Cyclically Cynical

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Cyclically Cynical

Cyclically Cynical

@CyclicallyC

Crisp, clean, and no caffeine. Never had me. Never will. I follow pundits, fighters, comedians, and adult film performers - Neither I nor they are work safe.

33.294031,-112.096542 Inscrit le Haziran 2010
212 Abonnements256 Abonnés
Kokopelli
Kokopelli@AzSvor·
@azesamemes Ahhh so there is fraud from ESA? Wow thanks for admitting there’s a problem that needs fixing
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Arizona ESA Memes
Arizona ESA Memes@azesamemes·
It's true. Those extra 12 workers would have made an enormous difference and would have made it possible to stop disallowed spending before it happened rather than audit it after the fact.
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Rep. John Gillette AZ House LD30
Sedition and lies are what you offer. You have done nothing but campaign for the leftist in other states and try to block the will of 75 Million plus Americans.
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Senator Mark Kelly@SenMarkKelly

I don't take corporate PAC money. Never have, because I don’t want Arizonans to have any doubt I’m fighting for them — not big companies. It should be the same for every member of Congress. We need to ban corporate PACs right now.

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Bis Bald
Bis Bald@ScottH16547710·
@AzRepGillette I hope someone DOES look into where ALL of Marx’s money is coming from. Bet a bunch of it is foreign.
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Cyclically Cynical
Cyclically Cynical@CyclicallyC·
@AzRepGillette The no corporate PAC pledge contains a loophole: candidates can accept contributions from trade associations funded by corporate stockholders or administrative personnel, since those aren't technically "corporate PACs" under the strict pledge definition.
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Arizona ESA Memes
Arizona ESA Memes@azesamemes·
Essence Bakery Cafe at 38th and Indian School not only allows an SOS petition signer to be on their property getting signatures, they kicked out someone who questioned it and tried to give info. This is NOT an ESA-friendly business!
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Patriotnheels 🇺🇸👠
Patriotnheels 🇺🇸👠@patriotnheels·
Bullies Within the Republican Party: A Growing Problem We Can’t Ignore Republicans, by their very nature, are independent thinkers. We question the narrative. We form our own opinions on a wide range of issues, even when those opinions aren’t popular. At our core, most Republicans share foundational beliefs—respect for the Constitution, the value of life, support for school choice, limited government involvement in healthcare, and a deep commitment to protecting family. For many, faith plays a central role in shaping those views. Even those who are not religious often draw on biblical principles to guide their positions. But something troubling is happening within our own ranks. In counties across the country—including right here in Maricopa County—a small but loud group has chosen a different path. Instead of engaging in thoughtful debate, they resort to bullying. They target fellow Republicans—those doing the work, standing firm in their beliefs, and speaking what they believe to be the truth. Many Republicans embrace the 80/20 rule: if we agree on 80% of the issues, we can work together. I also strongly believe in Ronald Reagan’s Eleventh Commandment: “Thou shalt not speak ill of a fellow Republican.” Unfortunately, that principle seems to be fading. The mudslinging today is not just coming from across the aisle—it’s coming from within. As we get closer to primary season, it’s only getting worse. A large portion of this behavior comes from so-called “keyboard warriors”—individuals who hide behind screens, spending their days attacking other Republicans online. The same names show up repeatedly. Some claim to be reporters, presenting themselves as experts on the law while spreading misinformation and half-truths. Others gain proximity to public officials through personal relationships and begin to speak as if they hold authority themselves—sometimes even referring to government resources as “ours.” Then there are those who take their behavior into public spaces—attending meetings only to disrupt, insult, and attack elected officials during public comment, often to the point of being removed. And yes, there are also individuals who engage in stalking, harassment, and rumor-spreading simply because they disagree with someone. This isn’t strength. It’s not leadership. It’s not even productive disagreement. It’s childish—and it’s damaging our party. There is a clear difference between holding elected officials accountable and launching personal attacks. One strengthens our system. The other tears it down. Unfortunately, politics has become increasingly personal, and that toxicity is pushing good people away—people who might otherwise serve, volunteer, or lead. This isn’t just a Maricopa County issue. It’s happening in other places too. I’ve seen it back in Texas as well. For some reason, the anonymity of a keyboard gives people the courage to act in ways they never would face-to-face. Enough is enough. If we want to preserve the integrity of the Republican Party, we need to raise the standard. We need to bring civility back. That means calling out bad behavior—not with more attacks, but with clarity and firmness. It means refusing to engage in gossip and lies. It means supporting candidates and ideas without tearing others down. There are even campaigns now that employ individuals whose sole job is to attack opponents online. That’s not strategy—that’s sabotage. And it hurts everyone. The truth is simple: bullies only thrive when they are tolerated. It’s time for Republicans to stand together—not just on policy, but on principle. We don’t have to agree on everything, but we should be able to disagree without destroying each other. Let’s class things up. Let’s lead by example. And when we see bullying, let’s be willing to say—clearly and collectively—this is not who we are.
Patriotnheels 🇺🇸👠 tweet media
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Arizona Free Enterprise Club
🚨 The government doesn’t solve problems… The border didn’t need another bill....It needed leadership. • Washington knew the problem at the border • They had the power to fix it Instead? They stalled and spent More laws. More money. More control. And the crisis got worse. This wasn’t incompetence—it was a choice. From the border to homelessness, government doesn’t solve problems… 🎙️ @sherifflamb1 says what everyone’s thinking. 🔥 FULL episode is dropping Coming Soon with @ScotMussi Presented by @azfec #stateroomarizona #azfree #sheriffmarklamb
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Arizona ESA Memes
Arizona ESA Memes@azesamemes·
We invest ONE TRILLION DOLLARS nationwide into educating fifty million students in public schools. That’s $20,000 on average per student, with a proficiency rate from 20-40% depending on subject and grade level. Schools shift blame, attack school choice, and ask for more money.
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Arizona ESA Memes
Arizona ESA Memes@azesamemes·
You know what fraud is? I'll tell you what fraud is: Making $13.4 billion off of the taxpayer tax-free, while showing 40% proficiency at doing your own job. You then get to complain that you don't get enough money, and yet you have a $7.8 billion surplus. That's fraud.
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Cyclically Cynical
Cyclically Cynical@CyclicallyC·
@Dbax1fan @civicusP @CraigHarrisNews @POTUS @GOP @KariLake True. But unlike FL, AZ law says no count of mail-ins until the close of polls. [Envelopes and signatures yes, vote tallying, no.] And by and large, the vote in final in AZ about the same time it is in Florida, about 2 weeks, because Florida doesn't finish in a day.
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Cyclically Cynical
Cyclically Cynical@CyclicallyC·
@Dbax1fan @civicusP @CraigHarrisNews @POTUS @GOP @KariLake Yes, and yes. They don't even have all the cast ballots. All provisional ballots have until 5pm, TWO DAYS AFTER the polls close for curing - not in the final count. UOCAVA ballots have another TEN DAYS AFTER the polls close to ARRIVE - not in the final count. Day 14 is final.
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Cyclically Cynical
Cyclically Cynical@CyclicallyC·
@OgreJohnny @bloodandashesss @upstatefederlst I've demonstrated plenty of rational argument for it. It's a solution in search of a non-existent problem that disenfranchises a large swath of actual Americans to combat the fantasy that illegal immigrants are skewing our votes. It's theater for rubes. Are you entertained?
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OgreJohnny
OgreJohnny@OgreJohnny·
@CyclicallyC @bloodandashesss @upstatefederlst Thank you for admitting, albeit through backpedaling and ad hominem, that you have no rational argument against requiring voter ID (i.e., demonstrating the point of the post with which you originally contended).
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Cyclically Cynical
Cyclically Cynical@CyclicallyC·
@civicusP @Dbax1fan @CraigHarrisNews @POTUS @GOP @KariLake They absolutely 100% do not and you're silly for believing so. Voters have, until 5pm on the second day AFTER an election, to solve any provisional issues. Those ballots are not yet counted. UOCAVA have another TEN DAYS AFTER ELECTION DAY to ARRIVE. And on day 14, they finish.
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Cyclically Cynical
Cyclically Cynical@CyclicallyC·
@fromoutrespace @RealSKeshel Depending on your count, we performed ELEVEN audits, including those by hyper-partisan right-wing sources, during which nary a scrap of evidence to support the idea of malfeasance was found.
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Gwillem Figba, President of Pluto
@RealSKeshel Elections are reliable? Fine, how 'bout some thorough audits to prove that (or not) and settle the issue for good? Because just babbling "they're reliable, now shut up" ain't gonna do it. 🤥
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