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This post set the bar. Dropping a 5.7x viral multiplier on the timeline.
Straight from your comment section
"Maybe that is what you wish. But Bahrain and its people are stronger than what your “woke” fallacies would like them to be. 🇧🇭💪💪. WE WILL BUILD IT AGAIN!!"
— @hass_mah_1989
"Fascinating insights into the shifting tides of wealth in China. The potential for both massive inheritance and ensuing disputes is a compelling narrative."
— @ramonarowenasloan
"Spare the life of soldiers and civilians"
— @jolerougeot
"Saw this at Sundance last year, it was fantastic!"
— @lila_hi_zenga
"THE CHEEK OF STARMER AND LABOUR IS ASTONISHING! COST OF LIVING? 😂 FACT FOR YOU! FOR EVERY £100 OF PETROL YOU PUT IN YOUR CAR, £57 GOES TO LABOUR. THEY’RE LAUGHING AT YOU!"
— @craigukx
"Why can’t the Democrats win? Why do they have to count on the Republicans losing? The Democrats need to work on getting strong, and not depend on the weakness of their opposition 🔥"
— @wearefreeq
"What a reckless headline. #FailedJournalism"
— @saffron_golab_anar_and_such
March 16, 2026
When the Oscars take place this weekend, few countries will be watching as closely as will Brazil. Last year, for the first time, a Brazilian film was nominated for best picture. This year promises more—“The Secret Agent” by Kleber Mendonça Filho is nominated for four Academy awards. Brazil’s sudden success has led to euphoria in a nation that has long been considered Latin America’s cinema laggard. Tap the link in our bio to find out why growing competition and a more internationally minded Academy awards are to thank. Photo: Dado Galderi/The New York Times/Eyevine
March 16, 2026
This spring Dartmouth College will graduate a class fluent in literature, science, writing and foreign languages—but, for the first time in more than a century, not necessarily able to swim. Swim tests were once commonplace on American campuses. But over the years budget pressures and waning administrative enthusiasm led many schools to abandon their swimming requirements. In recent years the focus has shifted away from the cost and inconvenience of swim tests. Click the link in our bio to find out why instead, it has shifted to the uncomfortable racial disparities they reveal. Photo: Getty Images
March 16, 2026
Big oil shocks, a generation of economists has been taught, are a relic of the distant past, when energy production was concentrated in the Middle East and the world economy was not so energy-efficient. Over the past two weeks, however, the old way of thinking has returned from the scrapheap. A big enough shock in the Gulf, it turns out, can still initiate a profound crisis. And the chaos emanating now from the Strait of Hormuz is huge. It has already caused the biggest energy supply shock in history. Yet click the link in our bio to find out why some regions will be more affected than others. Photo: Reuters
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