Joshua Milgrim

259 posts

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Joshua Milgrim

Joshua Milgrim

@JoshuaMilg

West Monroe Beigetreten Mart 2026
145 Folgt14 Follower
Jermaine Curtis
Jermaine Curtis@JermaineCurtis·
I worked with a D1 player and a D3 player this morning. On paper... They looked almost identical. 6'4 200 pounds... Both had elite bat speed. Both had power. Both were physically gifted. But there was one difference. Every time the D3 player mishit a ball... He complained. He got frustrated. He pouted. Then he'd struggle for the next 3 or 4 swings. Pop-up. Ground ball. Weak contact. The D1 player? He'd mishit one. Make an adjustment ...And move on. No emotion. No drama. Just the next pitch. It reminded me of something I learned playing professional baseball... Sometimes the biggest difference between two players isn't their talent. It's the conversation they're having with themselves in their head after they fail. Your bat speed matters. Your swing matters. But the operating system between your ears matters just as much. The best hitters I've been around don't waste energy explaining why they failed. They spend their energy figuring out what to do on the next pitch. - Jermaine Curtis P.S. The next time you mishit a ball, don't ask, "What's wrong with me?" Ask, "What's my adjustment?" P.P.S. - If you enjoyed this, and thought it was helpful, share it. (It tells me you want more content like this)
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Joshua Milgrim
Joshua Milgrim@JoshuaMilg·
@SirIsaac_Brock You lose in hockey and in business . Too many beta males in Canada happy with making $50k per year and smoking weed, eating ketchup potato chips reminiscing about their junior league hockey team!
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Peter Ratcliffe, forever Canadian 🇨🇦
It's standard for abusers to blame their victims. The US has abused Canada's trust, our sovereignty and our economy. They want us to understand and accept that abuse and pretend it just never happened. Clearly as abusers. they are upset that we're moving on and away from them.
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David Santoro
David Santoro@DavidSantoro1·
When I’m in Europe, I no longer hear the question: “Can America still be counted on?” Europeans have moved on to: “How can we make this work now and in the medium term until we’re able to take care of ourselves?”
Antony Blinken@ABlinken

I was recently in Europe, where the topic du jour was America. What I heard didn't surprise me, but the consistency did. Again and again, people asked the same question: Can America still be counted on? This week's NATO summit surely did little to reassure them. The Alliance itself is stepping up. More money for security — building upon a trend begun during the Biden Administration, when the number of allies devoting the long agreed 2% of GDP to defense went from 9 to 23. Greater industrial cooperation, including across the Atlantic.  Sustained support for Ukraine. A strong reaffirmation of its commitment to collective defense in the face of Russian provocations. The Trump Administration could and should have declared success. Instead, more public confrontations with allies, threats directed at fellow NATO members, and renewed suggestions about taking territory from a close partner dominated the headlines. The greater damage is quieter, and much harder to reverse. Many Europeans are no longer asking when America will return to the role it has played for generations. They are planning for a future in which it doesn't. For nearly eight decades, NATO and our broader network of alliances have been among our greatest strategic advantages. They have deterred aggression and so made war less likely, expanded our influence, strengthened our economy, and kept Americans safe. They allow us to share burdens rather than carry them alone. They multiply American power instead of diminishing it. These relationships were never acts of charity. They were built out of enlightened self-interest to advance our own security and prosperity. When allies lose confidence in the United States, they don't simply wait for Washington to change course. They adapt. They build new partnerships. They look elsewhere for leadership. Those decisions, once made, are difficult to undo. Our adversaries and competitors understand this. Russia has long sought to fracture the transatlantic alliance. China benefits whenever democratic nations are less able to act together. Every doubt cast on America's reliability is an opportunity for those who would prefer a weaker, more divided West.

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Larry Dallas
Larry Dallas@BartFurley·
I cannot wait for Xavier Trudeau to announce he is entering politics. I say that in about 10 years after Carney is done we vote for Xavier. If he wants to lead that is.
Larry Dallas tweet media
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annika christy
annika christy@kingkrabbyp·
Twitter trolls hate to see me comin after a few drinks
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Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson@sarobertson_·
Chrystia Freeland on Trump's behaviour at NATO: "I think actually that he needs to be called out much more ... The comments with regard to Spain were also utterly unacceptable ... Trying to appease President Trump just encourages him. What he understands is strength."
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Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson@sarobertson_·
Reid: "Those stories in the WSJ -- those are explosive stories. Europe was at a loss of what to do when Trump started raising tariff barriers and talking about the end of NATO, much less taking over Greenland. And it was Carney who said, 'Guys, get with the program. The world has changed. The US is not a reliable partner. We're going to have to rely on one another more often and in deeper ways. And sometimes that's going to put us at loggerheads with the US.'"
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That Rude Cat.
That Rude Cat.@NotAssangesCat·
You know what, Adam? We don't need American wine or liquor. Even if it shows back up on the shelf, Canadians are so universally pissed at America's failure to reign in that idiot President of yours, we won't buy it. SO get off your asses and do something about him. Talk is cheap.
Senator Adam Schiff@SenAdamSchiff

Canada's boycott of California wine is causing devastating harm to winegrowers. I'm urging the Canadian government to recognize that California doesn’t agree with these tariff wars, to lift these restrictions, and increase consumer options to strengthen both our economies. sacbee.com/food-drink/art…

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Mark Slapinski
Mark Slapinski@mark_slapinski·
Trump literally put tariffs on the WHOLE WORLD. Blaming Carney for not getting them removed on Canada is disingenuous.
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Joshua Milgrim
Joshua Milgrim@JoshuaMilg·
@NotAssangesCat @what6996 Cat, id like to tell you I’d be rich if I had a dollar for every Canadian who tells me they wish they were American, but unfortunately it would only be worth 70 cents!
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That Rude Cat.
That Rude Cat.@NotAssangesCat·
@what6996 Well, since you're in America, you're free to buy whatever pisswater you like. As are we in Canada. We don't need your crappy booze. And we won't buy it. Even in provinces where it remains available - sales are in the crapper - like your country.
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Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson@sarobertson_·
Carney on Erdogan's gift: "I would like to reassure Canadians, they keep guns away from me ... Struck me that my gift of maple syrup kind of undermatched the whatever it was."
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Joshua Milgrim
Joshua Milgrim@JoshuaMilg·
@JillSweden1 We’ll get Elon to create a workaround right after we go back to the moon. So Jilly, why don’t you just relax and nibble on some ketchup chips.
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JillCanadian🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇸🇪🇪🇺
Les États-Unis s'appuient sur un réseau électrique étroitement intégré à celui du Canada, important d'importantes quantités d'électricité — principalement en provenance de provinces riches en ressources hydroélectriques telles que le Québec, l'Ontario et la Colombie-Britannique.
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Antony Blinken
Antony Blinken@ABlinken·
I was recently in Europe, where the topic du jour was America. What I heard didn't surprise me, but the consistency did. Again and again, people asked the same question: Can America still be counted on? This week's NATO summit surely did little to reassure them. The Alliance itself is stepping up. More money for security — building upon a trend begun during the Biden Administration, when the number of allies devoting the long agreed 2% of GDP to defense went from 9 to 23. Greater industrial cooperation, including across the Atlantic.  Sustained support for Ukraine. A strong reaffirmation of its commitment to collective defense in the face of Russian provocations. The Trump Administration could and should have declared success. Instead, more public confrontations with allies, threats directed at fellow NATO members, and renewed suggestions about taking territory from a close partner dominated the headlines. The greater damage is quieter, and much harder to reverse. Many Europeans are no longer asking when America will return to the role it has played for generations. They are planning for a future in which it doesn't. For nearly eight decades, NATO and our broader network of alliances have been among our greatest strategic advantages. They have deterred aggression and so made war less likely, expanded our influence, strengthened our economy, and kept Americans safe. They allow us to share burdens rather than carry them alone. They multiply American power instead of diminishing it. These relationships were never acts of charity. They were built out of enlightened self-interest to advance our own security and prosperity. When allies lose confidence in the United States, they don't simply wait for Washington to change course. They adapt. They build new partnerships. They look elsewhere for leadership. Those decisions, once made, are difficult to undo. Our adversaries and competitors understand this. Russia has long sought to fracture the transatlantic alliance. China benefits whenever democratic nations are less able to act together. Every doubt cast on America's reliability is an opportunity for those who would prefer a weaker, more divided West.
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Joshua Milgrim
Joshua Milgrim@JoshuaMilg·
@DanielSprarc You’re a dummy if you think you don’t need an id to buy a gun. You must not have any guns. Did your wife tell you no?
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Daniel Sprader
Daniel Sprader@DanielSprarc·
HEY MAGA, IF YOU'RE SUDDENLY SO "PRO ID" ARE YOU OK WITH THE SAME ID RULE FOR GUN PURCHASES, TOO?
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