05/29/2026
Don't use calculator 🤯😨🤯🤯
Share the daily life of American teachers Give up that mediocrity and pursue the job you love.
05/29/2026
Don't use calculator 🤯😨🤯🤯
05/29/2026
Do you agree with her?👏🏾
05/29/2026
Do you agree with her?
05/29/2026
Great response!🎯
05/29/2026
🚨BREAKING: Florida Sheriff Vows to Charge Parents if Their Kids Join Destructive 'Teen Takeovers'!
Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd is issuing a strong warning ahead of summer: parents will be held legally accountable alongside their teens if they participate in chaotic, social media-fueled "teen takeover" gatherings that involve vandalism, fighting, blocking streets, or damaging businesses.
"We're not gonna tolerate any sort of 'teen takeover' here in our county," Judd declared. He made it clear that deputies will arrest involved juveniles — and if parents fail to supervise or control their kids, "we're gonna come lock you up too or charge you civilly."
The no-nonsense sheriff emphasized personal responsibility: "Parents, hold your children accountable so we don't have to."
This comes as similar disruptive trends have caused problems in other cities. Judd's message is blunt — don't test it in Polk County.
05/29/2026
🚨BREAKING: 44-year-old man arrested for disguising in a wig and posing as a woman in order to access women's gym locker rooms.
05/28/2026
Maddie Ziegler
05/28/2026
In 1911, Albert Einstein fell in love with his own cousin. For that relationship, he was willing to neglect even his own children — and he reportedly used his future Nobel Prize money as leverage to force his wife into divorce.
What shocked people even more was a question he allegedly asked before marrying his cousin:
“So who should I marry — you or your daughter?”
Back in 1896, Einstein was just another messy-haired student at the ETH Zurich.
There, in the physics department, he met the only woman in the class, Mileva Marić. The two quickly fell in love.
In 1901, Mileva became pregnant before marriage and gave birth to a daughter, Lieserl.
At the time, that kind of scandal could destroy an academic career.
To protect his future, Einstein arranged for the child to be sent to rural Serbia to be raised in secret. He repeatedly warned Mileva:
“No one can know she exists.”
The little girl died of scarlet fever at only 21 months old.
She never saw her father even once.
Despite the grief of losing her daughter, Mileva married Einstein and gave up much of her own academic ambition to support him behind the scenes.
Then came 1905 — Einstein’s “miracle year.” One groundbreaking physics paper after another changed the scientific world.
Late at night, Mileva often sat beside him under dim lamplight, checking complicated equations again and again.
Some early drafts reportedly carried both of their names, but when the papers were finally published, hers had disappeared completely.
She believed sacrifice would bring stability.
But the heart of a genius rarely stays with one person forever.
In 1912, while recovering in Berlin, Einstein grew close to his cousin Elsa Einstein.
On one side was his exhausted wife, worn down by domestic life. On the other was his warm and attentive cousin nearby.
He chose without hesitation.
In 1914, trying to pressure Mileva into divorce, Einstein presented her with what many later described as a humiliating “marital contract”:
His clothes had to be kept in order
Meals had to be delivered to his study on time
She was not to expect physical intimacy
If he told her to stop talking, she had to obey immediately
By then, Mileva was emotionally shattered.
In 1918, during divorce negotiations, Einstein lacked the money to provide a proper settlement. So he made an extraordinary promise:
“If I win the Nobel Prize in the future, all the prize money will go to you.”
Few believed he would actually honor it.
But Mileva took the gamble — and won.
In 1922, after receiving the Nobel Prize, Einstein transferred the prize money — about 120,000 Swiss francs — to her as promised.
She used the money to buy rental properties, securing at least some stability after the collapse of their marriage.
After leaving his first wife, Einstein married Elsa.
Before the wedding, another bizarre episode reportedly occurred.
Half-jokingly, he asked Elsa’s daughter Ilse:
“If I marry, should I choose you or your mother?”
One sentence revealed just how reckless he could be in matters of love.
Elsa understood his nature well. Rather than fight it endlessly, she reached a strange unspoken arrangement with him:
“As long as you come home for dinner and don’t embarrass me publicly, do as you like.”
With that freedom, Einstein became even more uninhibited.
Rumors and stories linked him to numerous women — from secretaries to wealthy widows, and even alleged connections with Soviet intelligence circles.
Whenever Elsa saw her husband behaving intimately with another woman in public, she would quietly remove her glasses and polish them over and over again —
as if not seeing it clearly might make it hurt less.
In the end, the greatest damage fell on the children.
His eldest son, Hans Albert Einstein, grew up watching his mother cry and developed deep resentment toward his father.
To defy him, Hans chose hydraulic engineering instead of physics, infuriating Einstein and permanently damaging their relationship.
His younger son, Eduard Einstein, suffered even more.
Burdened by both hereditary mental illness and emotional neglect, Eduard developed severe schizophrenia in his twenties and spent much of his life institutionalized, enduring harsh insulin shock treatments.
In 1933, Einstein visited him for what would be the last time before leaving for the United States.
Over the next 22 years, he never returned to see him again.
In 1955, at age 76, Einstein died in Princeton.
Under his hospital bed were unfinished physics calculations.
Even at the very end of his life, he seemed more comfortable hiding inside formulas and the universe than facing the emotional debts and family wounds he had left behind.
In 1911, Albert Einstein fell in love with his own cousin. For that relationship, he was willing to neglect even his own children — and he reportedly used his future Nobel Prize money as leverage to force his wife into divorce.
What shocked people even more was a question he allegedly asked before marrying his cousin:
“So who should I marry — you or your daughter?”
Back in 1896, Einstein was just another messy-haired student at the ETH Zurich.
There, in the physics department, he met the only woman in the class, Mileva Marić. The two quickly fell in love.
In 1901, Mileva became pregnant before marriage and gave birth to a daughter, Lieserl.
At the time, that kind of scandal could destroy an academic career.
To protect his future, Einstein arranged for the child to be sent to rural Serbia to be raised in secret. He repeatedly warned Mileva:
“No one can know she exists.”
The little girl died of scarlet fever at only 21 months old.
She never saw her father even once.
Despite the grief of losing her daughter, Mileva married Einstein and gave up much of her own academic ambition to support him behind the scenes.
Then came 1905 — Einstein’s “miracle year.” One groundbreaking physics paper after another changed the scientific world.
Late at night, Mileva often sat beside him under dim lamplight, checking complicated equations again and again.
Some early drafts reportedly carried both of their names, but when the papers were finally published, hers had disappeared completely.
She believed sacrifice would bring stability.
But the heart of a genius rarely stays with one person forever.
In 1912, while recovering in Berlin, Einstein grew close to his cousin Elsa Einstein.
On one side was his exhausted wife, worn down by domestic life. On the other was his warm and attentive cousin nearby.
He chose without hesitation.
In 1914, trying to pressure Mileva into divorce, Einstein presented her with what many later described as a humiliating “marital contract”:
His clothes had to be kept in order
Meals had to be delivered to his study on time
She was not to expect physical intimacy
If he told her to stop talking, she had to obey immediately
By then, Mileva was emotionally shattered.
In 1918, during divorce negotiations, Einstein lacked the money to provide a proper settlement. So he made an extraordinary promise:
“If I win the Nobel Prize in the future, all the prize money will go to you.”
Few believed he would actually honor it.
But Mileva took the gamble — and won.
In 1922, after receiving the Nobel Prize, Einstein transferred the prize money — about 120,000 Swiss francs — to her as promised.
She used the money to buy rental properties, securing at least some stability after the collapse of their marriage.
After leaving his first wife, Einstein married Elsa.
Before the wedding, another bizarre episode reportedly occurred.
Half-jokingly, he asked Elsa’s daughter Ilse:
“If I marry, should I choose you or your mother?”
One sentence revealed just how reckless he could be in matters of love.
Elsa understood his nature well. Rather than fight it endlessly, she reached a strange unspoken arrangement with him:
“As long as you come home for dinner and don’t embarrass me publicly, do as you like.”
With that freedom, Einstein became even more uninhibited.
Rumors and stories linked him to numerous women — from secretaries to wealthy widows, and even alleged connections with Soviet intelligence circles.
Whenever Elsa saw her husband behaving intimately with another woman in public, she would quietly remove her glasses and polish them over and over again —
as if not seeing it clearly might make it hurt less.
In the end, the greatest damage fell on the children.
His eldest son, Hans Albert Einstein, grew up watching his mother cry and developed deep resentment toward his father.
To defy him, Hans chose hydraulic engineering instead of physics, infuriating Einstein and permanently damaging their relationship.
His younger son, Eduard Einstein, suffered even more.
Burdened by both hereditary mental illness and emotional neglect, Eduard developed severe schizophrenia in his twenties and spent much of his life institutionalized, enduring harsh insulin shock treatments.
In 1933, Einstein visited him for what would be the last time before leaving for the United States.
Over the next 22 years, he never returned to see him again.
In 1955, at age 76, Einstein died in Princeton.
Under his hospital bed were unfinished physics calculations.
Even at the very end of his life, he seemed more comfortable hiding inside formulas and the universe than facing the emotional debts and family wounds he had left behind.
05/28/2026
taymila supremacy
05/28/2026
05/28/2026
I found this in my younger brother school bag, what is it?