❤️05/25/22 | Athletic Trainer for Christus St. Vincent-Capital High School | opinions are my own and do not represent CSV or CHS

Joined March 2014
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“The secret of the care of a patient, is caring about the patient”-John Lopez, LAT, ATC
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
WE’RE GOING TO AN ELLA LANGLEY CONCERT ON THE 18TH AND WE’RE EVEN GOING TO MEET HER!!!!
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If America beats Paraguay in tonight's World Cup match, come celebrate at Steak n Shake tomorrow with a Patriot milkshake for only 25 cents! Limited to one milkshake per customer. 🇺🇸 ⚽️ 🏟 🇺🇸
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I really hope these aren’t actual cheetah furs
Jun 12
The DR Congo arrival fits are pure aura.
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
A nation can’t celebrate its independence? We’ve lost the plot.
🚨 BREAKING! 🤯 The Haiti National Team will have to change its uniform for the World Cup. 🇭🇹 FIFA has asked Saeta, the company responsible for the uniform's design, to alter it due to potential political messages. 👕 Haiti's jersey features a design of the Battle of Vertières from 1803. This battle was considered decisive for the country's independence following the conflict with France. ⚔️ ℹ️ @geglobo
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
Introducing the Scottish-American travel dictionary 🇺🇸🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 We’ve put together this guide to keep the Tartan Army out of trouble in the States. Read carefully to avoid confusing the locals, deeply offending the country, or being interrogated by Homeland Security over a sandwich.
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
The World Cup begins tomorrow, and many will watch the matches. Soccer reminds us of something we must not forget: life is not a race to show off on our own, but a path we learn to walk together. Anyone who does not know how to pass the ball, even if they have talent, has not yet understood the game. Anyone who does not know how to live with and for others has not yet understood life. #ApostolicJourney
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
"Europe has massive stadiums too." No, my Continental friend, you really do not. The largest stadium in Europe - Spotify Camp Nou in Barcelona - maxes out at 105k. Most European stadiums are about 50k to 70k. By contrast, the Jordan-Hare Stadium is 88k seats. Come on over to Sanford Stadium in Athens, GA to watch the Georgia Bulldogs, and you'll be joined by 92k friends. Check out Kyle Field in College Station for 103k. UMich gets to pack 108k into Michigan Stadium at Ann Arbor. These are all University venues, by the way, not government funded civic projects. When we say the "European Mind Cannot Comprehend", this is what we're talking about.
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
WHAT THE HELL WOW
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
Everyone bully Kevin O’Leary until he shrinks it to 0 acres
Kevin O’Leary will shrink his 40,000-acre Utah data center by half after facing backlash “I have no choice”
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
So anyways, I was selected for yet another oral presentation at the same national conference this year 🥰🥰🥰
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
We’re pleased to share that Martin-Baker will once again be exhibiting at the Annual SAFE Symposium in Mobile, AL. Stop by our booth #108 to chat with the team about the latest in Ejection Seat Technology! 🔻 #EngineeringForLife
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My first day and my last day. Has been a wild, absolutely wild 3 years @capital_jaguar But I wouldn’t rather have gone through it with any other group. Thank you for giving me a home after college. Love and will miss all of you. Excited for a new chapter.
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Honored and happy to be named @positiveath NM AT of the Year :) ALSO Congrats to @CHSJagsFootball Niko Salazar for winning one of the Athlete of the Year spots. Cant imagine someone who deserves it more. Kid works his butt off every single day.
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We have the Apache at home
China's new Z-10B recently broke cover, and if rumors are correct, it’s already on PLA’s active roster. The new helicopter borrows heavily from the Z-10ME export variant built for Pakistan, packing a mast-mounted radar, satcoms, and a beefy EW suite. Visually, the only real way to tell the Z-10B apart from the Z-10ME is the tail. The domestic version drops the complex scissor-type setup for a simplified, conventional tail rotor design. Anyway, here is a quick visual overview of the new bird. What do you think of it, #avgeeks?
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
This will happen to all of the wildlife that are going to be affected by these data centers btw.
that was his home💔
Community note
The photo is an AI-generated image from the satirical "Florida Man Breaking News" page and does not depict a real event. facebook.com/groups/6535796… x.com/ChoosingBitcoi…
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May 24
Wym “allegedly”, his drunk ass right there on camera 😭
🚨 A bunny in China allegedly snuck into the grape-fermenting pit and got very drunk
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
She's going to remember that hug during those times when things get rough. That hug communicated things words never could.
The surgeon who saved his life from cancer surprised him at his high school graduation 🥹
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
I just had the craziest experience at the airport. We are about to board a flight to Atlanta when the pilot from the incoming plane walks out of the jetway. Guy is probably late 50s, salt and pepper hair, military look. The kind of pilot you instantly feel good about seeing on your flight. Pilot walks over to the counter, gets on the PA system, and starts addressing everyone. “Folks, I’ve been doing this a long time. Flying one of these jets is easy. The hard part is looking at 130 people and telling them their flight is going to be delayed.” Audible groans throughout the boarding gate. Most people here are flying to Atlanta as a layover before another flight. 130 people just had their day become a complete mess. The pilot goes on. “I get it, trust me. But here’s the deal: During our landing, we had a small mechanical issue. I’m not your pilot for the next leg, but I don’t feel confident the jet’s safe to fly until we have a mechanical team look it over, and I don’t feel comfortable asking the next pilots to fly you guys until we get confirmation.” He points at the agents next to him behind the counter: “Now, none of this is the agents’ fault. Please be kind to them. I’m the one who made this decision, not them, so any inconvenience you experience is my fault. Just please know that I don’t do this lightly, and I’m only doing it because I believe it’s in the best interests of everyone’s safety.” Now this is where the story gets crazy. The pilot puts the microphone down, grabs his suitcase, and all the people in the gate… Start clapping. I’m not joking, everyone starts clapping for the guy. 130 people who just had their travel plans ruined give an ovation to the guy who made the decision and delivered the message. All because he addressed them with decency and transparency, took ownership of the decision, made it clear that it was necessary, and explained why it was in everyone’s best interest. It’s honestly one of the best examples of strong communication—of strong leadership, for that matter—that I’ve seen in a long time. @Delta, whoever your Atlanta to Wichita pilot was this morning, he’s one of the good ones. Please tell him the delayed passengers of flight 1637 appreciate what he did.
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
The last time an El Niño this strong hit, it killed 50 million people. That was 3 to 4% of the entire world population. Scale that to today and you're looking at 250 million equivalent. The 1877 Super El Niño triggered simultaneous droughts across India, China, Brazil, and East Africa. Crops failed on four continents at the same time. The famine lasted three years. Researchers have called it "arguably the worst environmental disaster to ever befall humanity." NOAA's latest update gives a two-in-three chance this one reaches strong or very strong by fall. European models are even more aggressive. Sea surface temperatures need to exceed 2°C above normal to qualify as "super." The trajectory is pointing directly at that threshold. Here's what makes 2026 structurally different from every previous Super El Niño: there are two independent supply shocks converging on the same crop cycle. The Iran war has shut down roughly a third of the world's seaborne fertilizer trade through the Strait of Hormuz. US fertilizer supply was at 75% of normal in mid-March, right when the Corn Belt needed it most. Fertilizer prices hit their highest level since 2022. That input shortage is already baked into the 2026 growing season. The El Niño yield shock operates on a 6 to 12 month lag. India is forecasting below-normal monsoons for the first time in three years. Indonesia and Malaysia carry 90% of global palm oil, and El Niño production declines in those countries take 6 to 24 months to peak. Every strong El Niño in the past 55 years has reduced global cocoa production. So the fertilizer shortage weakens the crops El Niño is about to stress, and the El Niño yield collapse hits in 2027 on fields that were already under-fertilized in 2026. Two shocks with nearly identical lag structures, converging on the same harvest window. The difference between 1877 and 2026: we can see this one coming six months out. The commodity futures curve is barely pricing either shock. Whether that's rational discounting or willful denial depends entirely on what the Pacific Ocean does between now and October.
🚨: The 2026 “Super El Niño” is projected to be the strongest in 150 years
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Dillon Alam, LAT, ATC retweeted
A simple software update now lets soldiers use the radios they already carry to stop enemy drones. L3Harris created this new tool called Wraith Shield, which works with their common Wraith radios like the AN/PRC-171 model that many U.S., NATO, and allied troops already have. The radios scan radio waves around them while an onboard computer detects signals from enemy FPV drones When a soldier spots one, they push a button, and up to 40 radios in the group work together to jam the drone’s signal, causing it to crash, hover in place, or return home. The update costs only a few thousand dollars per radio, and soldiers need no new gear or much extra training. It will soon support bigger groups and more radio types later this year. Older anti-drone tools can be expensive or require special teams, but Wraith Shield gives every small unit this capability using equipment they already have. It works best against radio-controlled drones and does not fully stop fiber-optic drones, fully self-flying ones, or specialized military drones. The first units are ready to ship now, and both the U.S. and other countries want them.
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