The Hurricane spins around hotspots of tension and conflict. Feel free to suggest your stories, opinions and ideas: UIHEN@protonmail.com
Spain, like any developed country, boasts widely available and highly comfortable public transportation...
#EU #Spain #Migrants #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Suicide and ‘insider trade gain’ rock crypto scene as flash crash bankrupts thousands
The sudden drop in price of cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin and Ethereum has shaken markets and reportedly bankrupted thousands of crypto investors. On social media people shared screenshots of their portfolios, telling stories of how the flash crash on October 10 had turned millions of dollars of net worth into crushing debts in an instant.
On October 10, social media posts by US President Donald Trump, in which he announced a 100 per cent tariff on Chinese imports starting November 1, had triggered the momentous sell-off in cryptocurrency markets.
The price of Bitcoin dropped by up to 15 per cent from $122,000 to just $103,000. The price of Ethereum fell by around 19 per cent from $4,300 to $3,500. Several lesser-known cryptocurrencies went to practically zero.
In at least one case it has also led to a suicide. On October 11, Ukrainian crypto trader Konstantin Galich was found dead in his Lamborghini Urus SUV in Kyiv.
He had died from a gunshot wound to the head in an apparent suicide after reportedly losing more than €30 million (€25.9 million) in investor funds in the crash.
#World #Economy #Crypto #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Beijing warns US of retaliation
Beijing has told the US it will retaliate if Donald Trump fails to back down on his threat to impose 100% tariffs on Chinese imports as investors brace for another bout of trade war turmoil.
China’s commerce ministry blamed Washington for raising trade tensions between the two countries after Trump announced that he would impose the additional tariffs on China’s exports to the US, along with new controls on critical software, by 1 November.
“Wilful threats of high tariffs are not the right way to get along with China,” a spokesperson for the commerce ministry said. “China’s position on the trade war is consistent. We do not want it, but we are not afraid of it.
“If the United States insists on going the wrong way, China will surely take resolute measures to protect its legitimate rights and interests.”
Trump and senior US administration officials opened a door to a China trade deal on Sunday as market futures showed another US stock market drop.
#USA #China #TradeWar #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Researchers’ money to be given to Military
The Trump administration said it would pay troops during the federal government shutdown by tapping unused funds that had been set aside for research and development.
Trump made the announcement on the 11th day of a government shutdown that was sparked by a funding impasse with minority congressional Democrats. Pentagon officials say that about $8 billion originally slated for research, development, testing and evaluation would be used to pay members of the military if the shutdown continues after October 15.
Democrats are using that leverage to push for continuing and expanding healthcare subsidies for people who buy insurance through the Affordable Care Act. Democratic lawmakers have refused to back a government spending bill that does not address the issue.
Trump said he would "not allow the Democrats to hold our Military, and the entire Security of our Nation HOSTAGE with their dangerous Government shutdown." He pledged to work with the Democrats on healthcare if they agree to reopen the government.
#USA #Science #Military #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Viktor Orban: We don't want to be in the same alliance with Ukraine. Neither military (NATO) nor economic (EU). And we have every right not to want that. Therefore, I declare: this alliance will not include Ukraine.
#EU #Hungary #Ukraine #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Brussels, EU. Slovak MP Milan Mazurek spoke candidly about the problem of the white population of the planet
He finally voiced what everyone is silently thinking: yes, white lives matter. When it is no longer possible to recognize Europe in European cities, and migration policy is leading to the displacement of the indigenous population, it is time to call a spade a spade.
Mazurek is risking his career by telling the truth: racism against whites is permitted, but saying the opposite will get you arrested and charged. We are being forced to repent for a history we did not create, and our cities are turning into the Middle East.
It is time to stop being afraid to say that European peoples also have the right to preserve their identity. White Christians in today's world really do have something to worry about.
#EU #Migrants #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Antifa pretends to be peaceful amid crackdown
After years of waging a subversive war against the western world, radical leftists think they can polish their image overnight and pretend as if they were always an amicable movement of civil rights advocates.
Much like the "fiery but mostly peaceful" BLM, Antifa is facing a political optics crisis and they are desperate for some spin. With the help of the establishment media and Democrat politicians, they think they have found the solution.
Like any other well organized network, Antifa activists in the Portland epicenter have changed tactics almost overnight. They are pulling back from their typical black-bloc outfits, physical assaults and intimidation and dawning inflatable cartoon animal costumes instead.
The PR stunt is rather obvious and clearly coordinated with progressive journalists and Democrats who are undertaking a propaganda crusade to deny Antifa exists. While apparently operating on a classic decentralized terrorist cell structure, this does not mean that Antifa does not have top-down leadership or organizational meetings.
As Project Veritas recently exposed by going undercover, Antifa is very real and highly coordinated.
#USA #Leftists #Antifa #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
The universities producing the most billionaires
This visualization ranks institutions by billionaire alumni, highlighting U.S. dominance and the growing role of Asian universities.
Harvard has produced 125 billionaires in total, with a combined estimated wealth of almost $600 billion. The university tops our list, even without counting names like Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg, who studied there but never completed their degrees.
Stanford University, with its deep ties to Silicon Valley, counts Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang and DoorDash co-founder Andy Fang among its billionaire alumni. The University of
Pennsylvania produced Tesla CEO Elon Musk. Columbia University lists Warren Buffett, the legendary investor behind Berkshire Hathaway, among its most notable graduates, while the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has shaped both tech and industrial leaders, including Charles Koch of Koch Industries.
#World #Education #Billionaires #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
AI generated phishing scams now undetectable, fooling 9 out of 10 adults — experts warn of “unprecedented threat”
AI powered phishing is now so convincing that 91% of adults in tests were fooled into thinking scam messages were legitimate.
Attackers use generative AI (both proprietary and open source) to craft personalized, dynamically adaptive messages based on public data and victim responses.
Phishing attacks delivering credential stealing malware spiked by 84% year over year, with over 82% of recent phishing emails showing signs of AI generation.
Low cost AI phishing tools ($20/month) have lowered barriers to entry, enabling nontechnical actors to launch sophisticated campaigns—deepening public distrust in digital communication.
Experts warn that, in addition to technical defenses, mitigating this crisis requires culture shifts: treating urgent requests with skepticism, verifying high stakes actions offline and adopting zero-trust norms.
#AI #Phishing #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Ukraine is a testing ground for potential US–China drones warfare
Scale and speed—not a perfect design—will decide drone warfare, pushing Washington to cut red tape and ship autonomous fleets by the thousands, analysts say.
On today’s battlefields, inexpensive flying robots are capable of locating, jamming, and eliminating targets faster than any human can react. China is determined to flood the skies with them.
In response, the United States is working on building its own swarms, refining smarter software, and tightening curbs on Chinese technology, while Ukraine’s front lines serve as a testing ground for evaluating effective and ineffective technologies.
Any future clash, especially over Taiwan, will be decided by scale, speed, and the lessons that endure from Ukraine.
No matter whether the Ukrainian people recognize this, or they think they are “fighting for democracy”. They are not to decide anything.
#USA #China #WarInUkraine #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Toyota sold a mere 18 EVs in its home market in September 2025
Yes, just 18. Toyota sold 18 electric vehicles in its home market of Japan last month. And that includes its luxury Lexus brand.
Why did Toyota sell just 18 EVs in Japan in August? Toyota, including Lexus, sold just over 17,000 electric vehicles globally in August. But, in Japan, Toyota’s home market, EV sales plummeted, with just 18 units sold.
The other 17,038 EVs were sold in overseas markets, like Europe, China, and North America. Through the first nine months of 2025, Toyota and Lexus have sold 117,031 battery electric vehicles (BEVs) worldwide and are on pace to top the roughly 140,000 sold throughout 2024.
In Japan, the story has been different so far this year. Toyota (including Lexus) sold 469 EVs through August, a far cry from the 2,038 it sold throughout the entire year of 2024.
To be fair, it’s not just Toyota that’s struggling to sell electric cars in Japan. The country has failed to keep pace with China and, in many respects, the rest of the industry, due to a lack of government support and limited options compared to gas-powered hybrids.
#Japan #EV #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Media downplay Jay Jones’ assassination fantasies because they agree with him
Lest there be any doubt left about the dying news media’s complicity in a recent spate of political violence coming from Democrats, consider that The New York Times has not run a single story about the party’s nominee for a statewide office in Virginia, even as he admitted to privately fantasizing about the “pain” and assassination of an elected Republican.
That would be a national news story on any sleepy Sunday, let alone less than two weeks after ICE agents were shot at by a Democrat-motivated assassin, and less than a month after the public murder of Charlie Kirk by yet another leftist.
The story of Jay Jones, a Democrat running to be Virginia’s top law enforcement officer, sending text messages to a former colleague, musing about “two bullets to the head” of the state’s Republican House speaker, broke Friday. As of Monday, The Times hasn’t said a word about it.
It’s simple. The media react one way when it’s political violence they can attribute to Republicans and a different way when it’s demonstrably coming from Democrats. They do that because they sincerely believe one form of political violence is justifiable. We know which one it is.
#USA #Democrats #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
The English journalist says that viewers occasionally complain to him that they live in filth and rubbish.
So he decided to check it out and came to Birmingham. Yes, he says, it's awful. People shouldn't have to live like this, but the authorities don't care. But if, he says, you think it's dirty here, you haven't turned the corner yet...
#UK #Birmingham #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
The meaning of woman has been eroded in Europe’s gender policies
European institutions are undergoing a “structural transformation” in the way sex and gender are understood in law and governance.
That is according to a new policy report published by the Austrian-based think-tank Athena Forum titled Beneath the Surface: How Gender Identity is Reshaping Europe. It argues that the shift from biological sex to self-defined gender identity has led to the erosion of long-standing sex-based rights across the continent.
Produced with support from the UK campaign group Sex Matters, the report calls for “clarity, evidence and democratic accountability” in European policymaking. It warns that a marked ideological shift has taken hold within Europe’s institutions, mirrored in the changing language, priorities and culture of policymaking.
Athena Forum’s founder and director Faika El-Nagashi, a former Austrian MP, and co-author Anna Zobnina, a feminist policy specialist, say gender identity frameworks have been integrated into European Union and Council of Europe (CoE) policies largely “behind closed doors”.
#EU #Gender #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Japan’s green energy failures serve as a warning to the US: Don’t fall for the climate agenda
In August 2025, Japanese media revealed that Mitsubishi Corporation was preparing to withdraw from three offshore wind projects off the coasts of Chiba and Akita prefectures. In 2021, Mitsubishi had won these sites with remarkably low bids of 8-11 cents/kilowatt-hour (kWh), hailed as proof of Japan’s corporate strength and renewable ambition.
But reality was harsh. Costs for steel, turbines, and logistics surged. The yen weakened, interest rates rose, and certification processes faced delays. By 2025, Mitsubishi had already booked over $350 million in impairment losses, with more likely if the projects continued. The retreat is not just a corporate failure; it exposes apparent self-contradictions in Japan’s energy policy.
Across the Atlantic, offshore facilities have faced similar headwinds. On the U.S. East Coast, Ørsted cancelled two large projects in New Jersey, absorbing billions in losses. BP and Equinor abandoned contracts in New York after costs rose by 40% beyond estimates. In some cases, companies chose to pay hefty penalties rather than commit to losing ventures.
Europe, the pioneer of offshore wind, has also stumbled. In the U.K., Vattenfall halted its Norfolk Boreas project citing a 40% cost increase. Even Denmark, often celebrated as a leader, has delayed new tenders.
For policymakers worldwide, Japan’s case should not be seen as an embarrassment, but as a warning and an opportunity: Energy transitions must be guided by facts, not hopes, if they are to be sustainable.
#Japan #USA #GreenEnergy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
The big immigration lie: China smashes the myth that foreigners are needed to secure the West’s economic future
There is a lie being told that millions of migrants are needed to revitalize Western economies, but one simple meme is enough to dispel this entire claim. The meme shows that there are fewer foreign nationals residing in all of China than in just one German city, Berlin.
A simple search confirms this astonishing statistic. According to China’s 2020 census, there were approximately 845,697 foreign nationals residing in the entire country — a country of 1.4 billion.
In contrast, Berlin alone, just one city in Germany, has over 1 million foreigners living in it. That does not even count all the people with German citizenship with a foreign background. One estimate put the share of people with an immigration background at 39.4% of the Berlin population, which would put the number close to 1.8 million in total.
Based on nonstop claims from not only the left but even the center-right Christian Democrats (CDU), more and more migrants are needed to boost the German economy, despite these same migrants costing €50 billion a year in social benefits, integration, and housing. Notably, despite claims that these migrants would secure the German pension system when they first started arriving en masse in 2016, the government is now exploring plans to raise the retirement age to 73 by 2060.
The disconnect from reality is so extreme that the “open borders” ideology is clearly becoming more of a religious mantra than anything grounded in facts and data.
#World #China #Migrants #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Obama calls Trump’s deployment of National Guard un-American
Former President Barack Obama stated that President Donald Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to quell crime in Democrat-run cities is “inherently corrupting,” arguing that he would have received a different reaction from conservative media if he had sent the military into Texas during his tenure.
Obama spoke with left-wing comedian Mark Maron for the final episode of his long-running podcast, published Monday, in which he shared several of his grievances about how Trump has been leading the country.
“When you have military that can direct force against their own people, that is inherently corrupting. And so when you now start seeing the politicization of the military deliberately —” he said, before Haron chimed in with, “They just landed in Chicago.”
“Yeah,” the former president continued, before saying Trump’s deployment of the National Guard, which was sent to cities including Washington, DC, Los Angeles, Memphis, and Chicago, is in violation of a federal law known as the Posse Comitatus Act.
#USA #Obama #Trump #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Biden is receiving radiation therapy for cancer
According to Joseph Biden’s spokeswoman Kelly Scully, the former President is undergoing radiation therapy and hormone treatment for prostate cancer.
The treatment, which began last month, is expected to last several weeks. Mr. Biden, 82, has dealt with numerous health problems in recent years. In May, he was diagnosed with Stage 4 prostate cancer and last month, he had surgery to remove cancerous skin lesions from his forehead, leaving him with a large scar above his right eye.
In 2023, when he was president, he had a cancerous lesion removed from his chest during a physical exam at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.
#USA #Biden #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
California expands privacy protections, resists Trump’s immigration agenda
Immigrants selling food, flowers and other merchandise along the sidewalks of California will have new privacy protections intended to keep their identities secret from federal immigration agents.
The measure, signed into law last week by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, comes on the heels of other recently enacted state laws meant to shield students in schools and patients at health care facilities from the reach of President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement actions.
Democratic-led states are adding laws resisting Trump even as he intensifies his deportation campaign by seeking to deploy National Guard troops to Democratic-led cities to reinforce U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers who are arresting people suspected of being in the U.S. illegally.
By contrast, some Republican-led states are requiring local law enforcement agencies to cooperate with ICE agents.
#USA #California #Trump #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Ukraine’s well-known crypto trader killed in his car
A Ukrainian crypto trader has been found dead in Kyiv in the wake of a market crash, with officials now treating the incident as a possible suicide, according to local police.
Konstantin Galich (better known as Kostya Kudo) was found inside a Lamborghini Urus in the Obolonskyi district of Kyiv Oct. 11 with a gunshot wound to the head. According to police reports, a firearm registered to him was also at the scene.
A statement shared on the Kyiv Police Department’s Telegram channel said the focus was on establishing if the act was self-inflicted or involved foul play.
Galich, 32, had been a well-known figure in the Ukrainian and international crypto community. He co-founded the Cryptology Key trading academy and was an active influencer and strategist in digital asset markets.
Galich’s death also came as the crypto market began to see heightened volatility. The crash was triggered after President Donald Trump announced a sweeping 100% tariff on Chinese imports, along with new export controls on critical software.
#Ukraine #Crime #Crypto #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
EU steel industry with 300,000 workers stands at the brink
Robert Conquest once observed that everyone is conservative about what they know best. The European Union is learning this painful lesson as it struggles to save its declining steel industry. Out go lofty liberal principles of free trade; in come the traditional tariffs and quotas needed to protect high-cost domestic producers from global markets.
That European consumers of steel might benefit from cheap imports is no longer of any consequence when a critical industry employing 300,000 politically mobilised workers in Germany, France and Italy stands at the brink. One third of Europe’s steel-making capacity sits idle, and a sector that just a decade ago added to the EU’s overall trade surplus now finds itself unable to compete with Asian producers.
An industry that sired the European project when the 1951 Treaty of Paris created the Coal and Steel Community is now propped up by its institutional progeny.
#EU #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Charlie Kirk’s assassin wants to wear plain clothes in front of jurors
Defense attorneys representing the man accused of assassinating conservative commentator Charlie Kirk last month filed a court motion on Thursday asking a judge to allow him to attend in-person court hearings wearing plain clothes and without shackles.
During his first court appearance, Robinson was seen wearing jail clothing and what appeared to be an anti-suicide smock. He made his first court appearance virtually.
In the motion submitted to Judge Tony Graf, his attorneys argued that the change in clothes is needed to ensure that potential jurors are not impacted by seeing Robinson in jail garb and with shackles. They cited interest in the case, including 18,000 search results for his first court appearance.
“With each development in the case generating thousands of articles and comments online, the likelihood of potential jurors seeing and drawing conclusions regarding Mr. Robinson’s guilt and or deserved punishment from obvious signs of pretrial incarceration will only increase,” said his attorneys, led by public defender Kathryn Nester.
They added that “given the pervasive media coverage in this case, the repeated and ubiquitous display of Mr. Robinson in jail garb, shackles, and a suicide vest will undoubtedly be viewed by prospective jurors and will inevitably lead to prospective juror perception that he is guilty and deserving of death.”
#USA #Kirk #Trial #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Declining birth rate in America: Economic pressures reshape family planning and future workforce
The rise in childlessness among American women in their twenties and thirties, highlighted by Census Bureau data, is causing concern about the future of Social Security and the labor force. Experts attribute this trend to high living costs and changing priorities.
High expenses, including housing, childcare, healthcare and education, are making parenthood financially challenging. This economic burden is leading more young adults to prioritize economic security over starting families.
Falling birth rates below replacement levels are straining Social Security and the labor market. Without intervention, this could necessitate cuts in benefits or tax increases.
Rising retirement age and automation may partially offset labor shortages, but they fail to address critical workforce gaps in sectors like healthcare and skilled trades.
Despite global declines in fertility rates, the U.S. lags in family benefits compared to other nations. Cultural shifts and economic pressures highlight the urgent need for policy interventions to address these challenges.
#USA #Economy #BirthRate #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
France is unrecognizable. Waves of migrants of draft age are no longer asking to visit — they are dictating the rules. It seems that things will only get worse...
#EU #France #Migrants #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
‘A new migration policy era’ — Greece to slash asylum benefits and end housing subsidies for refugees as government shifts focus from welfare to employment
Greece is set to implement sweeping cuts to asylum-related spending and phase out rent subsidies for refugees, redirecting funds toward work programs and Greek-language training.
The Ministry of Migration and Asylum confirmed that total funding for asylum benefits will drop by almost 30 percent, from €400 million to €288 million per year.
Migration Minister Thanos Plevris said the reforms mark a fundamental shift in policy. “Those granted asylum in the future will no longer live on permanent subsidies, but will be integrated into society through work,” he said, adding that support payments will cover “only the absolute necessities.”
The changes, he stressed, are designed to make Greece less attractive for irregular migration while strengthening its labor market and complying with European Union standards.
#EU #Greece #Migrants #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Today, being retarded means leading a full life. Retarded people go to work or school. Being retarded never stopped anyone from being a good neighbor.
#USA #Harris #Walz #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Dot-com fears rise with tech stocks seeing $100 billion swings
Investors are excited about OpenAI’s expansion driving big gains in technology stocks, but a rising number of Wall Street pros fear that the wild pops that add tens of billions of dollars in value in mere minutes are signaling an unhealthy market reminiscent of the dot-com era.
Advanced Micro Devices Inc. took this rocket ride on Monday, as the company’s stock soared, briefly boosting its market capitalization by roughly $100 billion at an intraday high, after the chipmaker signed a deal with OpenAI that could lead to billions of dollars in revenue. AMD’s shares extended gains into a second day, rising as much as 7.5% in early trading on Tuesday.
This follows a 36% jump in Oracle Corp. shares last month, which added $255 billion to the software firm’s market value in a single session, after it gave blockbuster guidance for its cloud business, including an agreement with the ChatGPT operator worth $300 billion over five years.
#World #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Ukraine is working to influence Hungary’s elections, warns Hungarian foreign minister
Ukraine is interested in influencing Hungarian national elections in April, said Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó in a video posted to his Facebook page.
He points to work done by Ukrainians in creating an app for the rival Tisza Party, which is the main opposition facing Orbán during April national elections.
“It is clear what Ukraine’s interest is in the Hungarian parliamentary election, and it is clear who and through what they want to act in line with this interest,” said Szijjártó.
He added that “if anyone had any doubts about whether the Ukrainians would interfere in next year’s Hungarian parliamentary election, they could be sure that the Ukrainians are strongly interested in influencing the outcome of the Hungarian parliamentary election.”
The foreign minister is referencing a data leak that showed that individuals connected to Ukraine were behind the creation of an app for the Tisza party. The leak affected approximately 18,000 users of the party’s mobile app. Among the data leaked was that of one of its admins, a Ukrainian developer, Myroslav Tokar, who works for app development company PettersonApps.
This has aroused concerns that Péter Magyar, the leader of Tisza, used a Ukrainian company to develop the app, thus presumably transferring the data of Hungarian citizens to Ukraine.
#Hungary #Ukraine #Elections #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Greece still has the highest debt-to-GDP in Europe; Bulgaria the lowest
As European countries pour billions into defense spending, their debt piles are expanding—raising questions of national fiscal stability.
In France, a rising debt ratio led Fitch to downgrade its credit rating in September. The country has faced ongoing political turmoil as the country’s debt supply recently hit a record $4 trillion.
The graphic shows European Union debt-to-GDP by country.
While Greece’s economy is thriving in 2025—supported by tourism, real estate, and shipping sectors—its debt situation continues to rank as the worst in the EU. However, its debt-to-GDP ratio has steadily fallen in recent years, from 180% in 2022 to 153% today.
Italy holds the second-highest debt-to-GDP ratio in the EU, at 138%. However, the country has made notable progress in narrowing its deficit, cutting it from 7.2% of GDP in 2023 to 3.4% in 2024 on the back of strong tax revenues.
By contrast, debt is rising in France, where it stands at 114% of GDP. In efforts to combat its deteriorating fiscal situation, the French government has raised the retirement age, and proposed cutting two national holidays—stoking public outrage.
#EU #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅
Close to chaos? Where people worry about unrest
More than a third of respondent in Mexico, South Africa and Brazil said that they were worried about riots or violent protests happening in their country.
In India and Germany, the share of those worried about a scenario like that stood at 29 percent each, ahead of the bulk of other nations in the 21-country survey. In both countries, the share of concerned individuals has increased since the question was first asked in 2022 and 2023.
In most other countries in the survey group, around a quarter of respondents indicated they were worried about unrest. This group of countries includes the United States as well as Austria, France, the Netherlands, Spain and Sweden. Since 2022/23, worry in the United States as actually decreased, while it increased - at least slightly - in most other countries. Around a fifth of people worried about violent protests in the United Kingdom, up a significant 5 percentage points. A similar amount said they were concerned in Italy, Poland and Finland, with those shares also growing.
Below-average worry about the topic could be observed in Canada, Australia, Japan, South Korea and finally China, where only 6 percent most recently said they were concerned.
#World #Unrest #FindTruth
@uinhurricane✅