• Amsterdam in de 1600s – Volledige documentaire https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLgD93agWik

    #Amsterdam #AIReconstruction #documentary

    Amsterdam was tussen 1600 en 1700 een werkstad, gebouwd voor handel en niet voor comfort. Deze video laat zien hoe de stad echt functioneerde: havens als werkplek, grachten als transportroutes, huizen als bedrijven, en regels en papierwerk die alles bij elkaar hielden. Je ziet met welke risico’s mensen elke dag leefden — letsel, ziekte, schulden, brand en mislukte handel — en waarom organisatie, niet luxe, Amsterdam zo machtig maakte.

    #Amsterdam #AIReconstruction #documentary #1600 #AtourOfAmsterdam
    Amsterdam in de 1600s – Volledige documentaire https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLgD93agWik #Amsterdam #AIReconstruction #documentary Amsterdam was tussen 1600 en 1700 een werkstad, gebouwd voor handel en niet voor comfort. Deze video laat zien hoe de stad echt functioneerde: havens als werkplek, grachten als transportroutes, huizen als bedrijven, en regels en papierwerk die alles bij elkaar hielden. Je ziet met welke risico’s mensen elke dag leefden — letsel, ziekte, schulden, brand en mislukte handel — en waarom organisatie, niet luxe, Amsterdam zo machtig maakte. #Amsterdam #AIReconstruction #documentary #1600 #AtourOfAmsterdam
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  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1PFWefG3yLg Amsterdam in the 1600s: The Golden Age (AI Reconstruction)

    What Amsterdam Looked Like in the 1600s | The Golden Age (AI Reconstruction)

    What was Amsterdam like before it became a global financial center?
    Before stock exchanges, multinational corporations, and modern infrastructure, Amsterdam was already quietly organizing the world around it.

    In this video, History Evolution explores Amsterdam during the 17th century Golden Age, when the city emerged as a central node in global trade — not through conquest, but through coordination, systems, and record-keeping.

    Using period maps, architectural remains, shipping records, and contemporary written accounts, we reconstruct Amsterdam as it functioned in the 1600s. These reconstructions are rendered as ultra-realistic visuals and animated to restore motion and scale — allowing us to observe the city from above, walk its streets, and follow the flow of goods through its canals and harbor.

    Guided by our AI historian Dr. Henry Alden, we examine Amsterdam as a working system:

    The concentric canal network as urban infrastructure

    The merchant houses and warehouses that organized trade

    The harbor as a transit point, not a store of wealth

    The Dutch East India Company (VOC) and the mechanics of global commerce

    Taverns, markets, and informal institutions of information exchange

    Religious life shaped by Calvinist restraint

    Governance through administration rather than spectacle

    This is not a dramatization.
    There are no myths, no heroic narratives, and no modern assumptions.

    What we see instead are routines, records, and relationships — the foundations of the modern global city taking shape through daily practice.

    🎓 Narration & Historical Perspective

    Presented by Dr. Henry Alden
    Historian (AI Reconstruction)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1PFWefG3yLg Amsterdam in the 1600s: The Golden Age (AI Reconstruction) What Amsterdam Looked Like in the 1600s | The Golden Age (AI Reconstruction) What was Amsterdam like before it became a global financial center? Before stock exchanges, multinational corporations, and modern infrastructure, Amsterdam was already quietly organizing the world around it. In this video, History Evolution explores Amsterdam during the 17th century Golden Age, when the city emerged as a central node in global trade — not through conquest, but through coordination, systems, and record-keeping. Using period maps, architectural remains, shipping records, and contemporary written accounts, we reconstruct Amsterdam as it functioned in the 1600s. These reconstructions are rendered as ultra-realistic visuals and animated to restore motion and scale — allowing us to observe the city from above, walk its streets, and follow the flow of goods through its canals and harbor. Guided by our AI historian Dr. Henry Alden, we examine Amsterdam as a working system: The concentric canal network as urban infrastructure The merchant houses and warehouses that organized trade The harbor as a transit point, not a store of wealth The Dutch East India Company (VOC) and the mechanics of global commerce Taverns, markets, and informal institutions of information exchange Religious life shaped by Calvinist restraint Governance through administration rather than spectacle This is not a dramatization. There are no myths, no heroic narratives, and no modern assumptions. What we see instead are routines, records, and relationships — the foundations of the modern global city taking shape through daily practice. 🎓 Narration & Historical Perspective Presented by Dr. Henry Alden Historian (AI Reconstruction)
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  • To power its green transition, the EU is burning millions of tons of wood pellets every year, shipped in from the US and Canada.

    Europe is cutting down forests halfway around the world, grinding them into pellets and shipping them across the Atlantic to burn in its power stations.

    Unsurprisingly, the total emissions here are higher than simply burning coal, according to studies by the EU's own scientific advisors.

    But countries like the UK, Denmark and the Netherlands do it anyway, because it technically counts as zero carbon emissions.

    Carbon Loophole: Why Is Wood Burning Counted as Green Energy?

    "Ecologists say that the claims of carbon neutrality, which are accepted by the European Union and the British government, do not stand up to scrutiny"

    #klimaat #zwendel #groenbedrog
    To power its green transition, the EU is burning millions of tons of wood pellets every year, shipped in from the US and Canada. Europe is cutting down forests halfway around the world, grinding them into pellets and shipping them across the Atlantic to burn in its power stations. Unsurprisingly, the total emissions here are higher than simply burning coal, according to studies by the EU's own scientific advisors. But countries like the UK, Denmark and the Netherlands do it anyway, because it technically counts as zero carbon emissions. Carbon Loophole: Why Is Wood Burning Counted as Green Energy? "Ecologists say that the claims of carbon neutrality, which are accepted by the European Union and the British government, do not stand up to scrutiny" #klimaat #zwendel #groenbedrog
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  • de afbeelding toont de vernietiging vergiftiging van het eco systeem door windmolens maar men heeft de sterfte van miljoenen insecten door wieken niet in beeld gebracht en de catastrofale gevolgen ervan vd voedsel productie, eveneens plaatste men onderaan de leugen dat windmolen energie minder CO2 uitstoot zou betekenen, het tegendeel is nl waar.. bij de productie vervoer plaatsing etc komt veel meer co2 en toxische troep vrij wat zeer slecht is voor het milieu.

    every year windmills destroy more and more insects inc bees and countless birds/// destroying the food cricle / eco system and economies/ many windmills burn and spead clouds of cancer causing fiber toxics. The production in china, transport by boats, the placing and using Windmills causes extra more CO2 and toxic clouds poisening the eco system
    de afbeelding toont de vernietiging vergiftiging van het eco systeem door windmolens maar men heeft de sterfte van miljoenen insecten door wieken niet in beeld gebracht en de catastrofale gevolgen ervan vd voedsel productie, eveneens plaatste men onderaan de leugen dat windmolen energie minder CO2 uitstoot zou betekenen, het tegendeel is nl waar.. bij de productie vervoer plaatsing etc komt veel meer co2 en toxische troep vrij wat zeer slecht is voor het milieu. every year windmills destroy more and more insects inc bees and countless birds/// destroying the food cricle / eco system and economies/ many windmills burn and spead clouds of cancer causing fiber toxics. The production in china, transport by boats, the placing and using Windmills causes extra more CO2 and toxic clouds poisening the eco system
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  • mozart cat plays tom and jerry symphony
    mozart cat plays tom and jerry symphony :smiling-face-with-hearts:
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  • Het horrorhotel van Amsterdam #tolhuis https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=12pLpBW5HM4
    Het horrorhotel van Amsterdam #tolhuis https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=12pLpBW5HM4
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  • Don Lemon was participating in the attack.

    Lemon openly coordinated with Kima Armstrong, admitted foreknowledge of a “surprise operation,” withheld details to avoid tipping off targets, then joined activists storming a Christian church during worship. That’s conspiracy and obstruction.

    Lemon was interviewed by Minnesota AG Keith Ellison—the same official who spearheaded the wrongful prosecution of Derek Chauvin—and Ellison proudly promoted the segment.

    There is no First Amendment right to disrupt a church, intimidate worshippers, or obstruct lawful activity. Speech doesn’t include invasion. Assembly doesn’t include coercion.

    If a lawyer helps plan a robbery, he’s not just “observing.” Same rule applies here.

    The media doesn’t get immunity for crimes just because they bring a camera.

    https://x.com/TheBrancaShow/status/2013476586150838739

    #lemon analyse

    Quote and Full ContextThe most widely circulated and quoted version from multiple video clips, news reports, and X posts is:

    "Watch this guy here, look, hugging his kid. And, you know, I imagine it's uncomfortable and traumatic for the people here, but... careful, it's very slippery right here. [...] but that's what protesting is about."

    He says this while filming a father embracing and comforting his visibly upset child amid the chaos.

    In some slightly varied transcriptions from clips (due to audio quality or editing), it's phrased as "It's uncomfortable and traumatic for the people here, but that's really what protesting is about" or "It is traumatic for the people, and that's what protesting is about."

    This moment has been heavily clipped and shared , often with captions emphasizing that Lemon appears to justify or downplay the impact on children while narrating it live.

    https://x.com/markkayeshow/status/2013285524958491000
    Don Lemon was participating in the attack. Lemon openly coordinated with Kima Armstrong, admitted foreknowledge of a “surprise operation,” withheld details to avoid tipping off targets, then joined activists storming a Christian church during worship. That’s conspiracy and obstruction. Lemon was interviewed by Minnesota AG Keith Ellison—the same official who spearheaded the wrongful prosecution of Derek Chauvin—and Ellison proudly promoted the segment. There is no First Amendment right to disrupt a church, intimidate worshippers, or obstruct lawful activity. Speech doesn’t include invasion. Assembly doesn’t include coercion. If a lawyer helps plan a robbery, he’s not just “observing.” Same rule applies here. The media doesn’t get immunity for crimes just because they bring a camera. https://x.com/TheBrancaShow/status/2013476586150838739 #lemon analyse Quote and Full ContextThe most widely circulated and quoted version from multiple video clips, news reports, and X posts is: "Watch this guy here, look, hugging his kid. And, you know, I imagine it's uncomfortable and traumatic for the people here, but... careful, it's very slippery right here. [...] but that's what protesting is about." He says this while filming a father embracing and comforting his visibly upset child amid the chaos. In some slightly varied transcriptions from clips (due to audio quality or editing), it's phrased as "It's uncomfortable and traumatic for the people here, but that's really what protesting is about" or "It is traumatic for the people, and that's what protesting is about." This moment has been heavily clipped and shared , often with captions emphasizing that Lemon appears to justify or downplay the impact on children while narrating it live. https://x.com/markkayeshow/status/2013285524958491000
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  • Just because you're offended or or say or feel so, doesn't mean you're right https://x.com/gervaisclips/status/2013317384921047234
    Just because you're offended or or say or feel so, doesn't mean you're right https://x.com/gervaisclips/status/2013317384921047234
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  • #lemon analyse

    Exact Quote and Full ContextThe most widely circulated and quoted version from multiple video clips, news reports, and X posts is:


    "Watch this guy here, look, hugging his kid. And, you know, I imagine it's uncomfortable and traumatic for the people here, but... careful, it's very slippery right here. [...] but that's what protesting is about."

    He says this while filming a father embracing and comforting his visibly upset child amid the chaos.
    The tone is casual and observational — he acknowledges the distress ("uncomfortable and traumatic") but immediately frames it as an acceptable, even necessary, aspect of protest ("that's what protesting is about").
    In some slightly varied transcriptions from clips (due to audio quality or editing), it's phrased as "It's uncomfortable and traumatic for the people here, but that's really what protesting is about" or "It is traumatic for the people, and that's what protesting is about."

    This moment has been heavily clipped and shared (e.g., by accounts like TheBlaze, End Wokeness, Reverend Jordan Wells, and others), often with captions emphasizing that Lemon appears to justify or downplay the impact on children while narrating it live.

    https://x.com/markkayeshow/status/2013285524958491000
    #lemon analyse Exact Quote and Full ContextThe most widely circulated and quoted version from multiple video clips, news reports, and X posts is: "Watch this guy here, look, hugging his kid. And, you know, I imagine it's uncomfortable and traumatic for the people here, but... careful, it's very slippery right here. [...] but that's what protesting is about." He says this while filming a father embracing and comforting his visibly upset child amid the chaos. The tone is casual and observational — he acknowledges the distress ("uncomfortable and traumatic") but immediately frames it as an acceptable, even necessary, aspect of protest ("that's what protesting is about"). In some slightly varied transcriptions from clips (due to audio quality or editing), it's phrased as "It's uncomfortable and traumatic for the people here, but that's really what protesting is about" or "It is traumatic for the people, and that's what protesting is about." This moment has been heavily clipped and shared (e.g., by accounts like TheBlaze, End Wokeness, Reverend Jordan Wells, and others), often with captions emphasizing that Lemon appears to justify or downplay the impact on children while narrating it live. https://x.com/markkayeshow/status/2013285524958491000
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  • They rescued 109 children in Dallas after arresting 244 predators.
    If this is what they caught… what does that say about what’s still hidden?
    They rescued 109 children in Dallas after arresting 244 predators. If this is what they caught… what does that say about what’s still hidden?
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