@hhaf58: غثهم شوية تلكة حقدهم بعيونهم#منشوراتي_لاتمثلني_مجرد_ذوق #نشواتية♡🦋 #مالي_خلق_احط_هاشتاقات #محظورة_من_كلشي😫💔، #حسابيي_محظور

⇣.  يـاقـــَـوتِ 🌻🦋. ┊⇣
⇣. يـاقـــَـوتِ 🌻🦋. ┊⇣
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Friday 05 June 2026 14:36:25 GMT
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_f2004_
فـاَٰءِٰ :
صبـ(⛅)ـُ(آٍلـٍـً(🌺)ـٍورٍدً)ـ(⛅)ـٍآٍآٍحً
2026-06-05 22:33:21
0
zliv7
᷂زهَرة . :
اي وعلي
2026-06-05 21:45:02
0
user9977133712234
،، :
ممكن العباره
2026-06-05 19:15:57
0
zk.aj2
zahraa💞 :
اي ونبي 😂
2026-06-05 21:42:10
0
ho.___zz30
جَنـ⃪̶ـ̶َات⇣ :
ابدعتِ عمَري
2026-06-05 14:55:07
1
2hex.l
﮼مَرمر . :
والله صح
2026-06-05 18:45:50
0
aa___a102
حــ۫͜ـَنــ𔘓ـــين ⁞✦ :
𝒈𝒈
2026-06-05 16:17:15
0
user559764656
العبساوي 😎💯 :
فـعلاّ💔🌷.
2026-06-05 15:44:11
1
_f2004_
فـاَٰءِٰ :
تم استمري يروحي
2026-06-05 22:33:16
0
_f2004_
فـاَٰءِٰ :
يسعدها يروحي
2026-06-05 22:33:13
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ho.___zz30
جَنـ⃪̶ـ̶َات⇣ :
يي والله
2026-06-05 14:54:49
1
ho.___zz30
جَنـ⃪̶ـ̶َات⇣ :
تم يحيلي
2026-06-05 14:55:14
0
aa___a102
حــ۫͜ـَنــ𔘓ـــين ⁞✦ :
𝒅𝒅
2026-06-05 16:17:20
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aa___a102
حــ۫͜ـَنــ𔘓ـــين ⁞✦ :
𝒕𝒕
2026-06-05 16:17:18
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2hex.l
﮼مَرمر . :
مبدعه يروحي
2026-06-05 18:45:40
0
adf8j9
زينپ|| فـداެء العَبـ⃪اس ☪︎313 :
حلات نشرج
2026-06-05 19:50:10
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aa___a102
حــ۫͜ـَنــ𔘓ـــين ⁞✦ :
𝒖𝒖
2026-06-05 16:17:06
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aa___a102
حــ۫͜ـَنــ𔘓ـــين ⁞✦ :
فعلاً
2026-06-05 16:17:03
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kr_520
أم يــقين ولارين💕✨ :
أي بلعباس
2026-06-05 22:55:00
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aa___a102
حــ۫͜ـَنــ𔘓ـــين ⁞✦ :
𝒊𝒊
2026-06-05 16:17:09
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aa___a102
حــ۫͜ـَنــ𔘓ـــين ⁞✦ :
𝒎𝒎
2026-06-05 16:17:13
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aa___a102
حــ۫͜ـَنــ𔘓ـــين ⁞✦ :
𝒑𝒑
2026-06-05 16:17:11
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aa___a102
حــ۫͜ـَنــ𔘓ـــين ⁞✦ :
استمري يروحي
2026-06-05 16:16:57
0
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John D. Rockefeller Sr. (1839–1937) was an American industrialist, founder of the Standard Oil Company, and one of the wealthiest individuals in modern history, as well as a pioneering philanthropist. Born on July 8, 1839, in Richford, New York, to a modest family, Rockefeller was the son of a traveling salesman (often described as flamboyant and unreliable) and a devout, thrifty mother. The family moved several times before settling near Cleveland, Ohio, in 1853. From a young age, he showed business acumen—raising turkeys, selling candy, and doing odd jobs. He briefly attended a commercial college for bookkeeping and began working as an assistant bookkeeper at age 16. He tithed (gave about 10% or more) of his earnings to his Baptist church from early on, a habit that continued lifelong. In 1859, he entered a partnership in a produce commission business, which profited during the Civil War. He married Laura Celestia “Cettie” Spelman in 1864; they had five children (one died in infancy), including John D. Rockefeller Jr., who later managed much of the family’s philanthropy. Rockefeller entered the oil industry in 1863 by investing in a Cleveland refinery amid the early oil boom (sparked by discoveries in Pennsylvania). He focused on refining rather than drilling, emphasizing efficiency, cost control, and vertical integration. In 1870, he and partners (including his brother William, Henry Flagler, and Samuel Andrews) founded the **Standard Oil Company of Ohio** with $1 million in capital. Through aggressive expansion, acquisitions, economies of scale, and innovations (like reusing refinery by-products and negotiating railroad rebates), Standard Oil grew rapidly. By the early 1880s, it controlled about **90% of U.S. oil refining and pipelines**. In 1882, it became the **Standard Oil Trust**, an early example of a large corporate trust that centralized management while owning numerous subsidiaries. Rockefeller served as president and largest shareholder until retiring from active management around 1897 (though he remained a major owner until the company’s breakup). His methods dramatically lowered kerosene prices (from ~58 cents to 8 cents per gallon by some accounts), making lighting affordable for millions, while building a highly efficient global operation. However, critics labeled him a “robber baron” for alleged tactics including predatory pricing, secret railroad deals, industrial espionage, and eliminating competitors—practices that fueled public outrage and muckraking journalism.  Standard Oil’s dominance led to antitrust scrutiny. In 1911, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled it an illegal monopoly under the Sherman Antitrust Act and ordered its dissolution into 34 independent companies (many of which later became Exxon, Mobil, Chevron, and others). Rockefeller retained significant stakes in the successor firms, and his wealth actually increased in the following years as the industry grew. At his peak around 1913, Rockefeller’s fortune was estimated at about $900 million (roughly 2–3% of U.S. GDP at the time). Adjusted for inflation and economic share, estimates of its modern equivalent range widely—often cited between ~$30 billion (pure CPI inflation) and hundreds of billions when measured as a portion of the economy (some analyses place it near $400–600+ billion in today’s terms). #johndrockefeller #entrepreneur #wealth #contriversal #fyp
John D. Rockefeller Sr. (1839–1937) was an American industrialist, founder of the Standard Oil Company, and one of the wealthiest individuals in modern history, as well as a pioneering philanthropist. Born on July 8, 1839, in Richford, New York, to a modest family, Rockefeller was the son of a traveling salesman (often described as flamboyant and unreliable) and a devout, thrifty mother. The family moved several times before settling near Cleveland, Ohio, in 1853. From a young age, he showed business acumen—raising turkeys, selling candy, and doing odd jobs. He briefly attended a commercial college for bookkeeping and began working as an assistant bookkeeper at age 16. He tithed (gave about 10% or more) of his earnings to his Baptist church from early on, a habit that continued lifelong. In 1859, he entered a partnership in a produce commission business, which profited during the Civil War. He married Laura Celestia “Cettie” Spelman in 1864; they had five children (one died in infancy), including John D. Rockefeller Jr., who later managed much of the family’s philanthropy. Rockefeller entered the oil industry in 1863 by investing in a Cleveland refinery amid the early oil boom (sparked by discoveries in Pennsylvania). He focused on refining rather than drilling, emphasizing efficiency, cost control, and vertical integration. In 1870, he and partners (including his brother William, Henry Flagler, and Samuel Andrews) founded the **Standard Oil Company of Ohio** with $1 million in capital. Through aggressive expansion, acquisitions, economies of scale, and innovations (like reusing refinery by-products and negotiating railroad rebates), Standard Oil grew rapidly. By the early 1880s, it controlled about **90% of U.S. oil refining and pipelines**. In 1882, it became the **Standard Oil Trust**, an early example of a large corporate trust that centralized management while owning numerous subsidiaries. Rockefeller served as president and largest shareholder until retiring from active management around 1897 (though he remained a major owner until the company’s breakup). His methods dramatically lowered kerosene prices (from ~58 cents to 8 cents per gallon by some accounts), making lighting affordable for millions, while building a highly efficient global operation. However, critics labeled him a “robber baron” for alleged tactics including predatory pricing, secret railroad deals, industrial espionage, and eliminating competitors—practices that fueled public outrage and muckraking journalism. Standard Oil’s dominance led to antitrust scrutiny. In 1911, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled it an illegal monopoly under the Sherman Antitrust Act and ordered its dissolution into 34 independent companies (many of which later became Exxon, Mobil, Chevron, and others). Rockefeller retained significant stakes in the successor firms, and his wealth actually increased in the following years as the industry grew. At his peak around 1913, Rockefeller’s fortune was estimated at about $900 million (roughly 2–3% of U.S. GDP at the time). Adjusted for inflation and economic share, estimates of its modern equivalent range widely—often cited between ~$30 billion (pure CPI inflation) and hundreds of billions when measured as a portion of the economy (some analyses place it near $400–600+ billion in today’s terms). #johndrockefeller #entrepreneur #wealth #contriversal #fyp

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