Joe Biden huh

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Joe Biden huh

Joe Biden huh

@keepingkt

Married to Jilly. Like the beach and vanilla ice cream. Depends are the best. AKA The Autopen. No DM’s - Jilly says so.

Joined Ocak 2026
170 Following91 Followers
Joe Biden huh
Joe Biden huh@keepingkt·
@ABC Sure they will. You think they forgave Biden and Pelosi for vociferously supporting on demand abortions.
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ABC News
ABC News@ABC·
While the Catholic Church teaches forgiveness, American Catholics may not extend mercy to President Trump over his attacks on Pope Leo XIV, some political observers said. abcnews.link/6ykAblI
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Melanoma Trump
Melanoma Trump@EyebrowsRo31245·
@Bridget17812401 @baltimoresun These people are mostly harmless…I’m more likely to be assaulted by an angry unhinged MAGA fanatic Your comments are incoherent, explained only by a bizarre blind love for Trump You supposedly are anti-crime, yet you vote for a felon and love all his pro-criminal actions
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The Baltimore Sun
The Baltimore Sun@baltimoresun·
Maryland sheriffs are ramping up opposition to a newly passed immigration bill, weighing legal challenges and urging Gov. Wes Moore to veto the measure. The Community Trust Act, passed on Monday night, would restrict when local law enforcement can communicate with or transfer individuals they believe may be in the country illegally to Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Sheriffs said the change could hinder their ability to work with federal authorities, even though they’re still reviewing the final language. Supporters said the legislation aims to rebuild trust between immigrant communities and law enforcement by limiting cooperation with ICE. Read more: bit.ly/4vurUar 📸: Brendan Nordstrom, @baltimoresun
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FOX Baltimore
FOX Baltimore@FOXBaltimore·
Mayor Brandon Scott is seeking to expand Baltimore City Hall’s mayoral staff to a level that would make it larger than the governor’s office, according to his preliminary budget proposal. READ MORE: bit.ly/4cLcSpj
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Keir Starmer
Keir Starmer@Keir_Starmer·
It’s good news that the Strait of Hormuz has now reopened. This must be a long lasting and workable solution, without tolls or restrictions on routes. Today we announced our joint plan with France and other international partners to protect freedom of navigation. We need to see a return to peace and stability, and a permanent ceasefire.
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Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.
Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.@Bob_Ehrlich·
Md Dems spent the last 90 days showing you exactly who they are. Soon, an incumbent will be knocking on your door...assuring you he/she is a “moderate.” This act will be repeated every cycle unless you-the voter-call it out in November.
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Senator Katie Boyd Britt
Senator Katie Boyd Britt@SenKatieBritt·
This is dead on arrival in the Senate. Temporary Protected Status is just that: temporary. Beyond that, 91% of all Haitian TPS holders entered the country illegally. In the last election, the American people rejected mass migration policies that effectively grant amnesty to illegal aliens. It’s past time to put our own citizens FIRST.
Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley@RepPressley

The House passed our extension of TPS for Haiti with a 224 vote victory of Democrats & Republicans alike. This has been a long-fought battle to defend our Haitian neighbors & our communities, and we're not letting up. The Senate must take action without delay.

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Joe Biden huh
Joe Biden huh@keepingkt·
@RepMcCormick Why couldn’t they go anywhere else. Our free social support programs. That’s It.
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Congressman Rich McCormick, MBA MD
I voted to extend TPS for Haitians because I cannot, in good conscience, send people who were lawfully granted protection here, followed our laws, and built lives under our rules back to rape, murder, and chaos in a lawless Haiti. This is completely separate from amnesty or illegal immigration. Conflating the two is dangerous.
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amos
amos@amoslevinsky·
Wow - literally the most vivid insightful description ive come across so far on this matter
Zineb Riboua@zriboua

The Arab Word is Watching a Different War: Three reasons why it has been difficult to understand the Arab position: The first is the Arab relationship with Iran. From the vantage point of Brussels or London, Iran presents itself as a resistance movement with a grievance against American hegemony and Israeli occupation, and this presentation maps comfortably onto familiar Western anticolonial frameworks. What it does not map onto is the lived experience of Arab populations in Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, Bahrain, Syria, and across the Gulf. In those countries, Iran's presence meant Hezbollah holding the Lebanese state hostage to Tehran's decisions, thirty-five armed factions in Iraq drawing salaries from Iranian funds channeled through the Iraqi national treasury, and Houthi commanders answering to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps while firing on Arab civilians from Yemeni soil. Freedom is not the word any serious Arab observer would use for what Iran brought. Indeed, the Arab world's quarrel with Iran runs far deeper than American bases or Israeli airstrikes. What drives it is the systematic subversion of Arab sovereignty by a foreign power that uses the language of Islamic solidarity as cover for an imperial project conducted through proxies. The second dimension is the proxy question itself, where Western analysis fails most comprehensively. Iran goes far beyond supporting armed groups. Parallel state structures get built inside Arab countries, financial systems get captured, and political figures get installed who owe their existence and survival entirely to Tehran. The Iranians who have administered this project understand it as the export of a revolution, but what Arab populations have experienced is closer to a colonial occupation conducted through intermediaries, and as of now, they’re not mourning the Islamic Republic. When Westerners treat these proxy networks as instruments of legitimate resistance rather than as mechanisms of subjugation, they endorse an imperial project while believing themselves to be opposing one, and as a matter of fact, make themselves the legitimizing force behind Iran’s war against the Arab world. The third dimension is the most counterintuitive for a Western audience, and it is the one most consequential for how the current war is understood and misunderstood. For Arab nationalists, including secular nationalists and even those with deep reservations about Israeli policy, Iran represents a greater and more immediate threat than Israel does. This is a position that Western media are structurally ill-equipped to render intelligible, because Western discourse on the Middle East has been organized for decades around the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as the primary axis of regional injustice. The result is that when Western governments and Western publics take strong positions against Israel’s actions against Iran’s operations, they believe themselves to be standing with the Arab world. In reality, they are advancing a position that the Arab world does not share and has not asked for, while ignoring the threat that Arab governments and Arab populations actually live with. The rhetorical use of Israel as a perpetual alibi for Iranian aggression has been one of the Islamic Republic’s most durable tools, and Western opinion has served as the unwitting amplifier of that tool across the entire duration of the Islamic Republic’s existence. open.substack.com/pub/zinebribou…

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Zineb Riboua
Zineb Riboua@zriboua·
The Arab Word is Watching a Different War: Three reasons why it has been difficult to understand the Arab position: The first is the Arab relationship with Iran. From the vantage point of Brussels or London, Iran presents itself as a resistance movement with a grievance against American hegemony and Israeli occupation, and this presentation maps comfortably onto familiar Western anticolonial frameworks. What it does not map onto is the lived experience of Arab populations in Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, Bahrain, Syria, and across the Gulf. In those countries, Iran's presence meant Hezbollah holding the Lebanese state hostage to Tehran's decisions, thirty-five armed factions in Iraq drawing salaries from Iranian funds channeled through the Iraqi national treasury, and Houthi commanders answering to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps while firing on Arab civilians from Yemeni soil. Freedom is not the word any serious Arab observer would use for what Iran brought. Indeed, the Arab world's quarrel with Iran runs far deeper than American bases or Israeli airstrikes. What drives it is the systematic subversion of Arab sovereignty by a foreign power that uses the language of Islamic solidarity as cover for an imperial project conducted through proxies. The second dimension is the proxy question itself, where Western analysis fails most comprehensively. Iran goes far beyond supporting armed groups. Parallel state structures get built inside Arab countries, financial systems get captured, and political figures get installed who owe their existence and survival entirely to Tehran. The Iranians who have administered this project understand it as the export of a revolution, but what Arab populations have experienced is closer to a colonial occupation conducted through intermediaries, and as of now, they’re not mourning the Islamic Republic. When Westerners treat these proxy networks as instruments of legitimate resistance rather than as mechanisms of subjugation, they endorse an imperial project while believing themselves to be opposing one, and as a matter of fact, make themselves the legitimizing force behind Iran’s war against the Arab world. The third dimension is the most counterintuitive for a Western audience, and it is the one most consequential for how the current war is understood and misunderstood. For Arab nationalists, including secular nationalists and even those with deep reservations about Israeli policy, Iran represents a greater and more immediate threat than Israel does. This is a position that Western media are structurally ill-equipped to render intelligible, because Western discourse on the Middle East has been organized for decades around the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as the primary axis of regional injustice. The result is that when Western governments and Western publics take strong positions against Israel’s actions against Iran’s operations, they believe themselves to be standing with the Arab world. In reality, they are advancing a position that the Arab world does not share and has not asked for, while ignoring the threat that Arab governments and Arab populations actually live with. The rhetorical use of Israel as a perpetual alibi for Iranian aggression has been one of the Islamic Republic’s most durable tools, and Western opinion has served as the unwitting amplifier of that tool across the entire duration of the Islamic Republic’s existence. open.substack.com/pub/zinebribou…
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Joe Biden huh
Joe Biden huh@keepingkt·
@BarackObama Clam it Barack. Divider in Chief. And keep your stinking dirty paws off of me.
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Barack Obama
Barack Obama@BarackObama·
Virginia, if you haven’t done it already, make a plan to vote YES on the redistricting referendum. You can vote early by April 18 or on Election Day, April 21. Find your polling place at IWillVote.com/VA.
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Kentucky Girl
Kentucky Girl@Notwokenow·
Why hasn’t this woman been expelled from the House? She allegedly stole $5,000,000 from FEMA. She has some audacity to get up at that podium and demand Americans continue to financially support anything.
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The Baltimore Sun
The Baltimore Sun@baltimoresun·
Lawmakers and a former staffer cite violence, safety failures and medication issues at Carroll County youth facility bit.ly/4cxKzt6
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Gary M. Collins
Gary M. Collins@realgarycollins·
'SHUT IT DOWN NOW!': I spoke with a whistleblower who worked at a private rural Maryland juvenile facility that houses "challenging" foster children under state custody who have nowhere else to go. He claims he saw a lack of medical care before quitting, which led to violence.
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Gunther Eagleman™
Gunther Eagleman™@GuntherEagleman·
🚨 TRUMP WHITE HOUSE VOWS TO VETO ANY TPS EXTENSION FOR 350,000 HAITIANS! Trump will VETO any bill that extends Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for approximately 350,000 Haitians. To the 10 RINOs that voted with the Left... 🖕
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Jonathan Turley
Jonathan Turley@JonathanTurley·
In calling for new blue states and the packing of the Court, James Carville advised Democratic candidates: “Don’t run on it. Don’t talk about it. Just do it.” Call it the Nike School of Constitutional Law. It is the rage among academics and pundits alike. jonathanturley.org/2026/04/17/fk-…
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Matt Van Swol
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol·
I HAVE GOOD NEWS FOR ONCE!!! Even though a woke judge in Charlotte NC DROPPED THE BOND of an known Tren de Aragua (TdA) gang member ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT FROM VENEZUELA from: $1,000,000 -> $25,000... and he even posted bond!!! ...ICE CAME AND GOT HIM!!!!!! He will NOT walk free!!! Luis was charged after he fired a gun, his pregnant wife wrestled it away from him, but sadly in the process the gun fired and the bullet struck her stomach and k*lled her 7 month old baby. He was put in jail, initially given a $1m bond which was dropped to $25k. He posted bond, BUT because ICE put a detainer on him, the jail COULD NOT legally release him for 48 hours. 48 hours later, ICE showed up at the jail and got him! It is INSANE that Charlotte NC was about to let an honest-to-God known Tren de Aragua (TdA) gang member WALK OUT OF PRISON. THANK GOD FOR ICE!!!!
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Mike Netter
Mike Netter@nettermike·
She ran him over twice, stepped out of her car, knelt beside him, kissed him — and then st*bbd him nine times. On May 3, 2024, 20-year-old Karon Fisher fatally attacked 64-year-old Steven Anderson outside his home in Houston, Texas. Anderson had just walked outside to collect his mail when Fisher’s vehicle struck him. Instead of stopping, Fisher reversed, hit him again, and then got out of the car. What followed was captured on a neighbor’s security camera — Fisher straddled Anderson’s body, kissed him, and repeatedly st*bbd him. Witnesses rushed out, one bringing a pillow to try to help the victim, but it was too late. Anderson, a retired manager at a cancer center, was described by neighbors as kind, gentle, and deeply loved in his community. Fisher was arrested the same day and charged with m*rder. Her bond was initially set at $2 million. Later that day, while under evaluation at a hospital, Fisher allegedly assaulted a staff member — and later bit a jailer while in custody. Those incidents led to additional charges. Police have said there is no known connection between Fisher and Anderson, and the motive remains unclear. The attack appeared entirely random, leaving residents shaken and horrified. As the case moves forward, investigators are examining Fisher’s mental health and background — but for Anderson’s family, the tragedy is already beyond comprehension: a man k*lled in front of his own home, and an entire neighborhood left asking why. Should Fisher ever get out in the public again?
Mike Netter tweet media
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