Barkleysdad

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Barkleysdad

Barkleysdad

@KF1NN

wiping personal info from this in a half-hearted attempt to stick it to the Musk

Se unió Temmuz 2012
1.8K Siguiendo250 Seguidores
Barkleysdad retuiteado
Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
This sounds nice, but it's a great way to undermine the welfare state. The strongest welfare states in the world (the Nordics) tax everyone, including nurses. And they give everyone universal healthcare, childcare, pensions, education in return. When the middle class has skin in the game, they defend the system. When welfare is 'just for the poor', it becomes a poor program: stigmatized, underfunded, easy to gut. That's why billionaires keep pushing this idea. The real scandal isn't that this nurse pays $12k. It's that Jeff Bezos pays $0.
Shay Boloor@StockSavvyShay

Jeff Bezos said the bottom half of Americans should pay zero federal income tax. He cited a nurse in Queens making ~$75K and paying ~$12K in taxes saying “we shouldn’t be asking this nurse in Queens to send money to Washington.”

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Richard Stengel
Richard Stengel@stengel·
George H.W. Bush kept his assets in a blind trust, as did Bill Clinton. Neither Obama nor Biden traded stocks or bonds while in office. 3,700 trades is probably more than all the trades of all the presidents until now. And he is trading stocks that are affected by his decisions. A walking conflict of interest, at the least, and perhaps insider trading. Just as members of Congress should not be able to trade stocks, so too the president. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
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The New Yorker
The New Yorker@NewYorker·
Hanif Abdurraqib on basketball follies, rooting for a hopeless and hapless team, and awaiting the season that the Minnesota Timberwolves go 82–0: newyorker.com/sports/sportin…
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Zach Lowe
Zach Lowe@ZachLowe_NBA·
There is a Lowe Post from Sept. 2024 w/ Hanif about basketball, literature, Cleveland, struggles, life, etc. that was never released b/c...well, you know. We should do it again. If you are a hoops fan and have not read "There's Always This Year," rectify that now.
The New Yorker@NewYorker

Hanif Abdurraqib on basketball follies, rooting for a hopeless and hapless team, and awaiting the season that the Minnesota Timberwolves go 82–0: newyorker.com/sports/sportin…

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Barkleysdad
Barkleysdad@KF1NN·
@jon_greenberg This is the hard hitting coverage we pay for on free agent signing day
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jon greenberg
jon greenberg@jon_greenberg·
In the past month, the Chicago Bears website has posted stories about Kevin Warren’s great-niece and his executive assistant.
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Buffalo Wild Wings
Buffalo Wild Wings@BWWings·
They’re called boneless wings and will forever be called boneless wings. Celebrate the court’s decision today with BOGO FREE boneless wings.
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Alec MacGillis
Alec MacGillis@AlecMacGillis·
This is quite an exchange with @DavidAFrench about whether we are witnessing the emergence of a "dual state."
Alec MacGillis tweet mediaAlec MacGillis tweet media
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Ronnie Evans
Ronnie Evans@RonnieAEvans·
I’m sorry. I try not to post political stuff. But I just watched a video of ICE officers attack a man who was helping a woman up, pin him on the ground, take his (legally owned) gun he NEVER attempted to holster, and then 6 officers shot him to death. He was white (not important to me but def to MAGA assholes). He was a citizen. He was simply helping another citizen get up. And he was pinned to the ground, disarmed and THEN ecexuted by masked agents working for Donald Trump’s gestapo. Fuck you if you support this.
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ashton kutcher
ashton kutcher@aplusk·
A win would’ve been nice, but it was still the greatest night of my football life. It’s the moment that I will always remember when the real reason for football clicked in. Football isn’t just a game played with a ball on a field. It’s not just 3-D chess with men colliding. It’s human connection. It’s family genetics. It’s an allegiance passed from generation to generation. I witnessed my son standing in the same place that I stand, screaming at a black square with color pixels for an orange and blue team as if somehow his cries could affect the outcome of the game. Last night was the night that I knew I had done my real job as a Bears fan. I pass the game to the next generation. I shared a forever loyalty. He is fully on his way on a life time journey or highs and lows, love and loss, passion and grit, strategy and might, joy and disappointment. And when the day comes where my son and I are at an impasse. We can always talk about the Bears.
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Chicago Bears
Chicago Bears@ChicagoBears·
Kings of the North 👑
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Mark D. Levine
Mark D. Levine@MarkLevineNYC·
Year 1 data on congestion pricing in Manhattan… * Vehicle traffic: -11% * Foot traffic: +3.4% * Storefront vacancy: -0.9% * Pollution: -22% * Revenue for mass transit: $548M So YES this has been a huge success. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
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Barkleysdad
Barkleysdad@KF1NN·
I think our love of the Founding Fathers severely underestimates how drunk they were all of the time
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories

The bar tab of a 1787 farewell party for George Washington is still intact. The Founding Fathers drank 54 bottles of Madeira, 60 bottles of claret, 8 bottles of whiskey, 22 bottles of porter, 8 bottles of hard cider, 12 of beer, and 7 bowls of alcoholic punch. There were only 55 attendees. In September 1787, just before the signing of the U.S. Constitution, George Washington attended a farewell gathering in Philadelphia with fellow delegates of the Constitutional Convention. What makes this night memorable is not just its historical significance, but the surviving bar tab that documents the staggering volume of alcohol consumed. With only 55 men in attendance, the tally reveals a feast of indulgence: dozens of bottles of fortified Madeira wine and claret, substantial amounts of whiskey, porter, and cider, along with large bowls of communal punch. By today’s standards, the sheer quantity seems almost unbelievable, averaging more than a bottle per man before considering the punch and beer. This extravagant send-off was not unusual for the era. Alcohol was a central feature of 18th-century social and political life, often consumed at levels that would astonish modern observers. Taverns and banquets were places where ideas were debated, alliances forged, and trust built, fueling not only camaraderie but the revolutionary spirit itself. The farewell party’s surviving record gives us a rare glimpse into the daily lives of the Founding Fathers, reminding us that these men, though monumental in history, were also human, fond of celebration, fellowship, and raising a glass to their new nation. Madeira wine was George Washington’s personal favorite, and he often ordered it by the cask. © Historyfeels #archaeohistories

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Chicago Bears
Chicago Bears@ChicagoBears·
We're IN 🐻⬇️
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angry buni 🤬
angry buni 🤬@theangriestbuni·
THIS!
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