Acts of Diversion

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Acts of Diversion

Acts of Diversion

@ShieldWall1485

🇺🇸(🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇩🇪) Variant 3 • Stand greatly, remain steadfast, restore our nation • John 10:11 • 🌲🏰

🇺🇸 Beigetreten Şubat 2022
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Connor Tomlinson
Connor Tomlinson@Con_Tomlinson·
They will stab you to death, call their family to cover it up, and their co-ethnics will celebrate it online. I'm a single issue voter at this point. Immigration from India must end, and be reversed.
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Pratap Bhuyan@17_Bhuyan

@pelagiusreborn

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Acts of Diversion@ShieldWall1485·
No one in the West should have to be knowledgeable about the tribal differences from your own country. Keep that garbage at home. Here’s the real truth: the West may have class differences, but we don’t subscribe to your caste systems. We see you all as foreigners and don’t distinguish between Sikhs, Brahmins or Dalits.
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Khalsa_Raj1799
Khalsa_Raj1799@Khalsa_Raj1799·
@Con_Tomlinson Co-Ethnics? The guy is Assamese, while Sikhs are Punjabis. That's like using a tweet from an Italian to gride your axe against Swedes!
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Acts of Diversion@ShieldWall1485·
@DoItForMaMa @newstart_2024 Not at all. They’ve replaced wealth with ethnicity, race and sex. So now, instead of stealing from the rich, they want to steal from/replace Europeans and men.
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Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
Eric Weinstein just put his finger on something real. Liberal societies go illiberal in two different ways. One is hyper-liberal illiberalism. Open borders, fluid everything, “no person is illegal,” that whole vibe. The other is the backlash - hypo-liberal illiberalism. Hard borders, strong pushback, masculine energy. “Enough.” He was talking about Britain especially. Told them to stop the self-hatred. You built something special. That dry humor. That irreverent creativity. That ability to take ideas and make them world-class. Be proud of it. This feels like one of the clearest explanations I’ve heard for the pendulum we’re all watching swing right now. When one extreme goes too far, the correction comes hard. Societies need both openness and boundaries. Lose your sense of who you are, and things get messy fast. Do you think the UK (and other Western countries) actually need this corrective phase right now, or is it heading the wrong direction?
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Wayne O'Fathaigh🇮🇪🏳️‍🌈🇪🇺
@TX_lawpony @eoinyk As above seeing the Eiffel Tower in vegas is not the same as seeing it in Paris. I can get amazing Italian, French, viatnemese, Thai food where I love None & I mean none of them are close to doing it for real in the country where it originates
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TheBiggestMMA
TheBiggestMMA@TheBiggestMMA·
@eoinyk @WinterMute2236 I hate the UFC White House idea and I’m an MMA fan but this is the worst own ever, building an arena in two months for a single event is unprecedented motion.
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Acts of Diversion@ShieldWall1485·
@eoinyk @sot1977 I traveled through five states for Christmas and seven states for a job interview (all by car). I then did it all again in reverse. We aren’t impressed lol.
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Eoin Kelleher
Eoin Kelleher@eoinyk·
@sot1977 I've lived and worked in the US, have been to its three largest cities and 5 states. I've probably seen more of America than you have
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Echoes of War
Echoes of War@EchoesofWarYT·
He's watching you American, make him proud
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Barnaby Breaks History 🇺🇸
🇺🇸 Most Badass Presidents: Combat Veteran Edition #1 George Washington George Washington, our 1st President, was one badass President. Was the Father of our country under the miraculous care of divine Providence? You tell me. We all know his stories. But these will leave you absolutely awestruck. Born February 22, 1732, in Westmoreland County, Virginia. At age 21, Washington volunteered for a 500-mile winter expedition through the frozen wilderness to deliver a warning to the French near Lake Erie. On the return trip, the deep snow crippled their horses. He and his guide went out on foot and followed an Indian on a treacherous shortcut. When they reached a clearing, the Indian stepped ahead, turned, and fired at him point blank. The bullet passed harmlessly by him. In 1755, during the Battle of the Monongahela, Washington rode straight into a French and Indian ambush as aide to Gen. Braddock. He was suffering from severe dysentery but dragged himself onto his saddle. The slaughter was horrifying, and every other mounted officer was targeted and killed around him. Two horses were shot out from under him. Four bullets ripped through his coat and one his hat. He emerged completely unscathed. He later wrote in awe that “I was saved by the miraculous care of Providence.” Fifteen years later in 1770, an old Native American chief traveled a long path just to look upon Washington’s face again. The chief revealed that during that bloody battle, he had personally fired at Washington 17 times with a rifle that never missed. He ordered his warriors to target him exclusively, but every single musket ball failed to pierce him. Awed and terrified, the chief commanded his men to stop firing, declaring that Washington was under the special guardianship of the Great Spirit and could never die in battle. In 1758 near Fort Duquesne, his own troops, mistaking the other for enemy, began firing wildly at each other in the darkness and smoke. Washington charged between the two lines. He desperately used his sword to knock up the presented muskets of his own men. Bullets flew all around him. 14 men were killed and 26 wounded, but he came away untouched. At the Battle of Kip’s Bay in September 1776, he galloped alone toward the British lines when his militia troops broke and ran without firing a shot. He faced about fifty redcoats at close range as they leveled their muskets. His aides seized his horse’s bridle and dragged him to safety at the very last second. At the Battle of Princeton in January 1777, Washington rode his white horse directly between the British and American lines to rally his wavering troops. He was 30 yards from the British front line. He then ordered his men to fire. An aide covered his eyes with a handkerchief, certain the commander would meet his death. When the smoke cleared, Washington then chased the fleeing British alone shouting, “It’s a fine fox chase, my boys!” At the Battle of Brandywine in September 1777, Washington was secretly scouted in the woods by British Captain Patrick Ferguson, the inventor of a revolutionary, rapid fire rifle. Ferguson crept close, leveled his lethal weapon, and had him directly in his crosshairs. As Washington turned to ride away, Ferguson’s gentlemanly code of honor stopped him from shooting an unsuspecting man in the back. The sniper lowered his rifle and let him ride on, completely unaware that he could have ended the American Revolution. Ferguson later wrote that he could have easily lodged half a dozen balls in him, but admitted, “I let him alone.” Time after time he emerged from battle without a single scratch. Did I mention this man also defeated the greatest empire on earth? When King George III learned that Washington planned to surrender his military commission and return to farming at wars end, he said, “If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world.” Yes, he was. And we were blessed to have him. Thank you, Mr. President! 🇺🇸🫡
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Barnaby Breaks History 🇺🇸@CorpBarnaby

🇺🇸 Most Badass Presidents: Combat Veteran Edition #2 Ulysses S. Grant Ulysses S. Grant, our 18th President, was one badass President. He was reserved in speech but relentless in battle. He also saved the Union. Born April 27, 1822, in Point Pleasant, Ohio. He is widely considered the finest horseman to ever graduate from West Point. He was baptized in fire during the Mexican War. At the Battle of Palo Alto, he sat on his horse as a cannonball tore the head off a soldier in front of him and the jaw of the officer beside him. At the Battle of Monterrey, he rode his horse “Comanche style,” using its body as a shield against enemy snipers as it sped through city streets to get ammo to troops. At the Battle of San Cosme Gate, he hauled a disassembled howitzer up into a church steeple, reassembled it, and rained shells onto the enemy. Gen. Taylor personally recommended him for bravery. He received two brevet promotions in the war. Grant resigned from the Army in 1854 to be with his family. The Civil War called him back. He rejoined as colonel of the 21st Illinois Volunteer Infantry and quickly rose to brigadier general. In his first command at the Battle of Belmont, he had his horse shot out from under him while leading from the front. Later, he found himself alone in a cornfield, the absolute last Union man on that side of the riverbank as a column of Confederate forces closed in 50 yds away. He went back looking for a lost unit that wasn’t there. “There is a Yankee officer, boys,” Confederate General Polk reportedly shouted. “Try your rifles on him.” Grant spun his borrowed horse, slid down a steep riverbank, and trotted it across a narrow plank onto a moving steamship as bullets hissed around him. Exhausted, he laid down on a sofa in the captain’s cabin. Upon hearing gunfire, he stood up. Seconds later, a musket ball ripped through the ship’s wall and buried itself in the sofa where his head had been. In the North’s first major triumph of the war, he took Fort Donelson and earned the nickname “Unconditional Surrender Grant”. At Shiloh, fighting on a crushed ankle and crutches, he refused to retreat after a disastrous first day. When asked if he would pull back, he simply replied, “No. Lick ’em tomorrow, though.” He did. He captured Vicksburg after a brilliant campaign and forty-day siege splitting the Confederacy in two. Lincoln finally got his fighting general. During the Wilderness Campaign, he sat on a stump at Saunders Field, calmly whittling a stick and smoking a cigar while shells exploded around his headquarters, showering his uniform with dirt. When a panicked officer claimed Lee would cut them off, Grant removed his cigar and coolly replied: “I am heartily tired of hearing about what Lee is going to do…try to think what we are going to do ourselves.” He didn’t retreat. He turned south, the first Union general to stay locked in with Lee. He would “fight it out on this line if it took all summer.” Lee knew how to win the battle. Grant knew how to win a war. At Appomattox on April 9, 1865, Grant accepted Lee’s surrender. While Lee wore a pristine dress sword and sash, Grant arrived in a muddy private’s coat with tarnished shoulder straps. He remained a common soldier’s general to the end. He saved the Republic on the battlefields long before he ever set foot in the White House. Thank you, Mr. President! 🫡🇺🇸

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Cam Higby 🇺🇸
Cam Higby 🇺🇸@camhigby·
This is how my 911 call went yesterday, it was INSANE: Dispatch: “911 what is your emergency?” Me: “I need an officer to take a report. I was attacked and robbed of at least $1,500 worth of property at Delaney Hall.” Dispatch: “sir who robbed you?” Me: “the masked chaos agents that are apparently allowed to run our streets while officers are nowhere to be seen.” Dispatch: “sir, are you saying ICE robbed you?” Me: “are you stupid? No I’m not saying ICE robbed me. I’m talking about the protestors who attack people every single night outside of Delaney Hall.” Dispatch: “Sir, they are simply peacefully protesting.” Me: “did you miss the part where they robbed and attacked me? You can keep your braindead opinions to yourself - you’re a 911 dispatcher and I was robbed. I need an officer not your stupid input.” I will be filing a FOIA for this 911 call with a Newark dispatcher. The first dispatcher straight up hung up on me.
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Nick Sortor
Nick Sortor@nicksortor·
🚨 BREAKING EXCLUSIVE: I INFILTRATED the Antifa camp at Newark ICE with a hidden camera Tens of THOUSANDS of dollars of equipment, food, and even RIOT EQUIPMENT has been supplied. Hot food delivered every hour. ARREST THE FUNDERS, AND THIS WILL STOP
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Remarks
Remarks@remarks·
JUST IN: 🇺🇸 White Americans could become the highest-fertility group by 2028 or 2029 as birth rates continue to improve.
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C.Jay Engel 🌲
C.Jay Engel 🌲@contramordor·
It’s important to remember that while there’s a lot of anti-American hate coming out among the Indian migrant community due to Trump’s immigration initiatives, there’s also a decent amount of Indians that really like this country, are interested in its cultural heritage, and want to see it thrive. They also have to go back.
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Acts of Diversion@ShieldWall1485·
Who cares? Seriously? The Bicentennial was a multi-month event. I remember my sister crying bec her scoop of RW&B ice cream rolled off her cone onto the floor. Everyone celebrated. Everything was colonial this and flag-draped that. You are so programmed to hate Trump, you’re raging about the day of the week for an event. My God, dude, step back and get a hold of yourself.
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Redhead Ranting™
Redhead Ranting™@redheadranting·
So they are all saying the same thing - that they were duped and the event they agreed to do is not the event it is. Can someone explain how the event is divisive or is it divisive because the lefties on the internet got mad and made threats to them? Also, there's more to this. This is either a deflection or a litmus test, but it's some kind of psyop.
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