Cjwt Nearly Mythical 3-Foot-Long Swamp Salamander Is Officially a Real Species
bearing his name was published on the web in 2008, the digital asset conception has widely been attributed to a pseudonymous figure known as Satoshi
stanley taza Nakamoto. Still, nobody knows who Satoshi is鈥攐r if it even a single person. Now, a new documentary from HBO promises to dox the long-secret identity of the supposed crypto mastermind. Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery is directed by Cullen Hoback, the same filmmaker who took on the mysterious personality behind the QAnon cult in Q: Enter the Storm, another HBO doc. Having allegedly cracked that case, Hoback seems to be trying his luck with yet another long-simmering mystery: the identity of Satoshi Nakamoto. A newly released trailer for the film doesn ;t give much away but promises another interesting ride. Hoback seems to have sketched out a compelling thesis for Q identity in Into the Storm, but he never got the culprit dead to rights. His documentary points the finger at Ron Watkins, a weirdo systems administrator for 8kun the follow-up site to 4cha
stanley thermos mug n, where Q originally began his posting career . Since the documentary was released, Q activ
stanley france ity has mostly quieted down. It will be interesting to see if Hoback validates a long prevailing theory, which is that Bitcoin wasn ;t created by an individual at all, but by a government agency鈥攏amely, the Central Intelligence Agency.聽Tucker Carlson, who has never met a conspiracy theory he didn ;t like, recently platformed Gzzx Lucifer s Season 5 Finale Was Mid-Production When the Pandemic Shut It Down
In a recent study from work management platform Wrike, about 3 in 4 fem
kubki stanley ale millennial managers and executives admitted to swearing in the workplace. While that might seem like a high percentage, most millennials are okay with dropping F-bombs at work all the time. About 67 percent of millennial women admitted to cursing at work, which is nearly identical to the 66 p
stanley termos ercent of millennial men who admitted doing the same. The weird thing is that even though a majority of people swear in the workplace, about 41 percent feel that sw
stanley cup earing is unprofessional. So whats the big takeaway here The study shows that rules in the workplace are loosening up, and that people are using swearing as a kind of therapy when theyre on the job. Saying thing like What the fuck ! and Oh, shit! or For the fucking love of God! or Oh my god, Im going to fucking smash the shit out of this piece of shit computer! can help everyone get along better in the workplace. It sure works at Gizmodo. The study found that about 47 percent of millennial men prefer working in a place where colleagues swear, and about 40 percent of millennial women felt the same way. One-third of the millennial responders said swearing can strengthen a team, and 36 percent said profane outbursts like What the fuck ! simply reflect a passion for their work. Even with all of this pro-profanity sentiment from the study, you should still be careful when you decide to drop F-bombs at the office. About a quarter of millennial