Frank Hatcher retweetet
Frank Hatcher
15.8K posts

Frank Hatcher
@FrankRHatcher
USAF Vet - 20 years - Retired - MBA - IT Management Business Operations Consultant - IT Photography site. https://t.co/FLbQ3TKbJQ
Southern Arizona Beigetreten Ocak 2011
450 Folgt530 Follower

@tommysantos14 It's minority rule at the end of the day. They will do anything they can to remain in power. If this country truly believed in free and fair elections, we'd have a national holiday to vote, you would be registered to vote at birth, mail in voting wouldn't be an issue, etc.
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I have to keep pointing this out. Are these people not American, or just completely fucking stupid?
They think it's a good idea to invalidate lawfully cast votes that simply aren't counted by 11:59pm on election day.
This is "short bus" level stupid.
Jack@jackunheard
🚨BREAKING: The Supreme Court signals it will STRIKE DOWN state laws allowing mail-in ballots to be counted after Election Day. Do you realize how massive of a win this will be?
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@SBarber561 @jackunheard I like your confidence. You should take your voter fraud evidence to a judge and prove the the claims you are making.
61 court cases by Trump and his lackies, all tossed out. No fraud. Mail in voting is safe and secure. Everything you stated is propaganda and noise. Do better
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Mail in ballots need to be stopped all together. Except for military and the disabled. We’ve seen Dems pay and register illegals and homeless. Those ballots then get mailed to abandoned houses,PO Boxes,restaurants ect by the dozens to hundreds. And then those that they registered aren’t the ones voting. It needs to stop!!!
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Frank Hatcher retweetet
Frank Hatcher retweetet

The world's largest utility company just eliminated one of the most dangerous jobs on earth.
China's State Grid which controls power for 1.1 billion people has deployed robotic electricians across 26 provinces and counting.
These machines work on live, 10,000-volt wires while the power stays fully on.
Before this, the workers who did this job wore full conductive armor and understood that one wrong move was fatal.
Now the robot takes that risk instead.
The machines strip insulation, tighten connections, and splice wires with millimeter precision, all while hanging at altitude on a live grid.
They complete tasks 50 percent faster than a human crew and report a 98 percent success rate.
This is already the operating standard in more than two dozen Chinese provinces.
China is about to spend $554 billion upgrading its power grid between now and 2030.
That is a war chest for building the most automated, AI-powered energy infrastructure in human history.
Meanwhile, the United States has a shortage of 40,000 electricians and the gap is getting worse every year.
China's answer to that problem is not a trade school, it is a fleet of machines that never sleeps or quits.
Every other country still arguing about whether robots will replace workers is watching the answer get deployed in real time.
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Frank Hatcher retweetet

He will stop at nothing to try to fuck with and cancel the midterms. Nothing. And when the midterms happen, and when he & his party get obliterated (one of his favorite words), he will never accept the results, he will say the election was “stolen,” and he will stop at nothing to delegitimize the entire election. And when your children ask you why he will do all of this, tell them the truth - because he’s democracy’s enemy and he’s a traitor to this country.
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Frank Hatcher retweetet

Couldn’t have said it better; we're ignoring Americans' needs for bombs to kill others, and nobody can tell us why? #DemsUnited
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@marceelias This dudes skin is super thin, he can't handle pressure and I give it less than a month and he's flipping out and doing shit worse than Noem. Only the best people! This timeline sucks!
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🚨BREAKING: The Senate voted 54-45 Monday to confirm Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R) to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) when outgoing Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem leaves office at the end of the month. democracydocket.com/news-alerts/se…
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Frank Hatcher retweetet
Frank Hatcher retweetet
Frank Hatcher retweetet
Frank Hatcher retweetet
Frank Hatcher retweetet
Frank Hatcher retweetet
Frank Hatcher retweetet
Frank Hatcher retweetet

Robert Mueller died last night.
He was 81 years old. He had a wife who loved him for sixty years. He had two daughters, one of whom he met for the first time in Hawaii, in 1969, on a few hours of military leave, before he got back on the plane and returned to Vietnam. He had grandchildren. He had a faith he practiced quietly, without performance. He had, in the way of men who have seen real things and survived them, a quality that is increasingly rare and increasingly mocked in the country he spent his life serving.
He had integrity.
And tonight the President of the United States said good!
I have been sitting with that word for hours now. Good. One syllable. The thing you say when the coffee is hot or the traffic is moving. The thing a man who has never had to bury anyone, never had to sit in the specific silence of a room where someone is newly absent, reaches for when he wants the world to know he is satisfied. Good. The daughters are crying and the wife is alone in the house and good.
I want to speak directly to the Americans reading this. Not the political Americans. Just the human ones. The ones who have lost a father. The ones who know what it is to be in that first hour, when you keep forgetting and then remembering again, when ordinary objects become unbearable, when the world outside the window seems obscene in its indifference. I want to ask you, simply, to hold that feeling for a moment, and then to understand that the man you elected looked at it and typed a single word.
Good.
This is not a country having a bad day. I need you to understand that. Countries have bad days. Elections go wrong. Leaders disappoint. Institutions bend. But there is a different thing, a rarer and more terrible thing, that happens when the moral center of a place simply gives way. Not dramatically. Not with a single catastrophic event. But quietly, in increments, until one evening a president celebrates the death of an old man whose family is still warm with grief, and enough people find it acceptable that it becomes the weather. Just the weather.
That is what is happening. That is what has happened.
The world knows. From Tokyo to Oslo, from London to Buenos Aires, people are not angry at America tonight. Anger would mean there was still something to fight for, some remaining faith to be betrayed. What I see, in the reactions from everywhere that is not here, is something older and sadder than anger. It is the look people get when they have waited a long time for someone they love to find their way back, and have finally understood that they are not coming.
America is being grieved. Past tense, almost. The idea of it. The thing it represented to people who had nothing else to believe in, who came here with everything they owned in a single bag because they had heard, somehow, across an ocean, that this was the place where decency was written into the walls. That idea is not resting. It is not suspended. It is being buried, in real time, with 7,450 likes before dinner.
And the church said nothing.
Seventy million people have decided that this man, this specific man who has cheated everyone he has ever made a promise to, who has mocked the disabled and the dead and the grieving, who celebrated tonight while a family wept, is an instrument of God. The pastors who made that bargain did not just trade away their credibility. They traded away the thing that made them worth listening to in the first place. The cross they carry now is a costume. The faith they preach is a loyalty oath with scripture attached. When the history of American Christianity is written, this will be the chapter they skip at seminary.
Now I want to talk about the men who stand next to him.
Because this is the part that actually breaks my heart.
JD Vance is not a bad man. I have to say that, because it is true, and because the truth matters even now, especially now. Marco Rubio is not a bad man. Lindsey Graham is not a bad man. They are idiots, but not bad, as in BAD! These are men with mothers who raised them and children who love them and friends who remember who they were before all of this. They are not monsters. Monsters are simple. Monsters do not cost you anything emotionally because there is nothing in them to mourn.
These men are something more painful than monsters.
They are men who knew better, and know better still, and will get up tomorrow and do it again.
Every small compromise they made had a reason. Every moment they looked the other way had a justification that sounded, at the time, almost reasonable. And now they have arrived here, at a place where a president celebrates the death of an old man and they will find a way, on television, to say nothing that means anything, and they will go home to houses where children who carry their name are waiting, and they will say goodnight, and they will say nothing.
Their oldest friends are watching. The ones who knew Rubio when he still believed in something. Who knew Graham when he said, out loud, on the record, that this exact man would destroy the Republican Party and deserve it. Who sat next to Vance and thought here is someone worth knowing. Those friends are not angry tonight. They moved through anger a long time ago. What they feel now is the quiet, irrecoverable sadness of watching someone disappear while still being present. Of watching a person they loved choose, again and again, to become less.
That is what cowardice costs. Not the coward. The people who loved him.
And in the comments tonight, the followers celebrate. People who ten years ago brought casseroles to grieving neighbours. Who stood in the rain at gravesides and meant the words they said. Who told their children that we do not speak ill of the dead because the dead were someone's beloved. Those people are tonight typing gleeful things about a man whose daughters are not yet done crying. And they feel clean doing it. Righteous. Because somewhere along the way the thing they were given in exchange for their decency was the feeling of belonging to something, and that feeling is very hard to give up even when you can no longer remember what you gave for it.
When Trump is gone, they will still be here.
Standing in the silence where the noise used to be. Without the permission the crowd gave them. Without the pastor who told them their cruelty was holy. They will be alone with what they said and what they cheered and what they chose to become, and there will be no one left to tell them it was righteous.
That morning is coming.
Robert Mueller flew across the Pacific on military leave to hold his newborn daughter for a few hours before returning to the war. He came home. He buried his dead with honour. He served presidents of both parties because he understood that the institution was larger than any one man. He told his grandchildren that a lie is the worst thing a person can do, that a reputation once lost cannot be recovered, and he lived that, every day, in the quiet and unglamorous way of people who actually believe what they say.
He was the kind of American the world used to point to when it needed to believe the story was true.
He died last night. His wife is alone in their house in Georgetown. His daughters are learning what the world is without him in it. And somewhere in the particular hush that falls over a family in the first hours of loss, the most powerful man and the biggest loser on earth sent a message to say he was glad.
The world that loved what America was supposed to be is grieving tonight. Not for Robert Mueller only. For the country that produced him and then became this. For the distance between what was promised and what was delivered. For the suspicion, growing quieter and more certain with each passing month, that the America people believed in was always partly a story, and the story is over now, and there is nothing yet to replace it.
That is all it needed to be.
A man died. His family is broken open with grief.
That is all it needed to be.
Instead the President said good.
And the country that once stood for something looked away 🇺🇸
Gandalv / @Microinteracti1

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@atrupar Time and gravity need to do their job, much sooner than later.
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Trump: "If the Radical Left Democrats don’t immediately sign an agreement to let our Country, in particular, our Airports, be FREE and SAFE again, I will move our brilliant and patriotic ICE Agents to the Airports where they will do Security like no one has ever seen before, including the immediate arrest of all Illegal Immigrants who have come into our Country, with heavy emphasis on those from Somalia, who have totally destroyed, with the approval of a corrupt Governor, Attorney General, and Congresswoman, Ilhan Omar, the once Great State of Minnesota. I look forward to seeing ICE in action at our Airports. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN! President DONALD J. TRUMP"

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@krassenstein Tell me you’re a brainwashed liberal idiot blinded by hate for one man without saying you’re brainwashed. Do you know how ignorant you sound?
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Frank Hatcher retweetet

THEY TRAPPED A 6-YEAR-OLD GIRL, IGNORED HER SCREAMS FOR HOURS, THEN SLAUGHTERED HER WITH 353 BULLETS! 💥😡
𝐇𝐞𝐫 𝐍𝐚𝐦𝐞 𝐰𝐚𝐬 𝐇𝐢𝐧𝐝 𝐑𝐚𝐣𝐚𝐛.
Trapped in a Car full of Corpses. Phone in hand. Voice Shaking: "I’m so scared… please come get me."
The World Heard Every Word.
Help Never Came.
This is What They do to Gaza's Children.
REMEMBER HER NAME.
BE HER VOICE.
SHARE THIS UNTIL THEY CAN'T IGNORE IT ANYMORE.
#GazaGenocide #Netanyahu #Eid2026
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@NotHoodlum I'm half tempted to buy stock in whoever makes champagne, the shelves are going to run dry for a month at the very least.
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