Jeremy 4Runner™️

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Jeremy 4Runner™️

Jeremy 4Runner™️

@Jeremy4Runner

Often mistaken for Hawkeye. Provider of impractical advice. Mountain Man 🏔️ Centrist 🏔️ Ski Junkie #smokefleet

Route 66 Beigetreten Mayıs 2026
613 Folgt952 Follower
FroDodge Baggins™
FroDodge Baggins™@FroDodgeBaggins·
Yo brochachos! Just a reminder to vet your follows. Not everyone gets clean accounts. I’m finding some bots, so even though I HELLA appreciate #smokefleet for doubling my followers in an afternoon, keep an Eagle Eye out for the traps. Ride on, and FuckFascistFucks! And FDJT&Emu!
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Jeremy 4Runner™️
Jeremy 4Runner™️@Jeremy4Runner·
@echipiuk Great analogy, except Switzerland doesn't have MAGASTAN next door with paid influencers and Russian bots sowing the seeds of division and hate on a daily basis. Direct democracy only works if your population is intelligent. Ours isn't.
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Eva Chipiuk, BSc, LLB, LLM
Switzerland holds multiple citizen referendums every year, giving citizens a direct voice in public issues. Over 60% of Swiss citizen initiatives ultimately result in legal or policy changes, whether passed directly by referendum or implemented voluntarily by government. Direct citizen participation has become a significant part of Swiss democratic culture and is often associated with high levels of civic engagement and public trust. More importantly, that level of public participation helps build trust and confidence in democracy because citizens know their voices matter. If governments genuinely want public trust, one of the best places to start is by asking the public what it thinks. Imagine that! Yet in Alberta, when citizens start a petition to try to bring an issue to a referendum, many, especially the establishment and legacy media, seem to have a legitimate meltdown over the idea of citizens having a direct say. 🤔🥴 I cannot think of anything more nonsensical than this! A referendum is not the destruction of democracy. It literally is democracy in action. There is something incredibly positive about seeing citizens informed, activated, and engaged in the democratic process. If governments are confident in their positions, they should not fear asking citizens what they think. They should encourage it. Also, on the topic of the Swiss cash referendum, the idea that cash should remain legal tender should never even become a question in a free society. Citizens should always have the ability to transact using cash if they choose. Thank goodness citizens had a democratic mechanism available to set things straight. Never give up your voice.
dejanira@dejanirasilveir

🚨🚨 DURO GOLPE MORTAL a la presidenta del Banco Central Europeo, Christine Lagarde. Suiza 🇨🇭 APROBÓ en referéndum garantizar el uso PERMANENTE del dinero en efectivo. 👏👏👏 Un 73% de los votantes respaldó una iniciativa para garantizar la disponibilidad permanente de dinero en efectivo en el país, que no podrá ser reemplazada por dinero virtual. Con el dinero en efectivo la Agenda 2030 no se puede implementar. EL EFECTIVO ES VIDA Y LIBERTAD⚔️🔥

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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
In West Hollywood, a simple hallway separated two lives that were never supposed to collide. Chris Salvatore was 31—an actor and singer just starting out. Norma Cook was 89—a sharp, champagne-loving interior decorator who had outlived most of her friends. When Chris moved into the apartment complex in 2013, he noticed the elegant older woman waving from across the hall. One polite knock led to a glass of her favorite bubbly. One glass turned into daily rituals: shared meals, long talks, her cat Hermes purring between them, and laughter that erased every year between them. “We became best friends instantly,” Chris later said. She had lost so many close friends during the AIDS epidemic; he was gay and understood that ache. Age melted away. What grew instead was a chosen family built on kindness, champagne toasts, and the quiet comfort of truly being seen. For nearly four years they lived this beautiful, ordinary rhythm—until leukemia, which Norma had battled quietly, took a devastating turn. Pneumonia hit hard. Hospital stays stretched into months. Doctors delivered the news: she could no longer live alone. No nearby family. No savings for full-time care. A nursing facility seemed like the only door left. Chris refused to let that be her ending. Instead of watching her fade in an unfamiliar place, he stepped up in the most extraordinary way. He launched a heartfelt call for help on social media. Strangers flooded in—thousands of them—donating enough to bring Norma home. But Chris knew money alone wasn’t enough. On a cold January day in 2017, he invited her to move into his apartment. Permanently. He became her full-time caregiver, power of attorney, and safe harbor. No hesitation. No conditions. Just pure, unconditional love. Their new normal was simple and sacred: home-cooked dinners, watching the news together, quiet evenings with Hermes on the couch, and plenty more champagne. Even as her health slipped, Norma’s spirit stayed bright. Doctors had given her mere months, but love stretched those days into something precious. She spent her final Valentine’s Day exactly where she wanted to be—surrounded by the family she had chosen. On February 15, 2017, Norma passed peacefully in Chris’s living room, holding his hand, her last words a soft “I love you.” Chris later shared that Norma taught him what real love looks like: showing up without expectation, staying when it’s hard, and choosing connection over convenience. Their story didn’t end with her passing. He turned their bond into a beautiful children’s book, My Neighbor Norma, so kids everywhere could learn that family isn’t always blood—it’s the people who open their hearts (and their doors). In a world quick to scroll past strangers, Chris and Norma remind us: sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is simply refuse to let someone face their hardest chapter alone.
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Jeremy 4Runner™️
Jeremy 4Runner™️@Jeremy4Runner·
@ValerieAnne1970 The "Vaccine Gap": For nearly 20 years, Japan experienced a "vaccine gap" which led to disease outbreaks of measles, rubella, and influenza induced pneumonia in the elderly. Oh, and they didn't end vaccines, they made them optional and idiots like you got everyone sick.
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Valerie Anne Smith
Valerie Anne Smith@ValerieAnne1970·
This should stop every parent in their tracks. In 1994 Japan ended all mandatory vaccines for babies under two years old. The outcome? Japan now has one of the lowest infant mortality rates on the planet. America? Highest infant mortality of all industrialized nations.
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Sholdon Daniels For Congress
Sholdon Daniels For Congress@SholdonDaniels·
Barack Obama could arguably be considered the worst person that ever happened to America.
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Jeremy 4Runner™️
Jeremy 4Runner™️@Jeremy4Runner·
@LauraLoomer Why is Katy Perry dating Justin Trudeau!!! Isn't it embarrassing that this is how you will be remembered in history? An imbecile drumming up fake outrage so other imbeciles can get impressions?
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Jeremy 4Runner™️ retweetet
🦝trash panda🏳️‍⚧️
Aight I gave up. RIP to my original account. Quite a few people have refollowed me since starting over but I would appreciate if y'all could share this tweet to hopefully regain some more old followers that might still be unaware. Thanks to those who have been supportive!
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Justin Beemer™️
Justin Beemer™️@RealJustinBeemr·
Don’t buy the bullshit muchachos. We already knew there were UFOs. #smokefleet
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Warren Gunnels
Warren Gunnels@GunnelsWarren·
Elon Musk spent $290 million to elect Trump. Musk got $512 billion richer since Trump was elected & is now worth $815 billion. He wants to cut Social Security and Medicare by $500-$700 billion a year. You’re not angry enough.
ALUTHEDON@Mbakaza4L

And there it is. Elon Musk just said he wants to cut Social Security and Medicare, calling them “entitlements”: “That’s the big one to eliminate.”

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Jeremy 4Runner™️
Jeremy 4Runner™️@Jeremy4Runner·
@TerryHethering9 Amazing how many times I have to use this grade school diagram. Russia: Fascist state Canada: Social Democracy US: Magastan dumpster fire So the US is closer to Russia than Canada is.
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Jason Scott 🇨🇦
Jason Scott 🇨🇦@JasonOnTheDrums·
#ableg Danielle Smith declaring war on “wokeism” tells you: She cannot fix health care She cannot protect voter data She cannot control the extremists in her own orbit She cannot govern without outrage. So she gives Alberta a fake enemy + hopes nobody notices her many failures
Scott Robertson@sarobertsonca

Danielle Smith: "In Alberta, we are also putting an end to the era of Wokeism." *crowd cheers*

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Tokyo
Tokyo@otokyo__·
Who remembers what they were doing the morning of 9/11?
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Neil deGrasse Dyson™
Neil deGrasse Dyson™@NeildiGrasse·
ADMIRAL ACKBAR: "I might get hate for this too but I bought a Star Destroyer. With a young family, safety was important and so is not polluting the atmosphere with $5 a gallon gasoline."
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Jamison Daniel
Jamison Daniel@AntiquarianMuse·
How would you decorate Donald trumps prison cell?
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Mr PitBull Stories
Mr PitBull Stories@MrPitbull07·
May 15, 1963. Astronaut Gordon Cooper climbed into a capsule barely larger than a phone booth and launched into space aboard Faith 7. The mission was simple on paper: Orbit Earth 22 times. Stay in space for a full day. Come home alive. For most of the flight, everything worked perfectly. Then, on the 19th orbit, the warning lights came on. First, a faulty sensor falsely reported reentry. Then the electrical system failed. One by one, the automated controls died. Guidance system: dead. Orientation system: dead. Reentry calculations: dead. At 165 miles above Earth, Gordon Cooper suddenly had no functioning instruments to bring him home. And reentry is unforgiving. Too shallow, and the capsule skips off the atmosphere into space forever. Too steep, and friction turns it into a fireball. The difference between life and death was fractions of a degree. Mission Control could only watch. So Cooper became the computer. He drew reference marks on the capsule window with a pen. He stared at the stars he had memorized before launch and used them to orient the spacecraft by eye. He strapped a wristwatch to his arm and timed everything manually. Then he did the math in his head. No autopilot. No navigation system. No backup computer. Just a man, a watch, and the stars. At exactly the right second, Cooper fired the retrorockets manually. The capsule dropped into Earth’s atmosphere. For several minutes, communication vanished as plasma wrapped the spacecraft in fire. Nobody on Earth could contact him. Then the parachutes opened. Faith 7 splashed down just 4.4 miles from the recovery ship USS Kearsarge — the most accurate splashdown of the entire Mercury program. Later, Cooper described it simply: “I used my wristwatch for time, my eyeballs out the window for attitude.” That’s it. In one of the most dangerous moments in early spaceflight history, a human being outperformed the machines. We live in a world obsessed with automation and software. But Gordon Cooper’s flight is a reminder that when everything breaks, the final backup system is still the human mind. Calm under pressure. Thinking clearly. Making the call when nobody else can. It was true in 1963. It still is.
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