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Troll Life

@TrollingUfrvr

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East Coast Beigetreten Ekim 2024
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Javier Milei Quotes
Javier Milei Quotes@MileiSays·
Milei’s spot-on diagnosis of the left: “I thought being on the left was a mental problem. The empirical evidence is so overwhelming that it never worked anywhere, and they refused to accept it.” “But what I discovered is that being on the left is a disease of the soul. The left is built on envy, hatred, resentment, and unequal treatment under the law.” “They are very violent, and since they have no way or arguments to answer, they go for physical violence.”
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Mark Dawes
Mark Dawes@mdawese11·
@ABridgen @sexbasedrights Nonsense. COVID originated in a wet market in Wuhan and is zoonotic. Stop spreading childish conspiracy theories.
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Andrew Bridgen
Andrew Bridgen@ABridgen·
They made it in a lab. They KNEW it would kill. And they released it anyway. On June 18, 2026 — her FINAL day as Director of National Intelligence — Tulsi Gabbard declassified 4.7 million pages. Every email. Every wire transfer. Every internal memo they thought was buried forever. What the media WON'T show you from those files: PAGE 2,847 — NIAID Internal Memo, October 3, 2019: "Phase 3 aerosolization test complete. Mortality projection: 1.8 to 3.2 million within 18 months of release. Recommend immediate halt." Fauci's handwritten response: "Continue. Funding secured through Geneva." THAT WAS 3 MONTHS BEFORE THE FIRST "CASE" IN WUHAN. The money trail — now FULLY visible: ▪️ $47.3 million routed through EcoHealth Alliance to Wuhan between 2014-2019 ▪️ $128 million in "preparedness grants" sent to 3 Swiss intermediaries ▪️ $2.1 BILLION in Moderna pre-production contracts signed AUGUST 2019 — 4 months BEFORE the pandemic was announced They ordered the vaccine BEFORE the virus was public. A classified briefing — November 14, 2019 — attended by Fauci, Collins, and 7 members of Congress. They were told a novel pathogen would emerge from Wuhan within 60 days. They didn't warn you. They BOUGHT STOCK. Congressional trading records show $312 million in pharma positions opened between November 15 and December 20, 2019. THEY BET ON YOUR DEATH. AND WON. Declassified DOD mortality analysis — completed March 2024, suppressed until now: ▪️ COVID direct deaths: 1.2 million ▪️ Vaccine adverse deaths: 487,000 ▪️ Lockdown deaths: 340,000 ▪️ TOTAL: 2.03 MILLION AMERICANS From a virus MANUFACTURED and RELEASED with full knowledge. THIS IS THE LARGEST MASS MURDER IN AMERICAN HISTORY. WHAT COMES NEXT: A sealed federal grand jury — empaneled May 22, 2026 — has reviewed these documents for 27 days. 11 indictments ready. Fauci. Collins. 3 EcoHealth executives. 2 Moderna board members. 4 sitting members of Congress. Trump's response on June 19: "No deals. No immunity. TRIBUNALS." You watched them lock you in your homes. Silence your doctors. Inject your children. NOW YOU KNOW WHY. GAINOF-FUNCTION-1019 MODERNA-PRE-0819 TRIBUNAL-11-SEALED They created the plague. They sold the cure. They buried the evidence. But the evidence just ROSE FROM THE GRAVE. t.me/AXIOS4B
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John McWhorter
John McWhorter@JohnHMcWhorter·
Folks, I'd like to get my two cents in on Karmelo Anthony. This is a long one -- pretend it's an editorial. “He put his hands on me. I stabbed him.” Why does a boy spontaneously justify stabbing someone on so thin a pretense? And why do so many Black Americans see his 35-year prison sentence as racist? I think the answer to both questions takes us to Scotland, Ireland, and northern England. At a track meet at Kuykendall Stadium in Frisco, Texas in April of last year, Anthony sat down under a team’s tent. Anthony was neither on the team nor a student at its school, and an unwritten but widely known rule is that only team members are permitted under a team tent. Multiple student witnesses – and not just “whitenesses,” as several were Black -- testified about what happened next. Anthony was told several times to leave the tent but refused, including a profane epithet, culminating in warning “Touch me and see what happens.” Team member Austin Metcalf shoved Anthony, who pulled a knife out of his bag, stabbed him in the chest, threw the knife into the stands and ran away. Caught by the police, he immediately admitted to the stabbing, reportedly saying “He put his hands on me. I stabbed him.” Metcalf died in his twin brother’s arms. There is no reason to think Anthony was trying to kill Metcalf. He was trying to hurt him severely, putting him in the hospital, for shoving him, as he indicated in at first saying "He's not gonna die." Also, claims such as prosecutor Bill Wirskye’s that Anthony meant “Touch me and see what happens” as a provocation are based on a misreading of Black English. “Touch me and see what happens” is not a command to touch. It means “If you touch me, you will find out.” The question is why Anthony thought being pushed justified sinking a knife into Metcalf’s body. The answer is the culture of “disrespect” in young Black male culture, documented by many (including black sociologists). His calculus was "If he even touches me, I am disrespected, and will respond in destructive kind." The idea is that being dissed merits what we might phrase as cutting someone a new one. There is no reason to suppose that this is due to Black people having some inborn propensity to violence. The Black economist Thomas Sowell has traced the “disrespect” culture to the whites from the “Celtic Fringe” – an area comprising parts of northern England, Scotland, and Ulster County in Ireland -- who migrated to the South starting in the 1700s and established plantations (or worked on them as indentured servants). Black people, often enslaved, worked alongside and around them and their American-born descendants. At this time (although certainly not now), whites from the Celtic Fringe area had the same tripwire response to being dissed – “touchy pride” -- as well as many other traits now commonly associated with “gangsta” Black culture. In his classic study of early migrants to America “Albion’s Seed,” the historian David Hackett Fisher referred to the oppressed people of this northern borderland region, encompassing Scotland, northern England and Ulster County in Ireland, as “some of the most disorderly inhabitants of a deeply disordered land.” “Manliness and the forceful projection of that manliness to others – an advertisement of one’s willingness to fight and even to put one’s life on the line – were at least plausible means of gaining whatever level of security was possible in a lawless region and a violent time,” Sowell notes. Hundreds of thousands of people from this region migrated to America starting in the early 1700s, eventually migrating to the South. Many establishedplantations and bought enslaved Black people to work on them. Referring often to the scholarly and sympathetic study of this “cracker” culture in America by the historian Grady McWhiney, Sowell notes that they manifested “a touchiness about anything that might be even remotely construed as a personal slight, much less an insult, combined with a willingness to erupt into violence over it.” The step is short between that and “He put his hands on me. I stabbed him.” It is hard not to see the parallel between the “cracker” culture and the sociologist Elijah Anderson’s study of late twentieth century Black culture of “the streets,” where “respect is viewed as almost an external entity that is hard-won but easily lost, and so must constantly be guarded. (...) Many of the forms that dissing can take might seem petty to middle-class people (maintaining eye contact for too long, for example), but to those invested in the street code, these actions become serious indications of the other person's intentions. Consequently, such people become very sensitive to advances and slights, which could well serve as warnings of imminent physical confrontation.” Sowell argues that enslaved Blacks would have internalized these norms from the whites they worked with and lived around. It might seem hard to imagine whites and Blacks sharing a culture on the kind of plantation familiar from dramatic depictions, where legions of Black people worked in the fields while whites were their owners and overseers. However, in reality, relationships between whites and Blacks, while fraught and founded in pitiless domination, allowed for degrees of interchange and familiarity. Plantations varied massively in size, and white children and Black ones grew up playing together, even influencing one another’s speech. Black sociologist W.E.B. DuBois’ survey of Black Philadelphia in the 1890s, as well as studies afterward, shows that until the 1960s, the “cracker” inheritance from whites was largely confined to the least advantaged and segregated Black people. However, for the past several decades, aspects of the “disrespect culture” have had influence even among middle-class Black people. For one, the Black middle class vastly increased after the Civil Rights victories of the 1960s, and therefore, for most middle class Black people, poverty remains only a few generations back. Culture does not always change in lockstep with income. Add to this that in the 1960s, many Black people rejected the old idea that our goal was to assimilate to mainstream (i.e. white) norms. Rather than engaging in what is often called respectability politics, many Black people embraced the idea of a separate Black identity – and one aspect of that was the chip-on-the-shoulder style. This all meant that these days, a Black boy hardly needs to grow up in the ‘hood to internalize aspects of what Sowell calls “redneck” culture. This includes the tripwire sensitivity to being “disrespected.” This informs how so many black commenters on the trial and sentence seem to not quite process the horror of Metcalf’s murder. Representative Jasmine Crockett thinks the length of the sentence is racist – as if a white boy shivving a Black boy to death would only get a slap on the hand -- focusing on the fact that the knife was not especially large and that Anthony only stabbed once. Martin Luther King’s daughter Berenice King opines that the main lesson from the episode is racial disparities in the justice system. Many online revile that none of the jurors were Black. But it is reasonable to think that they would have liked that a representative number of jurors would pardon Anthony as representing his “disrespect culture,” and thus less culpable than a teen of any other race in America? If so, they are less progressive than retrograde, if we are really to get past race. Dr. King didn’t die demanding that whites make excuses for us. What’s missing in these opinions is thoughts that would occur readily to the outside observer. How about if Anthony hadn’t been carrying a knife at all? How about Anthony just getting up and leaving, or just shoving back rather than hauling out a weapon? But under the “disrespect” culture, even in the background as a tacit sentiment, the idea that Anthony could simply have done what he was told seems an almost unreasonable expectation based on respectability politics. And frankly, I venture that there another resonance in the air: that on a certain level we are supposed to see Anthony’s deed in the light of slavery, Jim Crow and George Floyd, and other disrepectings upon us as a group. Karmelo Anthony drank in this way of thinking subconsciously in the way that we all grow into the culture we are born into. He doubtless incorporated countless elements of Black culture that are positive or even just neutral. But one of them was this notion of what it is to be a man, which made sense in some upper reaches of what we now know as the United Kingdom centuries ago, but doesn’t work in modern American society. The sports journalist Jemele Hill advises “We need to be having conversations with our young black boys about emotional regulation and decision making and discernment and wisdom.” Black women often give their boys “The Talk” about obeying what cops demand. But that talk needs to come with a second one – there need to be “The Talks.” Young Black men need to be told not to fall for the idea that being dissed justifies physical violence. That, and not the persistence of racism, is what Karmelo Anthony’s fate should teach us. If you did, thanks for staying with me until the end!
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Shayla Sweatt
Shayla Sweatt@shay_sweatt·
So y'all thought Black America was to busy to breakdown and analyze this video?! #KarmeloAnthony was 5'8 140 lbs, had a surgically repaired right shoulder, and epilepsy, and was being jumped by 6'1 220 lbs twins and their friends. This was #SelfDefense. #BelieveKarmelo
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CCFreedmen
CCFreedmen@CCFreedmen·
Karmelo Anthony is a great young man who was accosted by known, racist bullies who had no authority or reason to demand anything of him, and especially not to touch him. Never forget, Hunter clearly stated that Austin grabbed his backpack.
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Troll Life
Troll Life@TrollingUfrvr·
Or maybe, I’m actually an attorney with 20 years of courtroom experience. The facts are clear. The boy refused to leave, while holding a concealed, open, knife, and saying “touch me and see what happens.” He is BARELY touched, and knife’s the other kid to death. Those are the undisputed facts. There was zero evidence at trial to suggest any other set of facts. Zero. Not only is that a WILDLY disproportionate level of force, the statement is very strong evidence of premeditation. You’re just a racist, black supremacist, semi-literate moron, chimping out because a negro was (for once) held accountable for negro behavior.
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Bree 🌬
Bree 🌬@SummerBree60136·
@TrollingUfrvr @CCFreedmen Naaah, what I'm saying is,. Your "I'M WHITE and I SAY SO" 🐂💩 miscarriage of justice is being challenged but more importantly, YOU and your EVIL DEMONIC kind are being JUDGED by The Most High!!!🔥🔥🔥🔥
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Troll Life
Troll Life@TrollingUfrvr·
No, you didn’t. Proportionality means that the level and type of force must be ONLY so much as is required to stop the “attack.” So when this chimp gets pushed, and escalates to a large knife to the chest, he’s no longer using reasonable self defense. I know that’s difficult for the negro mind to understand, but seriously, try. This is law that dates to the ancient times. It’s nothing new.
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Veronica Veritas
Veronica Veritas@VeronicaVeiled·
@omoluabi1sq Come to (many parts of) Europe. Nobody gives a sht about your body showing. Naked kids, breasts out at public pools, thong-bikini-wearing-moms with their toddlers. Americans are so so so weird about sexuality.
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DGov
DGov@omoluabi1sq·
Hotel Attendant: “Excuse me ma’am, you can’t wear that. We have a dress code here.” Lady: “A bikini? Why not?” Hotel Attendant: “There are kids by the pool.” Lady: “F*ck them kids.” 😳 Was she right for reacting that way, or should public spaces with children have rules everyone respects? What’s your take?
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Bree 🌬
Bree 🌬@SummerBree60136·
@CCFreedmen I wonder if an toxicology was done on the deceased bully, from everything I'm hearing and know seeing, he behaves like someone ampt up on drugs.
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Troll Life
Troll Life@TrollingUfrvr·
@CCFreedmen Read LAW, idiot. If you can read. Force must be proportional. Is that word just too difficult for you people?
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Danny Hollywood
Danny Hollywood@jumbles1978·
@travelingflying There is no system of oppression that has ever existed that comes even close to matching the horrors, brutality, and inhumanity of the Atlantic Slave Trade.
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Taya Bass
Taya Bass@travelingflying·
White people: -Didn’t start slavery -Were enslaved too -Ended slavery worldwide Yet White people are the only race blamed for slavery.
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Troll Life
Troll Life@TrollingUfrvr·
@anti_ljay @reesetheone1 Let me explain for the stupid nigger. If I shove you, you get to shove back. Maybe you can even punch me. YOU DONT GET TO PLUNGE A LARGE KNIFE INTO MY HEART. Damn you people are stupid.
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AM I THE DRAMA ? 9/19
AM I THE DRAMA ? 9/19@anti_ljay·
@reesetheone1 maybe if yt folks stop teaching their children how to be racist ass bigiots nun of this would have happened..like why do yt kids think it’s ok to put their hands on other folks children? Putting your hands on someone unprovoked come with consequences
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Sistas aren't the Democratic party’s GOTV mules.
From what I can see, metcalf tried to be a hard ass, pushed Anthony and got poked.
Brooke Taylor@Brooketaylortv

#BREAKING: This is the surveillance footage jurors were shown before convicting Karmelo Anthony of murder. The grainy surveillance video is shot from across the field but shows students under the Memorial High School tent where Austin Metcalf was stabbed. There is a physical confrontation that lasts seconds before Karmelo Anthony is seen running away.

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