Saturday, June 13, 2026

Wellness Resort!

The world’s wealthiest people aren’t checking into wellness resorts. They’re checking into places like Clinic Les Alpes. Hidden in the Swiss Alps above Lake Geneva, this fully licensed medical facility combines luxury hospitality with intensive programmes for burnout, addiction, trauma, anxiety, depression, and executive recovery. Its clientele reportedly includes CEOs, royalty, professional athletes, and high-profile public figures seeking discretion as much as treatment. With rates starting around €45,000 per week, Clinic Les Alpes may be one of the most expensive recovery retreats in the world, but for many, it’s viewed as an investment in something even more valuable than luxury: wellbeing.

Armenia to have tallest statue of Jesus Christ!

Armenia is building something that will stop the world in its tracks. Rising above Mount Hatis, just 30 kilometres outside Yerevan, a 33-metre aluminium statue of Jesus Christ is being assembled in three massive sections — each one so large it will require a helicopter to airlift it to the summit. When complete, the figure will stand atop a 44-metre pedestal housing a cultural museum and prayer chapels, bringing the total structure to 101 metres. That is taller than the Statue of Liberty. The location is no accident. Armenia was the very first country on earth to adopt Christianity as its official state religion, back in 301 AD. Over 1,700 years later, this nation is staking its claim to something the whole world will come to see. The numbers tell their own story. At 77 metres for the statue and pedestal alone, it will shatter the current world record. The 33-metre height of Christ himself is deliberate — one metre for every year Jesus walked the earth. It has not been a smooth road. The Armenian Apostolic Church opposed it. Archaeologists raised alarms after the original groundbreaking ceremony damaged an ancient mountaintop fortress. The site was moved. Permits were reissued. Construction was halted and restarted. And still, the project survived every attempt to stop it. The statue is already built. It is sitting in three pieces in a village called Zovuni, waiting for the pedestal to be ready. Then it goes up by helicopter. Completion is expected in 2027. Whatever you think of the man funding it, whatever the politics, whatever the controversy — when that figure rises above the Armenian sky, it will be one of the most extraordinary things built in the modern world. The first Christian nation on earth is about to have the tallest statue of Christ on earth.

Staying FREE in Movie-star's big mansion!

Brad Pitt bought neighboring homes to create privacy around his Los Angeles property. When he purchased one house from an elderly widower, he made sure the man could stay there rent-free for the rest of his life. The neighbour went on to live until 105.

Could you read it - CORRECTLY?

Promoting 'Cleanliness'!

Thankyou GOD!

FIGHT against Cockroaches!

Australia has just carried out the largest exotic invertebrate seizure in its history and the numbers are astonishing. Authorities recently confiscated more than 100,000 live exotic cockroaches from a commercial breeding operation, marking the country’s biggest-ever biosecurity bust involving illegal invertebrates. Among the insects were thousands of Madagascar hissing cockroaches, famous for their impressive size and distinctive hissing sound, along with large numbers of dubia cockroaches. While these species are commonly kept in some parts of the world, Australia’s strict biosecurity laws prohibit their importation and breeding due to concerns about potential environmental impacts. At first glance, a warehouse full of cockroaches might not sound like a major national issue. But in Australia, biosecurity is taken extremely seriously. As an island nation with many unique plants and animals found nowhere else on Earth, Australia has learned through experience that introduced species can have devastating consequences. Even small organisms can carry diseases, disrupt ecosystems, or establish invasive populations that are difficult or impossible to control. That’s why every unauthorized species is treated as a potential risk, regardless of how harmless it may seem. The record seizure highlights a growing underground trade in exotic insects, driven by demand from collectors, pet enthusiasts, and the reptile feeder market. For environmental officials, the message is simple: protecting biodiversity sometimes means stopping a threat before it ever has the chance to spread. Because when it comes to biosecurity, prevention is far easier than trying to repair the damage afterward.