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Statement on Climate and Civil Liberties

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ᴡⁿ ᡗᢦᡐᡉ˒ α΅’αΆ  αΆœΛ‘αΆ¦α΅α΅ƒα΅—α΅‰ α΅‰α΅α΅‰Κ³α΅α΅‰βΏαΆœΚΈ https://climateclock.world/ Demanding democratic climate action that upholds human rights, transparency, and dignity. Emergency measures must never become a pathway to permanent authoritarianism. We must abolish the military regime and the police state — even as the rules tighten under the climate emergency. Climate justice must never come at the cost of freedom. Defund repression. Fund resilience. Power to the people — not to surveillance. This is a powerful and visually striking image of a diverse crowd marching for climate justice, holding signs like “Demanding Democratic Climate Action,” “Human Rights First,” and “Emergency Measures Must Not Become Permanent.” It captures the energy, unity, and urgency of a grassroots climate rights movement. Prominent voices like George Clooney are raising concerns. In a recent CNN interview , he warned that the current climate of fear is even more widespread than during the...

Tiny Coins, Big Questions: Even the Cent Is Losing Value

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ᴡⁿ ᡗᢦᡐᡉ˒ α΅’αΆ  αΆœΛ‘αΆ¦α΅α΅ƒα΅—α΅‰ α΅‰α΅α΅‰Κ³α΅α΅‰βΏαΆœΚΈ https://climateclock.world/ Some people pay dearly for things that aren't worth half a cent in reality. Maybe that's why they're getting rid of cents in the U.S. The cent is "getting away" or becoming less relevant in the United States. Here's how: The U.S. penny will be phased out, with the Treasury Department halting production in early 2026 due to high costs and low usage. Each penny costs 3.7 cents to produce, causing annual losses over $56 million for the U.S. Mint. Bipartisan lawmakers support the decision, and President Donald Trump ordered the Treasury to stop minting pennies in February 2025, calling it "wasteful." Cash transactions will round to the nearest five cents, while electronic payments remain precise. This aligns the U.S. with Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, which discontinued low-value coins. Major banks, including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo, are developing...

Inside My Digital Backpack 🌐 Not Lost - Just Unsorted

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In times of climate emergency, explore climateclock.world My Personal Adventure Collection Over the years, I've gathered and documented fascinating things—travel experiences, unique maps, and quirky URLs that tell stories of where I've been and what I've discovered. Organizing Collections and URLs Every explorer needs a backpack—not always physical, but packed with experiences, tools, and treasures collected along the way. Mine lives online. Yours could too. ✅ 1. Determine Your Collection Types Identify what kinds of collections you’re organizing. Common examples: Collection Type Example Physical items Coins, stamps, books, pins Digital items URLs, photos, artworks, links Hybrid Items with both digital & physical value (e.g., scanned postcards) You could categorize like: 🧳 Travel πŸ—Ί️ Maps πŸ›️ Projects πŸ”— External References From hosting strangers who became friends to mapping the invisible arteries of cities, I’ve documented stori...

Luka Jagor πŸƒ‍♂️

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