E. Darwin Hartshorn ⳩

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E. Darwin Hartshorn ⳩

E. Darwin Hartshorn ⳩

@LogoSimian

Swamp hermit. I make stories. Advocate of Truth, Beauty and Goodness.

Keisylon Ruins Se unió Mayıs 2014
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E. Darwin Hartshorn ⳩
E. Darwin Hartshorn ⳩@LogoSimian·
My kid likes bugs. I am making bug stuff to make books, and comics, and video games.
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自衛隊医官だった人@ハイライトも見てってよ
小さい頃からスターウォーズが大好きで、スターウォーズは私の人生の教科書です。 なので数字が1から6までしか数えられません。 ディズニーは賠償すべき。
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Marshal_Victory
Marshal_Victory@Marshal_Victory·
@LogoSimian 𝕿𝖔 𝖙𝖍𝖞 𝖔𝖜𝖓 𝖘𝖊𝖑𝖋 𝖒𝖆𝖐𝖊 𝖑𝖔𝖑!
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RazörFist
RazörFist@RAZ0RFIST·
For the last time, fellow Accelerationists: By giving power to the Commies, we spark an immediate whiplash effect that ushers in a right-wing utopia and the rise of Mecha Hitler. Then all the Commies go away. You know. Like in North Korea.
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KeepCalmAndDrawl ☦️
KeepCalmAndDrawl ☦️@FormerlyFormer·
Very good explanation of why Americans are so fierce about gun rights. You may still find it silly, or overblown, or anachronistic but this nails the cultural vibe of “But WHY?” better than most. And it has more to do with this than hunting or even self-defense or other valid args.
Devon Eriksen@Devon_Eriksen_

Okay, time to explain guns to our new friends. Every day, when I leave the house, I attach a holstered handgun to my belt, under my shirt or coat. I would no more leave the house without a gun than I would walk around outdoors without shoes. Is it because I "need" a gun? No. I live in rural Tennessee, which is state in the American south. It's very safe here. The dangerous parts of America are big cities where the local government is leftist, and they shelter illegal migrant from the third world, and won't send violent criminals to prison. Places like Chicago and New York City. Yet, any time I leave the house, I put on a gun, knowing that I will probably never have to use it, and if I do, it will probably be on an aggressive stray dog, not a human. So why do I do it? Why do many other people who live around me do it? Why do we do this so much that carrying a gun is considered totally normal? If someone spotted it, it would not even arouse a comment, much less any fear. In fact, it is legal to carry a gun openly here, without covering it up. Covering it up is just considered polite. So.... why? Well, try thinking of an English nobleman, during the reign of Elizabeth the First. When he dressed to go ride to court, he would hang a slender fencing sword, called a rapier or smallsword, from his belt. He didn't expect to be attacked. He didn't even expect to fight a duel. And if he was challenged to a duel, he wouldn't need his sword right then. He would meet his challenger later at an agreed-upon place and time. No, he wore his sword because it was an expression of who he was. He was a gentleman, a person of status, with the legal privilege of carrying a sword. By carrying a sword, he asserted his rights and prerogatives as a nobleman. In Japan, you had the same sort of thing happening. The samurai, members of the bushi class, wore the two swords not because they expected to be attacked at any moment, but because the two swords were an essential part of who he was. So, in these two cases, weapons were carried by noblemen as an assertion of status. They had the right to do so, and they did so in order to assert, exercise, and retain the right. Americans carry guns because every American citizen is a nobleman. When we fought the British for our independence, that war began on April 19th, 1775, when British troops, fearing American rebelliousness, marched out from Boston to confiscate guns from people living in the surrounding countryside. Our ancestors did not submit to this. We shot them instead, and they fled back to Boston with their tails between their legs, to cower under the cover of the guns from the warship HMS Sommerset. Thus began several years of war. And when we won that war, we made a country where no government, and no man, would ever be allowed to disarm the people. No agent of the government may say to us, "I may have a gun, and you may not." Because to say that is to say "I am a nobleman, and you are a peasant. I am a master, and you are a slave." We are not peasants here. We are all noblemen. That is the most basic principle of what it means to be an American. I can be impoverished, so I can to be so poor that I live in a van down by the river. But however reduced my circumstances, as an American, I still have the rights and freedoms of a nobleman, of a daimyo, because that is the basic founding idea of the nation we forged on that day. If you come to America to visit, if you walk among us, you will pass many people carrying guns. You will not notice this. You will not see them. You will witness no violence. Everything will be normal. But the guns will be there. Because that is who we are. We don't carry guns to be violent. We don't wish to be rude, or to intimidate people. We keep our guns covered up. But they are the deepest, most essential part of what it means to be American.

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travis4nh
travis4nh@travis4nh·
The lefties mocked and attacked Bush for his proposal. Instead of being rich via the free market, we're all poor via the government. Now matter how much you hate Progressives, it's not enough. They are the party of crab-bucket-poverty. Everyone equal in the filth.
Ron Rule@ronrule

If the average person getting $4k/mo from social security could have put that 12.4% of every paycheck into the S&P instead, they would currently be getting $32k/mo instead of $4k. And their kids would continue to get that $32k/mo after they died. Social Security is a scam.

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Auburn American
Auburn American@TaconiteRed·
Minnesotan here ✋🏻 Just dropping by to say that no one in this state is surprised by this sentence. If a white native-born Minnesotan like me stole $3 million in taxpayer money, Walz and his DFL cronies would crucify us - publicly tar and feather us, seize every asset, lock us up for decades, and unleash their rabid mobs to endlessly harass our entire family. The idea that we’d get one year and a day in prison while only paying back $123K and walking away with the rest is laughable. It’s just (D)ifferent, rights guys?
KSTP@KSTP

Feeding Our Future defendant Abdul Abubakar Ali will serve one year and one day in prison for his role in the $250 million fraud scheme. kstp.com/kstp-news/top-…

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Chris Martz
Chris Martz@ChrisMartzWX·
I’m not sure who made this, but this is gold.
Chris Martz tweet media
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