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04/27/2026

The Man Born with a Comet… Who Left with Its Return

What if your entire life was tied to a visitor from the depths of space?

In 1835, as Halley’s Comet streaked across the sky, a baby boy named Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) entered the world in Florida, Missouri.

Seventy-five years later, the same comet came back… and just one day after it made its closest pass to Earth in 1910, the world said goodbye to one of its greatest storytellers — Mark Twain.

He saw it coming. Literally.

Twain wrote in 1909: “I came in with Halley’s Comet in 1835. It is coming again next year, and I expect to go out with it. It would be the greatest disappointment of my life if I don’t go out with Halley’s Comet.”

And he did — on April 21, 1910.

Two cosmic events, perfectly framing one legendary life.

Born under the comet. Died with its return.

Some stories aren’t just lived… they’re written in the stars. ✨

Hamilton Morris 04/27/2026

🚀 The N**i “Wonder Pill” That Fueled the Blitzkrieg 🚀
Did you know that during World War II, German soldiers were issued millions of methamphetamine tablets to stay awake and fight longer? The drug was called Pervitin — a brand name for methamphetamine hydrochloride produced by Temmler-Werke starting in the late 1930s.

Each Pervitin tablet contained 3 mg of methamphetamine.

In the lead-up to the 1940 invasion of France, the Wehrmacht supplied roughly 35 million tablets to about 3 million troops. That’s a total of 105 million mg — or 105 kilograms — of methamphetamine distributed in just a few months!

Official guidelines recommended 1–2 tablets as needed, or 2–4 tablets per day total. Effects from one tablet could last up to 8–12 hours. In practice, especially for tank crews (nicknamed Panzerschokolade or “tank chocolate”) and during intense operations, soldiers often took 3–5 tablets at a time (9–15 mg), and some units used up to four tablets a day for extended periods.

This stimulant helped combat fatigue and reduce the need for sleep, playing a role in the rapid advances of the Blitzkrieg. However, it also led to widespread side effects like dependency, exhaustion, and crashes when supplies ran low.
Fascinating (and sobering) piece of history — a reminder of how drugs have shaped warfare. What do you think? Did this surprise you?

Listen for an in depth discussion about this topic

https://youtu.be/vA0LDCB9SqM?si=rZAGriDKD3NaxtsX

Hamilton Morris 2.8K likes, 776 comments. "Norman Ohler discusses N**i use of methamphetamine and L*D for Alzheimer's"

Photos from Universal Consciousness's post 04/09/2026

Some of the most beautiful photos of our solar system

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