Las sonrisas — Santiago Galicia Rojon Serrallonga

SANTIAGO GALICIA ROJON SERRALLONGA Derechos reservados conforme a la ley/ Copyright Las sonrisas son orquídeas, tulipanes y rosas que no se marchitan, flores que aparecen en una estación y en otra y dejan sus fragancias a la gente buena, a los enamorados, a los artistas, a los que se quieren tanto, a los poetas inspirados, […]

Las sonrisas — Santiago Galicia Rojon Serrallonga

Here’s why most electric vehicles won’t qualify for $7,500 federal tax credit – San Gabriel Valley Tribune (Me: US competition will mean manufacturers will race to increase US sourced batteries and production)

There’s also a new $4,000 credit for buyers of used EVs, a provision that could help modest-income households go electric. Source: Here’s why most electric vehicles won’t qualify for $7,500 federal tax credit – San Gabriel Valley Tribune

World Lion Day

Lolsys Library

*I have to apoligise, I became sick yesterday. Hopefully I can do something with this*

This celebration of the animal kingdom’s most beautiful and fearsome creature was founded by Big Cat Rescue, the world’s largest accredited sanctuary dedicated to big cats. World Lion Day is the brainchild of co-founders Dereck and Beverly Joubert, a husband-and-wife team with a passion for big cats. They began the initiative in 2013, bringing together both National Geographic and the Big Cat Initiative under a single banner to protect the remaining big cats living in the wild.

I have a tiny thing for Lions, lol . Anthea Wright – Illustrations I keep hoping that Scar changes his mind, lol.

Some facts about the Lion World:

  • A Pride is actually the group of Lionesses, not the males.
  • A group of male lions is called a coalition.
  • The roar of the…

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Brazilians fear return to dictatorship as ‘deranged’ Bolsonaro trails in polls | Brazil | The Guardian

Hundreds of thousands sign pro-democracy manifesto amid fears the president will promote Trump-style insurrection against democracy Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro Tue 9 Aug 2022 07.00 EDT They were cruel, brutish years. Dissidents languished in torture chambers. Rebels were shot in cold blood. Artists fled abroad. “It was a time of constant sorrow and fear,” the Brazilian lawyer and former justice minister José Carlos Dias said of the military dictatorship that hijacked his country in 1964 and would rule for more than two decades. “Violence wasn’t just something the torturers enjoyed. It was government policy.”

Source: Brazilians fear return to dictatorship as ‘deranged’ Bolsonaro trails in polls | Brazil | The Guardian