@gingona_comunica: Tudo é verdade

GINGONA COMUNICA
GINGONA COMUNICA
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Region: AO
Tuesday 28 October 2025 02:29:39 GMT
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user4032292019691
P3dr021 :
os jogadores africanos que atuam na Europa não são ricos ?
2025-10-28 09:35:09
10
ld81638
Luídji :
O que me incomoda é lhe chamarem de doutor..
2025-10-28 04:09:51
47
langachik1984
Langachikchik :
A Isabel dos Santos é o que Sr Norberto
2025-10-30 14:57:26
0
teussanocosta1
user2807647525789 :
É verdade irmão.
2025-11-01 11:34:10
0
rissos.petro
Rissos Petro :
verdade
2025-11-12 12:53:12
0
user2340746793839
MAS :
amei😅
2025-10-29 14:55:49
0
user5234708670922
José Domingos :
meter sangue na ferida não cura a ferida.
2025-10-28 06:02:58
7
user7487379358275
Jesus :
Não é só em Angola, também em Moçambique.
2025-10-28 20:12:20
3
mariamelia2.0
Maria Amélia :
É verdade, meu irmão diz isso ele trabalha na Cuca, o meu cunhado também fala a mesma coisa.🤔🤔🤔
2025-10-28 21:07:16
0
joaovicente24yaho4
Luanda :
Pura verdade 👍
2025-11-04 19:35:12
0
usderrel.2
Isabel Kinavuidi :
eu quero ver esse debate
2025-10-29 12:13:26
1
lukaujohn
lukau john :
falaste tudo mano
2025-10-28 17:28:21
0
nelson_francys
Nelson Francys :
esse termo Doutor deve ser bem analisado, jura .😔😞
2025-10-28 09:47:18
7
mbanjedieto
Mbanjedieto! :
No MPLA muitos dirigentes estão fazer olhar mal ao termo " Dr"
2025-10-28 08:49:18
3
elysteves
Ely Steves :
Verdade
2025-10-28 02:36:33
2
sergiomanueldos90
Sergio chefe de cozinha :
@Sergio chefe de cozinha:já vivi está realidade mas isso para mim não e só causa do MPLA eu desconfio que o povo menos eu ganha polo povo épróprio 👿
2025-10-28 06:11:19
1
belgar..0
BOUTIQUE BELGAR :
eu ando muito cansada e aborrecida disto, o ordenado dos estrangeiros onde eu trabalho 🥺 e os salários dos Angolanos dá mesmo pena🥺🥺🥺🥺meu Deus que mal fizemos então, nos perdoe já papa Jeová 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
2025-10-28 07:10:55
2
geremiasda2
Ricardo :
todos pais Africanos ainda estao sobre controle dos ocidente ,por isso temos este tipo de problemas . temos que lutar . Viva Ibrahim traure . e nossa salvacao .😳😳
2025-10-29 15:47:15
0
helena.ponta
Helena Ponta :
Muito bem dito, parabéns
2025-10-28 21:18:31
0
user2172266008687
Franciscodalajoão :
Isso e muito triste
2025-10-28 06:39:15
2
user40734304455338
user40734304455338 :
mano você já falaste tudo.
2025-10-28 18:36:53
0
zaqueuneto2
Engenheiro Zaqueu Neto :
Pura verdade !
2025-10-28 03:33:43
1
pauloviriatoantonio
Paulo Viriato António( Filipe) :
Isso é muito triste. 😞😞😞😞😭😭😭
2025-10-28 05:44:54
2
antonioverdade471
antónio verdade :
👏👏👏 senhor com sabedoria é esse que merece ser chamado Dr
2025-10-28 07:52:14
5
cassule966
cassule :
verdade
2025-10-29 18:24:48
0
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Other Videos

Kinda Interesting Things #218: Bristol Basin on the East River If you’re walking along the East River between 23rd and 34th Streets, you’ll come across the Waterside Plaza. But what you might not realize is that beneath your feet lies a piece of another city — one that was nearly reduced to ashes during World War II. This is the Bristol Basin. This stretch of land between 23rd and 34th Street is where Manhattan quite literally meets the ruins of Bristol, England. During World War II, the city of Bristol was heavily bombed by the German Luftwaffe. Entire neighborhoods — homes, schools, cathedrals — were turned to rubble. When American ships carrying aid and supplies from New York sailed across the Atlantic, they had no British goods to replace them on the return trip. They couldn’t just sail back empty. Empty cargo holds made ships dangerously unstable — they rode too high in the water, at the mercy of wind and waves. To keep them balanced, captains filled the hulls with ballast — heavy material used to stabilize the vessel. So, they filled their hulls with the very bricks and stones of the bombed city. When those ships arrived in New York, that rubble was unloaded and used as landfill along the East River — helping to shape the ground we now know as the FDR Drive and Waterside Plaza. Sources: “Not in Their Backyard” (New York Times, 2009) “The Parts of NYC Moved from the United Kingdom, Now Part of City’s Land & Architecture” (Untapped New York, 2016) “How bricks from Bristol were used to build part of New York” (BBC, 2017) #nyc #DidYouKnow #bristol #nychistory
Kinda Interesting Things #218: Bristol Basin on the East River If you’re walking along the East River between 23rd and 34th Streets, you’ll come across the Waterside Plaza. But what you might not realize is that beneath your feet lies a piece of another city — one that was nearly reduced to ashes during World War II. This is the Bristol Basin. This stretch of land between 23rd and 34th Street is where Manhattan quite literally meets the ruins of Bristol, England. During World War II, the city of Bristol was heavily bombed by the German Luftwaffe. Entire neighborhoods — homes, schools, cathedrals — were turned to rubble. When American ships carrying aid and supplies from New York sailed across the Atlantic, they had no British goods to replace them on the return trip. They couldn’t just sail back empty. Empty cargo holds made ships dangerously unstable — they rode too high in the water, at the mercy of wind and waves. To keep them balanced, captains filled the hulls with ballast — heavy material used to stabilize the vessel. So, they filled their hulls with the very bricks and stones of the bombed city. When those ships arrived in New York, that rubble was unloaded and used as landfill along the East River — helping to shape the ground we now know as the FDR Drive and Waterside Plaza. Sources: “Not in Their Backyard” (New York Times, 2009) “The Parts of NYC Moved from the United Kingdom, Now Part of City’s Land & Architecture” (Untapped New York, 2016) “How bricks from Bristol were used to build part of New York” (BBC, 2017) #nyc #DidYouKnow #bristol #nychistory

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