@nextupdaily3: Every time 💀 #warzone #callofdutywarzone #meme #viral

nextupdaily3
nextupdaily3
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Saturday 04 July 2026 19:02:44 GMT
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momsmedicine
momsmedicine :
“I just marked the nearest buy station guys can u plz buy me back”
2026-07-07 15:24:13
30
eseweiide956_
JORGE ASCENCION :
Me already in contact with two of them
2026-07-07 12:46:55
20
_three3three_
Raychel :
Oops
2026-07-05 21:48:18
15
grayson7058
grayson :
I met a whole team whith snipers aiming at me in control center and I shat myself and broke my controller
2026-07-06 08:23:50
4
mileena4423
mileena4423 :
lol my duo reposted too😂😭
2026-07-07 03:11:45
3
na1fv17
Na1F🪐 :
@وسيم جعفري 💎 @'
2026-07-15 21:11:58
2
fuckdemracksup
marcus :
“They already shooting at me bro”
2026-07-07 22:27:30
2
maryposchhill
bear :
we love you Joe 💙
2026-07-10 04:54:07
2
sickwitit2o9
Daniel :
That sob'n smile gets me every time 🤟
2026-07-08 19:56:44
2
shinyeeveelynn
Bravo 7-2 💙 "Blue" Mactavish :
cue me dying "oh shit i just ran into their whole team"
2026-07-06 15:37:06
2
stanky_leg_1993
StankyLeg :
2026-07-06 15:16:17
2
farkasatika
🧸★JAGUッ🎮 :
@GBianka@ @QueenTee @A.P.O.L.L.O
2026-07-16 13:06:32
2
iicetalain
Icetalain :
too late 😂
2026-07-11 17:59:12
1
adri_zz3
adri😴 :
@Pasdattache0.0
2026-07-10 01:47:25
1
finley.schwar
Finley Schwar :
@Pikxy
2026-07-09 22:11:38
1
thejunkdealer
thejunkdealer :
Hope you got the buy back!! See you in rebirth!!!!
2026-07-09 15:32:56
1
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This is not CGI. This is not a sci fi film. This is Kuwait in 1991. As Iraqi forces retreated at the end of the Gulf War, they set fire to more than 600 oil wells, unleashing one of the largest environmental disasters in modern history. What followed was almost unimaginable. Thick black smoke swallowed the sky, blocking out the sun for miles. Fires raged uncontrollably for months. The desert transformed into something unrecognizable, a landscape that no longer looked like Earth. German filmmaker Werner Herzog traveled to Kuwait to document the aftermath, creating Lessons of Darkness in 1992. Instead of presenting it as a traditional documentary, he stripped away politics, geography, and context. There are no country names, no explanations, only images and narration that frame the destruction as if it were taking place on a distant, alien world. The film is set to powerful classical music, with compositions from Wagner, Mahler, and Verdi intensifying the surreal and haunting atmosphere. When it premiered at the Berlin Film Festival, the reaction was immediate and divided. Many in the audience were outraged, accusing Herzog of turning real suffering into something aesthetic. He defended his approach by pointing to artists like Goya and Hieronymus Bosch, who depicted horror through art to confront audiences in a deeper way. One of the film’s most unsettling moments shows firefighters relighting a well they had just extinguished. Herzog’s narration poses a haunting question, suggesting that after being surrounded by fire for so long, its absence felt unnatural. He later described the film as a requiem for a planet that had become uninhabitable. What remains is not just a record of destruction, but a reflection on how humanity processes catastrophe when reality becomes almost indistinguishable from nightmare. #History #War #Environment #Film #WorldEvents
This is not CGI. This is not a sci fi film. This is Kuwait in 1991. As Iraqi forces retreated at the end of the Gulf War, they set fire to more than 600 oil wells, unleashing one of the largest environmental disasters in modern history. What followed was almost unimaginable. Thick black smoke swallowed the sky, blocking out the sun for miles. Fires raged uncontrollably for months. The desert transformed into something unrecognizable, a landscape that no longer looked like Earth. German filmmaker Werner Herzog traveled to Kuwait to document the aftermath, creating Lessons of Darkness in 1992. Instead of presenting it as a traditional documentary, he stripped away politics, geography, and context. There are no country names, no explanations, only images and narration that frame the destruction as if it were taking place on a distant, alien world. The film is set to powerful classical music, with compositions from Wagner, Mahler, and Verdi intensifying the surreal and haunting atmosphere. When it premiered at the Berlin Film Festival, the reaction was immediate and divided. Many in the audience were outraged, accusing Herzog of turning real suffering into something aesthetic. He defended his approach by pointing to artists like Goya and Hieronymus Bosch, who depicted horror through art to confront audiences in a deeper way. One of the film’s most unsettling moments shows firefighters relighting a well they had just extinguished. Herzog’s narration poses a haunting question, suggesting that after being surrounded by fire for so long, its absence felt unnatural. He later described the film as a requiem for a planet that had become uninhabitable. What remains is not just a record of destruction, but a reflection on how humanity processes catastrophe when reality becomes almost indistinguishable from nightmare. #History #War #Environment #Film #WorldEvents

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