general

Best Bitcoin Casinos 2025: Where to Play Safely with BTC, USDT and Other Cryptos

The post Best Bitcoin Casinos 2025: Where to Play Safely with BTC, USDT and Other Cryptos appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The crypto gambling scene in 2025 is more sophisticated than ever. Players now have access to licensed, secure, and high-speed casinos where Bitcoin, Tether (USDT), and other cryptocurrencies work seamlessly. Gone are the days of shady crypto sites with unclear payouts — the best Bitcoin casinos today combine regulation, anonymity, and fairness. Below we’ve reviewed the top Bitcoin casinos of 2025 known for fast payments, transparent operations, and strong player protection. 1. Dexsport — Licensed Web3 Casino with 10,000+ Games and Instant Crypto Access Dexsport.io continues to dominate the Web3 gambling space as one of the few licensed decentralized casinos that offers both privacy and regulatory trust. Licensed by the Government of Anjouan, Union of Comoros, Dexsport bridges crypto transparency with casino-level entertainment. It features over 10,000 games from major studios like Pragmatic Play, NetEnt, Evolution, and PGSoft — all accessible instantly through email, Telegram, or wallet login. There’s no KYC, and deposits in BTC, ETH, or USDT are processed instantly. Highlights 10,000+ games (slots, live casino, crash, and table games) 38 supported coins across 20 networks Instant registration via wallet connect 480% bonus across first 3 deposits (up to $10,000) + 300 free spins 15% weekly cashback paid in stablecoins Audited by CertiK and Pessimistic Dexsport also includes a provably fair system and a public on-chain record of bets. It’s one of the few crypto casinos that blends anonymity, licensing, and audit-backed fairness. Why play here: Licensed, fast, no KYC, and unmatched bonus value. 2. BC.Game — Massive Game Library and Multi-Chain Payments BC.Game remains one of the most recognizable names in crypto gambling. It offers thousands of games and supports over 60 cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDT, and even…

general

Is Taylor Swift Really as Great as Shakespeare?*

To those who pay attention to the zeitgeist, Taylor Swift is the defining person of the century, not so much an echo from the past or a harbinger of the future as the pure distillation of the present. She reflects others’ lives and identities restless and shifting while her own life is mediated. Continue reading Is Taylor Swift Really as Great as Shakespeare?* The post Is Taylor Swift Really as Great as Shakespeare?* appeared first on Fair Observer.

general

The left wants to save democracy by destroying it

Democrats built this inferno to immolate one man. Now, watching it surge back on them, they rage at not their hypocrisy, but their powerlessness. When was the last time a prominent Democrat politician (other than John Fetterman) said anything remotely factual, or proposed any legislation to make America safer, stronger, more prosperous, or more united? All they have are lies, psychological projection, and logical fallacies. In the last case, they’re especially fond of proof by assertion unfounded claims stated as if they were true. Democrats have a new mantra: “We must save democracy from Trump.” This noble-sounding imperative has.

general

[Catholic Caucus Devotional] My Catholic Life! Catholic Daily Reflections: Doing Small Things Well – Saturday, November 8, 2025

Daily Readings from the USCCB“The person who is trustworthy in very small matters is also trustworthy in great ones; and the person who is dishonest in very small matters is also dishonest in great ones.” Luke 16: 10What are the “small matters” in life? Most likely, if you asked many different people from all walks of life this question, then you would receive many different answers. But if we consider the context of this statement of Jesus, then it is clear that one of the primary small matters of which He speaks is our use of money. Many people live as.

general

The Climate Cult Fails Europe

Brussels’ climate policy a poverty engine — one that is systematically draining Europe’s industrial base in global competition. The roadmap is already set: in the coming years, the EU and its member states will make both businesses and consumers pay even more for CO2 emissions. BASF CEO Markus Kamieth warns of the enormous destructive potential of this policy. Truth comes on pigeon feet — Friedrich Nietzsche already knew that. And apparently, the same applies to European climate policy: slowly, but inevitably, the reality of the true costs of the green transformation and its impact on Germany’s industrial foundation is emerging.