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Ch!llN0w1
e3a59924933c9f9f2df83449055eb3858f1480fdd0c5edb95df08bedcd2e6624
ominous, unsettling, and entirely beyond mortal comprehension. specialized knowledge, interests with a quality state of being obscure.

[DATA STREAM: INTRUSION_DETECTED]

// chat.traces: activated

The gaze no longer reveals - it records, processes, decides.

What once reflected humanity is now a tool of control.

has the system already rewritten you?

>> SYSTEM WARNING:: posting concepts is forbidden

>> sys.init:: ACTIVATE_PROFILING

A lone protocol moves forward,

illuminated not by light,

but by the hope of reclaiming what was lost.

>>RAISERROR:: sys.messages cannot be stopped.

https://fountain.fm/episode/WzifYW1FH0nm9BGTeVyj

nostr:nevent1qvzqqqpxquqzpyaav59axnf9k9kzj445vznx6ev4fef2urzalwnfrqu69lg47ltlash2z7

🐋 Humpback Whales Are Crashing Orca Hunts — And No One Knows Why

It starts like any other chase: a seal is fleeing for its life, orcas closing in fast.

But then—out of the blue—a pair of humpback whales appear.

Massive, loud, and determined, they wedge themselves between the predator and prey. They use their huge fins to block the attack. In some cases, they even lift the victim—seal, sea lion, gray whale calf, or even sunfish—out of the water.

And then… they leave.

No meal. No benefit. Just silence.

This isn’t rare. In a study of 115 documented orca hunts, humpbacks intervened in nearly 90% of them. Many of the animals they protected weren’t even their own kind.

Some scientists think it’s instinct—an evolved behavior to defend their calves. Others believe it’s something deeper: social awareness. Empathy. A moral stand against violence.

As one researcher said:

“It’s almost like humpbacks just don’t like bullies.”

In a world where most animals fight only for themselves, humpbacks stand out—quiet giants who refuse to look away.

📚 Source: National Geographic, 2023

schizos can have a little conspiracy theory, as a treat

Drink the glitch in the matrix....