools known in the past. There are huge halls that are decorated with mosaics, stained glass windows, sculptures and paintings, and the high columns create a sense of grandeur. Organic food is produced above the ground and cattle are grown naturally. The houses around the underground temple are built according to the principles of ecological construction. The village also has a biomolecular and forensic laboratory, premises where holistic souvenirs are created and sold. And community residents say they have an alchemical lab and a time machine. The inhabitants of the settlement are named after the plants and animals with which they live. Organic food is produced above the ground and cattle are grown naturally. The houses around the underground temple are built according to the principles of ecological construction. The village also has a biomolecular and forensic laboratory, premises where holistic souvenirs are created and sold. And community residents say they have an alchemical laboratory and a time machine. The inhabitants of the settlement are named after the plants and animals with which they live. Damanhur emerged in 1975 when Obert Ayraudi, later named Falco Tarasaco, established a sustainable eco-community driven by harmony and peace. The community has lived and worked in secret for 15 years. Once the settlement is open to the outside world, the doctrine of the founder and spiritual leader is expanded and continued after his death. The city is inspired by Egyptian culture and mythology, and many call it the eighth wonder of the world. Falco leaves behind the architectural masterpiece that the Damanhurs call the City of Eternal Light. People from all over the world visit the unusual community, trying to understand the mystery of Damanhur, and the most curious enroll in a local university and stay there. Visitors say the community is not religious but philosophical. The village offers a variety of packages for visitors who will receive spiritual uplift and a clean environment, free of technology and social networks.
  14. John has been labeled People's Sexiest Man Alive for 2019, so naturally he speaks about his stunning wife, whom he met on the set of his 2006 music video 'Stereo'. John Legend poured his heart and soul into the song 'All of Me' which he said was for his beloved wife, Chrissy. Anyone who has heard the song cannot question how in love he is with her. When asked about her in the November issue of People's Magazine where he was dubbed the Sexiest Man Alive, John said, “She’s the one. It’s clear!” He continued by saying, “We have great chemistry. She makes me laugh all the time. She’s a wonderful mother. She’s my best friend.” The couple met in 2006 and dated for quite some time before marrying in 2013. They married in Lake Como in one of the most romantic weddings to hit the celebrity event list. When asked what attracted him to his wife more than anything, he replied that it was her personality. For anyone who has ever heard Chrissy talk, or see her interact with others on-screen, she is indeed one of the most confident, hilarious, and sweet individuals around. “People see our banter a lot, and we have a lot of fun together. I like the fact that she makes me laugh all the time. The thing that makes me say ‘Aw’ is when she unironically compliments me because she doesn’t do it a lot,” John shared. “I wouldn’t love it if she did it all the time!” “Being a good husband is about communicating and listening to what your partner needs and wants,” he says. “A lot of it is being trustworthy, being dependable, being someone they can rely on. They want security and to know someone has their back. Hopefully I do that for Chrissy.” The couple have two children together, Luna and Miles, born in 2016 and 2018 respectively.
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CsBlackDevil Community [www.csblackdevil.com], a virtual world from May 1, 2012, which continues to grow in the gaming world. CSBD has over 70k members in continuous expansion, coming from different parts of the world.

 

 

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