Theory of Everything

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Theory of Everything
@TheoryofEverything
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I make stuff about quantum physics

Notes (15)

One must set aside desire in the anticipation of the stupidity of others.
2025-10-07 16:35:17 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
In the summer of 2022, Terese, Miche, Roger and Nella returned to their home country, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), after living as refugees for five years in Angola. In the Lôvua refugee camp, a group of friends gather around a fire with the owners of the place, Miche Mazela Kusa and Terese Kitembe, who are soon to return to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) with their two children. "I fled the conflict, but now peace and security are back, so I'm going home," says Miche, speaking of the ethnic and political conflicts that erupted in the Kasai province in 2017, pushing an estimated 35,000 people to seek refuge in Angola. At first, Miche didn't think that the war would reach Kamako (a town in Kasai where he lived, near the border), but the militias eventually entered his town. Some members of the community were killed and the army itself began to flee. At that point, Miche and his wife knew that they had to leave, so they in turn fled to Angola, leaving everything behind. Five years later, in August 2022, Miche and Terese are about to return to the DRC as part of a voluntary refugee repatriation operation organized on the Angolan side by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the Government of Angola and a number of other partners, with funding from the United Nations Peacebuilding Fund (PBF). The United Nations supports these repatriation operations to help Governments face the influx of refugees and migrants, improve border management, and find durable solutions to the challenges they face in this context. Repatriation operations are one such durable solution and, since the voluntary repatriation of Congolese refugees from Angola restarted in July this year, hundreds of Congolese refugees were able to return home with the help of UNHCR and IOM. "There are still a few weeks left [before we go back home], but I feel like we've been waiting for months," says Terese, whose husband is anxious too: "I even have trouble eating, because I had expected that I’d be back in Congo at this point," he says. Back home, back to work Miche and Terese have spent the past five years in Angola in the Lôvua camp. But they have not been idle. Miche was already a farmer in the DRC. "I am passionate about agriculture," he explains. Here in Angola, he continued to work as a farmer with his wife's help to complement the financial assistance that he received from UNHCR and be able to provide for his family. "It was a good thing to keep working. It was interesting, especially because of the experience I gained," says Miche, who is happy that the training sessions he took over the years in the camp allowed him to learn new farming techniques such as the use of chemical fertilizers. This passion for farming is also shared by Roger Kilabi Kilabi, a Congolese refugee who is also preparing to return to the DRC. Roger studied agronomy back in his home country and had been working in the agriculture sector. During the five years he was a refugee in Angola, he planted cassava, onions, carrots and sweet potatoes, though not without some difficulty: "It's a poor land and we have to force it to produce," he explains. image image
2025-10-07 04:04:55 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Pedophiles are backed by nuclear bombs.
2025-10-05 19:52:27 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
If you borrow against your bitcoin, And you are not already in insurmountable debt, You missed the point. No debt and even one sat makes you richer than anyone who borrowed money to build a corporation.
2025-10-05 02:26:23 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Just wondering how long until trump shows up having sex with a kid in OP_RETURN.
2025-10-01 23:56:23 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →