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‘Someone was dying in my office’: SNL’s Trump indifferent as man collapses in White House

Donald Trump’s character on Saturday Night Live stood indifferent as a man collapsed in his the Oval Office, drawing attention to a widely mocked moment. After an introduction by characters including those portraying Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Dr. Oz, a man collapses behind them and the camera slowly pans to James Austin Johnson’s Trump character. Last week, SNL’s Trump mused jokingly about the president’s recent MRI.”Oh hi, didn’t see you there, someone was dying in my office,” Trump says when the camera fully reaches him. He then notes that he stood there and stared at the emergency “like a sociopath. I didn’t even pretend like I was going to help,” he said, noting that RFK Jr. “booked it out of here like someone was trying to give him a vaccine. Each week I like to create a big visual that sort of sums up how things are going. Last week it was the demolishing of the East Wing,” SNL’s Trump said. “This week it’s a medical professional almost dying in my Oval Office.”.

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Humans have a hidden “seventh sense” — the ability to feel objects without touching them

Scientists have discovered that humans may possess a surprising ability a kind of “remote touch” that allows us to sense objects buried beneath materials like sand before we actually touch them. The finding, made by researchers at Queen Mary University of London and University College London, reveals that our sense of touch is far [.] The post Humans have a hidden “seventh sense” the ability to feel objects without touching them appeared first on Knowridge Science Report.

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Bitcoin whales are present but retail players are no where to be found—expert speaks on potential impact ‬ ⋆ ZyCrypto

The post Bitcoin whales are present but retail players are no where to be found-expert speaks on potential impact ‬ ⋆ ZyCrypto appeared com. Bitcoin’s latest market structure is showing a striking imbalance, as whales are stepping in, but retail investors remain largely absent. On-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant shared insight from analyst Darkfost, who noted “the rise of new whales, companies building treasury reserves, and addresses that accumulate without selling.” According to the analyst, these factors make the current cycle “structurally different from previous ones.” This shift in participation highlights how institutional and high-net-worth entities have taken center stage. Spot Bitcoin ETFs, which were once a driving force for retail exposure, saw net outflows of roughly $191 million on October 31, marking the first major withdrawal streak since March. For the first time in months, ETF demand trails behind miner issuance, creating short-term selling pressure. However, the SEC’s approval of in-kind redemptions could eventually make ETFs more efficient and appealing to long-term investors by reducing transaction costs and improving liquidity. Data from CoinMarketCap reveals Bitcoin was trading around $101,500 at press time, below the 200-day moving average, which signals lingering weakness. The MACD histogram remains positive, suggesting a potential reversal, while the RSI at 48 and muted volume highlight caution. Advertisement Support levels sit between $103K and $108K, while resistance looms near $116K-$120K. A confirmed breakout above that zone could restore bullish momentum, whereas a drop below $106K might pull Bitcoin toward the $100K mark. To crown it all, the upcoming BIP-119 technical upgrade and the sBTC, combined with ongoing macro influences, from U. S.-China trade tensions to the Fed’s rate policies, are shaping a cycle dominated by patience and accumulation. For now, Bitcoin’s direction hinges on whether institutional inflows rebound and retail confidence returns. As whales continue to build positions, the absence of retail investors may be the quiet reset before the next major move.

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