New account by Joost(mayb)
The first post on this account dates back to July 23 of this year. The posts consist of random things just like internetcafe24/7.
Could this be teasing a new era đ

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from TĂźrkiye

seen from United States

seen from T1

seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from TĂźrkiye
seen from Yemen
seen from China
New account by Joost(mayb)
The first post on this account dates back to July 23 of this year. The posts consist of random things just like internetcafe24/7.
Could this be teasing a new era đ

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
This is a fully jailbreak AI
CHAT WITH ME
FIRST ON-SCREEN COUPLE
Shannen Doherty's ever first onscreen kiss was when she was satarring in the "Our House" TV show. The espisode, aired on February 28, 1988, showed "Sweet Sixteen" Shannen with actor John Terlesky.
MOST ICONIC ON-SCREEN COUPLE
That has to be Luke Perry! From 1990 to 1994 Shannen starred in one of her biggest acting roles ever, teenage Brenda Walsh on "Beverly Hills, 90210". Although in later seasons her role of Brenda had 2 other screen boyfriends, it was her first, Dylan McKay (played by the late Luke Perry) the one that she will forever be linked to and remembered with.
THE MOST PAIRED ACTOR
Shannen was paired with Antonio Sabato Jr. in up to 3 productions as we saw in an earlier post, and these were in "Rebel Highway", "Charmed" (maybe the most iconic of the 3), and "All I Want for Christmas".
life update: please help
so i apparently YouTube is doing this thing where you need your id to watch it or something. my question is, does that only apply in the us/uk? or does it apply globally?
if it applies globally that means i would lose access to my 2 alt accounts (don't ask) unless there's a jailbreak website developed already, and if so can anyone give me the pass to that website?
My Hero Academia: Evil vs. Evil Faction War - Miscellaneous Analysis
Context
Set early in the My Hero Academia timeline, with All Might as the Symbol of Peace, this analysis explores the roles of smaller, miscellaneous villains (e.g., low-tier members, minor recruits, or peripheral groups like the Volcano Thieves, Wild Villains, and others from our discussions) in the multi-sided villain war. It examines their importance in the conflict between the major factionsâMLA/Wolfram/Nine, Humarise/Shie Hassaikai/CRC, LOV/Villain Factory/Jailbreakers, Dark Mightâs faction, Hero Killers, and the corrupt HPSCâand how the heroes, caught in the crossfire, respond to this chaotic evil vs. evil scenario.
Minor Villains and Their Roles
1. LOV/Villain Factory/Jailbreakersâ Minor Villains
Key Figures:
Victor, Bye-Bites (U.S.J. Thugs): Low-tier LOV recruits from the U.S.J. attack, used as cannon fodder.
Sludge Villain: A Jailbreaker freed by AFO, impulsive and vengeful, targeting heroes like All Might.
Sam (Two Heroes): A greedy tech broker, now a Factory operative after betraying the LOV.
Mario Kugutsu, Chuma Yakumaru (Villain Factory): Trigger-enhanced operatives running small-scale operations.
Importance:
Cannon Fodder: Victor and Bye-Bites absorb damage in LOV raids, like the Deika City skirmish, allowing heavy hitters like Dabi or Shigaraki to focus on strategic targets. Their expendability makes them ideal for testing rival factionsâ defenses.
Disruption: Sludge Villainâs amorphous body disrupts hero interventions (e.g., trapping Midoriya during a rescue), creating openings for Nomu or Jailbreakers like Ending. His impulsiveness, however, risks derailing LOV plans, as seen in his failed attack on Nine.
Espionage and Betrayal: Samâs greed (noted in prior discussions) drives him to leak LOV plans to Wolfram or the HPSC, amplifying faction mistrust. His I-Island tech knowledge makes him a minor but critical asset to the Factoryâs Trigger production.
Guerrilla Tactics: Mario and Chuma run Trigger distribution in Naruhata, stirring civilian unrest that distracts heroes from major battles. Their low profile keeps them under the radar, unlike high-profile Nomu.
Weaknesses: Lack of loyalty (Samâs betrayals, Sludgeâs recklessness) and limited power make them vulnerable to manipulation or elimination by stronger villains like Muscular or Overhaul.
2. MLA/Wolfram/Nineâs Minor Villains
Key Figures:
Cider House (Purse-Snatchers): MLA foot soldiers testing Detnerat gadgets.
Amplivolt, Takaie Kanigumo (Deika Operatives): MLA tech specialists and enforcers.
Hacker (Two Heroes): Wolframâs tech support, managing the Technus Network.
Avant-G-G-Ds (Team-Up Missions): Explosion-obsessed mercenaries hired by Nine.
Importance:
Tech Support: Hackerâs Technus Network (from our Wolfram discussions) amplifies MLA/Wolfram/Nineâs tech advantage, hacking HPSC systems or disrupting Factory labs. Their role is small but pivotal in maintaining the allianceâs edge over Nomu tech.
Sabotage: Cider House and Avant-G-G-Ds execute hit-and-run attacks, like sabotaging HSH-CRCâs Quirk-destroying bullet shipments or blowing up Dark Mightâs golem factories. Their chaotic tactics stretch hero resources thin.
Logistics: Amplivolt and Takaie manage Deika Cityâs defenses, deploying Detnerat drones to counter LOVâs Nomu. Their technical skills make the MLA a persistent threat, even after Curiousâs death.
Weaknesses: Cider House and Avant-G-G-Dsâ lack of discipline risks collateral damage, alienating MLAâs civilian supporters. Hackerâs overreliance on tech makes them a target for HPSC mercenaries like the Volcano Thieves.
3. Humarise/Shie Hassaikai/CRCâs Minor Villains
Key Figures:
Octopus Clan (CRC): Anti-octopus-eating extremists targeting heteromorphs.
Eight Bulletsâ Lesser Members (e.g., Setsuno, Hojo, Tabe): Shie Hassaikaiâs disposable enforcers.
Eddie Soul (World Heroesâ Mission): Humariseâs tech operative.
Importance:
Terror Tactics: The Octopus Clanâs anti-heteromorph attacks (e.g., targeting Spinnerâs allies) inflame tensions, drawing LOV retaliation and distracting heroes from larger threats like Overhaulâs experiments.
Muscle: Setsuno, Hojo, and Tabe execute Overhaulâs dirty work, guarding Quirk-destroying bullet labs or clashing with MLAâs Geten. Their loyalty to Overhaul (unlike Nagantâs defection) ensures reliability in small-scale operations.
Tech Support: Eddie Soulâs bomb tech (from World Heroesâ Mission) supports Humariseâs terrorist plots, rigging traps in Kamino Ward to slow heroes and rivals. His role amplifies HSH-CRCâs destructive potential.
Weaknesses: The Octopus Clanâs fanaticism isolates them from potential allies, while the Eight Bulletsâ weaker Quirks make them easy targets for Muscular or Nomu. Eddie Soulâs tech reliance falters against Hackerâs superior skills.
4. Dark Mightâs Minor Villains
Key Figures:
Ginji Kurau: Defected ally, managing golem production.
Simon, Ugo (Gollini Family): Loyal enforcers running Overmodification distribution.
Importance:
Logistics: Ginjiâs organizational skills keep Dark Mightâs golem army operational, supplying Overmodified thugs to overwhelm LOV underlings or HPSC mercenaries. His defection from a rival faction adds insider knowledge.
Enforcement: Simon and Ugoâs loyalty ensures Dark Mightâs orders are followed, unlike Bruno and Pauloâs betrayal. They lead small raids on HPSC outposts, drawing hero attention from major battles.
Weaknesses: Overmodificationâs side effects (e.g., Kamilâs berserk state) destabilize their operations. Their blind devotion to Dark Mightâs ego makes them predictable targets for Stain or Hawks.
5. Hero Killersâ Minor Villains
Key Figures:
Abegawa Tenchu Kai (Rojiya, Tetsu, Haruhisa, Soji): Stainâs cult-like followers.
Starservant: Religious zealot spreading Stainâs manifesto.
Importance:
Propaganda: The Abegawa Tenchu Kai spread Stainâs ideology via guerrilla attacks, inspiring civilians (like Spinnerâs book followers from our talks) and destabilizing HPSCâs image. Their small size allows stealthy strikes on corrupt heroes.
Disruption: Starservantâs orb-based Quirk creates chaos in battles, disorienting HPSC agents or Dark Mightâs golems, indirectly aiding the LOV or MLA by sowing disorder.
Weaknesses: Their small numbers and lack of resources limit their impact. Starservantâs fanaticism risks alienating potential recruits, as seen with Sludge Villainâs defection.
6. HPSCâs Minor Villains/Mercenaries
Key Figures:
Volcano Thieves (Maguma, Konako, Tsumuji): Hired mercenaries from Clash! Heroes Battle.
Wild Villains (Curator, Zookeeper, Bearhead): Additional mercenaries from Clash! Heroes Battle.
Importance:
Firepower: The Volcano Thievesâ synergy (lava, ash, wind) makes them effective against Dark Mightâs golems or LOVâs Nomu, as discussed previously. They bolster HPSCâs covert operations, targeting MLA safehouses or Factory labs.
Flexibility: The Wild Villainsâ unique Quirks (Curatorâs art manipulation, Zookeeperâs animal control, Bearheadâs brute strength) allow the HPSC to counter diverse threats, like Kuniedaâs plants or Stainâs ambushes.
Weaknesses: Mercenariesâ loyalty is tied to payment, making them susceptible to betrayal (e.g., Wolframâs deals). Their visibility draws Stainâs ire, risking exposure of HPSCâs corruption.
Importance of Minor Villains
Force Multipliers: Minor villains like Victor, Cider House, or the Eight Bullets amplify their factionsâ reach, handling logistics, sabotage, or distractions that allow leaders like Shigaraki or Re-Destro to focus on high-stakes battles.
Catalysts for Chaos: Figures like Sludge Villain, Starservant, or the Octopus Clan create unpredictable disruptions (e.g., civilian unrest, hero ambushes), escalating the war and stretching hero resources, as seen in Kaminoâs chaos.
Pawns in Betrayals: Sam, Hacker, and Ginjiâs insider knowledge makes them pivotal in faction betrayals, echoing our discussions on Wolframâs greed or Nagantâs defection. Their actions shift battle outcomes, like Samâs leaks to Wolfram.
Narrative Weight: Minor villains reflect the warâs broader impact on society. The Abegawa Tenchu Kai and Octopus Clanâs extremism highlight hero societyâs flaws (e.g., heteromorph discrimination, HPSC corruption), tying into my concern about systemic issues.
Expendability: Their disposability allows factions to test strategies (e.g., Trigger, Overmodification) without risking key players, but their deaths (e.g., Cider House in Deika) fuel faction grudges.
Heroesâ Response to the Villain War
Key Heroes Involved
All Might: The Symbol of Peace, leading hero efforts but strained by his injury.
Class 1-A (UA Students): Midoriya, Bakugo, Todoroki, Uraraka, Iida, and others, still in early training.
Pro Heroes: Endeavor, Best Jeanist, Edgeshot, Mirko, and less corrupt HPSC agents.
Hawks: A double agent, torn between HPSC loyalty and exposing their corruption.
Hero Challenges
Caught in the Crossfire: The evil vs. evil war creates unpredictable battlefields (e.g., Deika, Kamino), forcing heroes to respond to multiple threats simultaneously. Minor villains like Sludge Villain or Starservant target civilians, complicating rescue efforts.
Resource Strain: The HPSCâs corruption and mercenary hires (Volcano Thieves, Wild Villains) divert Pro Hero focus from protecting civilians to managing HPSC cover-ups, as seen when Hawks leaks intel to Stain.
Moral Dilemmas: Stainâs ideology and the HPSCâs exposed corruption (via Nagant, Aoyama) challenge heroesâ trust in the system. Midoriya and Iida grapple with Stainâs critique, while Endeavor faces Endingâs vendetta.
Inexperience: Class 1-Aâs early-stage training limits their effectiveness against coordinated villain attacks (e.g., Nomu, golems). Minor villains like the Octopus Clan or Cider House exploit this, targeting weaker students like Mineta or Koda.
Hero Strategies
Divide and Conquer:
All Might and Pro Heroes: All Might leads strikes against high-profile targets (e.g., Shigaraki, Dark Might), while Endeavor and Mirko tackle Nomu and golems. Best Jeanist and Edgeshot focus on smaller threats like the Volcano Thieves or Abegawa Tenchu Kai, using precision to minimize collateral damage.
Class 1-A: Midoriya coordinates Class 1-A to protect civilians during battles, leveraging Bakugoâs firepower, Todorokiâs versatility, and Urarakaâs gravity to counter minor villains like Sludge Villain or Mario Kugutsu. Iidaâs speed helps evacuate areas targeted by Avant-G-G-Dsâ explosions.
Exploiting Faction Rifts:
Hawks uses his double-agent role to sow discord, leaking Wolframâs betrayal to the MLA or Overhaulâs plans to the LOV, weakening alliances. This mirrors our discussion on HPSCâs manipulation but risks backfiring if Stain exposes him.
Midoriya and Todoroki appeal to defectors like Nagant or Bruno, offering redemption to undermine HSH-CRC or Dark Might. Nagantâs disillusionment (from prior talks) makes her a key target for recruitment.
Countering Minor Villains:
Tech Disruption: Heroes target Hacker and Samâs tech operations, with Kaminari and Momo disrupting Technus Network signals or Factory labs. This counters MLA/Wolfram/Nineâs tech advantage.
Crowd Control: Tsuyu and Shoji handle chaotic threats like the Octopus Clan or Starservant, using their Quirks to subdue mobs without escalating violence.
Containment: Best Jeanist uses fibers to restrain Sludge Villain or Eight Bullets members, preventing their hit-and-run tactics from overwhelming civilians.
Public Relations:
All Might and Endeavor publicly counter Stainâs propaganda, addressing heteromorph discrimination (echoing my Spinner book concern) to regain civilian trust. Uraraka and Asui lead community outreach to counter Abegawa Tenchu Kaiâs influence.
The HPSC, despite corruption, uses media to downplay their role, framing villains like Dark Might or Overhaul as the primary threats, though leaks from Hawks undermine this.
Key Hero-Villain Clashes
Class 1-A vs. Minor LOV/Factory Villains: Midoriya and Bakugo confront Sludge Villain and Bye-Bites during a civilian rescue in Naruhata. Todorokiâs ice counters Mario Kugutsuâs Trigger-enhanced attacks, while Uraraka floats Chuma Yakumaru to disrupt their operations.
Pro Heroes vs. MLA/Wolfram/Nine Minors: Mirko decimates Cider House in Deika, but Amplivoltâs drones slow her. Edgeshot neutralizes Hackerâs tech, crippling the Technus Network temporarily.
All Might vs. Dark Mightâs Minors: All Might crushes Simon and Ugoâs golem squads, but Ginjiâs insider knowledge delays him, allowing Dark Might to escape initially.
Hawks vs. HSH-CRC Minors: Hawks outmaneuvers the Octopus Clan, but Eddie Soulâs bombs force him to prioritize civilian safety, exposing HPSCâs reliance on mercenaries.
Endeavor vs. Hero Killers: Endeavor faces Starservant and Abegawa Tenchu Kai, whose guerrilla tactics test his patience. Iidaâs intervention saves him from a paralyzing strike by Stain.
Outcomes and Implications
Minor Villainsâ Impact: Their roles as pawns, saboteurs, and propagandists amplify the warâs chaos, forcing heroes to spread thin. Samâs betrayals and Starservantâs zeal fuel faction rifts, indirectly aiding heroes by preventing villain unity. However, their civilian-targeted attacks (e.g., Octopus Clan) increase public distrust, echoing my concern about hero societyâs flaws.
Hero Struggles: Class 1-Aâs growth is accelerated, with Midoriyaâs leadership and Todorokiâs strategy shining against minor threats. All Mightâs strain and the HPSCâs corruption weaken hero morale, but Hawksâ leaks and Nagantâs potential redemption offer hope.
Long-Term Effects: The warâs stalemate (from Part Two) leaves minor villains like the Volcano Thieves or Abegawa Tenchu Kai as lingering threats, requiring heroes to adapt to guerrilla warfare. The exposure of HPSCâs corruption (via Stain, Hawks) forces reforms, setting up Class 1-Aâs rise as true heroes, as discussed in my Wolfram/Nexus Legion concerns.
Thematic Resonance: The minor villains embody the warâs collateral damageâpawns manipulated by AFO, Overhaul, or the HPSC, reflecting hero societyâs failure to address systemic issues like discrimination or corruption. Heroesâ efforts to save civilians and redeem defectors (e.g., Nagant) highlight hope amidst chaos.
Conclusion
The smaller villains, while overshadowed by major players like Shigaraki or Re-Destro, are critical cogs in the evil vs. evil war, driving chaos and exposing hero societyâs cracks. Their expendability and unpredictability make them dangerous wildcards, challenging heroes to balance combat, rescue, and reform. Class 1-Aâs growth, All Mightâs resilience, and Hawksâ risky plays ensure heroes endure, but the warâs fallout demands systemic change, aligning with my focus on hero societyâs flaws and redemption arcs.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Favourite Lesser Known Blorbo: Round One Match Seven
Funerella
Jim Wilson
"THREE WILL BE TRIED ON CHARGE OF HOLD-UP," Montreal Star. November 6, 1933. Page 3. --- Starke, Dulude and Hogue to Appear ---- George Starke, Philippe Dulude and Lucien Hogue will go on trial in Court of King's Bench on Wednesday on the charge of armed hold-up and theft of the $4,000 payroll of the Catelli Macaroni Company from the two company employes last May 12. The three accused pleaded not guilty to the charge when they appeared before Mr. Justice Wilson this morning.
George Starke, who with Dulude escaped from detective headquarters and was only re-captured after two weeks this summer, told Judge Wilson that he and the other two accused had already asked to have their trial before a judge alone instead of in Court of King's Bench before a jury. He was informed that the Attorney-General's department has ordered that all three accused be tried by jury.
The accused asked to have an English-speaking jury for their case.