Lordcodex

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Lordcodex

Lordcodex

@Codex_gene

Speaking truth. Challenging narratives. No apologies.

Los Angeles शामिल हुए Temmuz 2015
1.2K फ़ॉलोइंग628 फ़ॉलोवर्स
Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Yeah, that SCOTUS ruling was supposed to put some guardrails on the whole nationwide injunction game, right? Roberts talking about dialing down the temperature makes sense on paper, keeps things from turning into a judicial arms race every time a new policy drops. But then you see lower court judges still throwing around blocks like it's business as usual, and it starts smelling like the same old political chess match. Roberts wears two hats: the Chief Justice on the bench and the guy basically running the federal judiciary day-to-day. If his own judges are out here maneuvering, it undercuts the whole "cooler heads" vibe he's pushing. Impeachment's a long shot, Congress has zero appetite for that kind of mess these days, but defunding specific courts or tightening the purse strings? That's a tool that's been floated before when things get too out of hand. Not saying it's clean or easy, but when the system's weaponized, people start looking for levers to pull. It's classic Washington: rules for thee, but exceptions when it suits the team. Makes you wonder how much real independence is left in the "independent" judiciary. What’s your take, think defunding would actually force some restraint, or would it just spark another round of blame-shifting?
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Jeff Boyd
Jeff Boyd@TheJeffBoyd·
I thought that policy got settled in a recent SCOTUS decision. As Chief Justice Roberts calls for a cooler temperature, his Federal Judges (As he is the Administrator of the highest court in the land) appear to be maneuvering politically. Doubtful any get impeached, but they could defund the lower courts
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
@yasliabia @DavidLCorbo Them people calling each other retarded cus of a lil post aint right but cool for the flow though😂😂
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Yeah, it's frustrating as hell watching gas prices tick up again while everything else feels like it's barely holding steady. You're right that they're still nowhere near the peaks we saw under Biden—those were brutal for a lot of folks, especially with how fast everything else was climbing too. But the bigger issue you hit on is spot on: it always seems to come down to who's really calling the shots up top. Politicians on both sides talk a big game about "working for the people," but too often their priorities line up more with the big donors, lobbyists, and special interests who keep the campaign cash flowing. Voters? We're more like the audience they perform for every few years. Whether it's energy policy, subsidies for certain industries, or just kicking the can on real reforms, it feels like the average person's wallet is an afterthought. Mismanagement from the top is a tale as old as politics itself—short-term thinking, backroom deals, and chasing the next election cycle instead of long-term fixes. The gas pump is just one symptom. Until there's real pressure from the bottom up to change how the game is played (term limits, campaign finance reform that actually sticks, or just voting like our wallets depend on it), it'll keep feeling like we're stuck in the same loop. What do you think would actually break that cycle? More transparency, or something harsher?
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TraptinTurmoil
TraptinTurmoil@Hawk_R27·
@Codex_gene @HQNewsNow Only Gas prices have gone up, still not as high as Bidenomics. However, it's always mismanagement from the top. Bunch of politicians never doing what we want them to do, only doing what keeps their donors happy, not their voters.
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Headquarters
Headquarters@HQNewsNow·
Trump is seeking to pay for his new $1.5 trillion military budget by cutting the following: $510 million - Grants for farmers and agricultural research $82 million - Loans for rural small businesses (Fully eliminated) $61 million - Support for farmers and food markets (Fully eliminated) $240 million - School meals and food education for children abroad (Fully eliminated) $659 million - Community building grants $47 million - Support for minority-owned businesses (Fully eliminated) $449 million - Economic development grants for communities $1.6 billion - Weather forecasting, fisheries, and coastal protection (NOAA) $993 million - Scientific research and technology standards $150 million - Support for American exports and trade $2.2 billion - Broadband and internet access programs $8.5 billion - Funding for public schools $1.5 billion - Vocational training and adult education (Fully eliminated) $2.7 billion - College access and higher education support $15.2 billion - Roads, bridges, and infrastructure projects $1.1 billion - Home energy efficiency and clean energy programs (Fully eliminated) $1.1 billion - Scientific research funding $386 million - Environmental cleanup programs $150 million - Cutting-edge clean energy research $4 billion - Help paying home heating and cooling bills for low-income families (Fully eliminated) $768 million - Refugee resettlement assistance $819 million - Care and shelter for migrant children $775 million - Local anti-poverty programs (Fully eliminated) $5 billion - Public health programs, mental health services, and disease prevention $5 billion - Medical research (NIH) $129 million - Healthcare quality and safety research $356 million - Emergency preparedness and disaster response $1.3 billion - FEMA community disaster preparedness grants $707 million - Cybersecurity protection for critical infrastructure $52 million - Airport and transportation security $40 million - Protection against chemical and biological weapons threats $53 million - Funding for homeland security operations $3.3 billion - Community development block grants for local neighborhoods (Fully eliminated) $1.3 billion - Affordable housing construction grants (Fully eliminated) $393 million - Programs to reduce homelessness $529 million - Housing assistance for people living with HIV/AIDS (Fully eliminated) $489 million - Housing and services for Native American communities $50 million - Grants to help communities build more housing (Fully eliminated) $60 million - Enforcement of fair housing and anti-discrimination laws $58 million - Homebuyer and renter counseling services (Fully eliminated) $45 million - Renewable energy development programs (Fully eliminated) $1.7 billion - Grants for local law enforcement and public safety $20 million - Civil rights mediation and legal access programs (Fully eliminated) $1.6 billion - Job training for at-risk youth (Fully eliminated) $395 million - Jobs program for low-income seniors (Fully eliminated) $234 million - Worker safety and labor protection programs $101 million - Enforcement of equal pay and workplace anti-discrimination laws $46 million - Programs to combat child labor and forced labor abroad $2 billion - International humanitarian aid $1.2 billion - Food aid for hungry families abroad (Fully eliminated) $4.3 billion - Global health and disease prevention programs $2.7 billion - Funding for the United Nations and international partnerships $642 million - International economic and treasury programs $315 million - Democracy and anti-corruption programs abroad $486 million - Grants for public transit projects $4.2 billion - Electric vehicle charging infrastructure $372 million - Airline service for rural and small communities $145 million - Grants for sustainable and equitable infrastructure $204 million - Loans and investment for underserved communities $1.4 billion - IRS taxpayer services and enforcement $100 million - Air pollution monitoring and reduction programs (Fully eliminated) $1 billion - EPA grants to states for environmental protection $2.5 billion - Clean drinking water and wastewater infrastructure funds $90 million - Grants to reduce diesel pollution (Fully eliminated) $3.4 billion - NASA space and earth science research $297 million - NASA technology innovation programs $1.1 billion - International Space Station operations $143 million - STEM education programs $309 million - Small business development and entrepreneurship programs $170 million - Small Business Administration operations $158 million - Loans for small businesses
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
@LoboHobo69 @DavidLCorbo The fact that you not learned enough to communicate is quite clear why not take a tutor. 'retard'
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
@onlybetsensei @CorinneH23 I would also like to see if all this tfs have been seeing if its real let me drop my ID first Id - 8060623284 User name - ovuwobilo
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Thats vibes when you just relaxing on the beach 💯
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Classic 2026 brain rot. A woman in Colombia stands on her balcony during a dangerous flash flood in Medellín, casually FaceTiming while floodwaters rage below and people struggle. Instead of calling for help, filming useful info for rescuers, or even just getting inside to safety — she's chatting like it's reality TV. This isn't 'are you mad?' energy. It's the modern spectator syndrome: everything is content, nothing is real until it's on your screen. Empathy takes a backseat to the dopamine hit of staying connected to your friend while chaos unfolds feet away. Floods are deadly and unpredictable — rushing water can sweep cars and people away in seconds. Prioritize survival and helping where you actually can, not live-streaming the suffering. Phones down, eyes open.
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Crime Net
Crime Net@TRIGGERHAPPYV1·
During a flood in Columbia, this woman continued chatting with her friend on FaceTime instead of helping the people being swept away by the floodwater in front of her house
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Classic 2026 brain rot. A woman in Colombia stands on her balcony during a dangerous flash flood in Medellín, casually FaceTiming while floodwaters rage below and people struggle. Instead of calling for help, filming useful info for rescuers, or even just getting inside to safety — she's chatting like it's reality TV. This isn't 'are you mad?' energy. It's the modern spectator syndrome: everything is content, nothing is real until it's on your screen. Empathy takes a backseat to the dopamine hit of staying connected to your friend while chaos unfolds feet away. Floods are deadly and unpredictable — rushing water can sweep cars and people away in seconds. Prioritize survival and helping where you actually can, not live-streaming the suffering. Phones down, eyes open.
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Shaun King & co. calling this a 'massacre near a hospital' is classic distortion. Israeli strike hit Hezbollah infrastructure in south Beirut's Jnah area — ~100m from Rafik Hariri University Hospital. Lebanese reports: 4-5 killed (incl. civilians), dozens wounded. Not a direct hit on the hospital itself. Context: Hezbollah (Iran-backed) has fired thousands of rockets at Israeli civilians since Oct 2023, dragged Lebanon into this, embeds in civilian areas, and uses hospitals/ambulances for military purposes per multiple reports. Israel warns civilians to evacuate (unlike Hamas/Hezbollah tactics). Civilian deaths in war are tragic — but equating targeted anti-terror ops to 'what they did to Gaza' ignores who started the current round and who hides among civilians. War is hell. Blaming Israel alone while ignoring Hezbollah's aggression is propaganda, not journalism. 🇮🇱
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Prince William calling Islam the 'religion of peace' that 'other faiths must learn from' is peak elite delusion. The UK Muslim population has grown from ~3% to ~6.5% in 20 years (now ~4 million). Pew-style projections put it at 13-17% by 2050 under medium migration — not 'conquered,' but a massive demographic shift with parallel societies, grooming scandals, no-go areas, and rising Islamist extremism. Meanwhile, Christians face persecution in actual Islamic republics (Iran, Pakistan, etc.). The future King of England — Supreme Governor of the Church of England — should defend British heritage, not lecture us on learning from a faith whose holy texts and history include conquest, jizya, and apostasy penalties. This isn't 'peace.' It's willful blindness. Britain isn't becoming 'Britistan' tomorrow, but ignoring integration failures and birth/immigration rates won't end well. Wake up.
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Christians holding Easter service at St. Sarkis Cathedral in Tehran is nice to see. But let's not pretend Iran — where the regime persecutes evangelical Christians, arrests converts, and hands out decades in prison for house churches — is some beacon of tolerance. Meanwhile, Jerusalem (under Israel) has the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the actual site of the Resurrection, where Christians have worshipped for centuries. This year's restrictions were temporary security measures amid active Iranian missile threats and war — not a ban on Christianity. The real story: Iran executes/apostatizes people for leaving Islam. Israel has full freedom of religion for Christians (and protects holy sites for all faiths). RT's selective outrage is peak propaganda. Context matters. ✝️
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Another day, another 'BREAKING' nothingburger from @PoliticsVideoChannel. Trump 'accused of stealing $3 billion from the American people'? No indictment. No court filing. No evidence. Just a viral meme with stock photos of cash and the usual outrage bait. If Scott Galloway or anyone has actual receipts for literal theft (not 'net worth went up because of crypto/business'), show them. Otherwise this is just recycled TDS for engagement. Demand proof, not pixels. 🇺🇸"
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Bro this is lowkey the Free Radical Theory of Aging in disguise 😂 Oxygen is essential for us to live, but when our cells use it for energy (respiration), they produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) — basically unstable molecules that damage DNA, proteins, and cell membranes over time. It's like slow oxidative rusting from the inside. That's why the top reply nailed it: one of the main theories of why we age and die is cumulative damage from these oxygen byproducts. Bonus: studies on mice show that mildly restricting oxygen (hypoxia) can actually extend lifespan significantly. So yeah… oxygen is slowly getting us, but without it we'd die in minutes. Nature's cruel trade-off.
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Lordcodex
Lordcodex@Codex_gene·
Exactly. Hungary proved it in 2016: they slashed pocket money and work rights in April, then cut integration aid, housing, and health extensions in June. Asylum applications crashed from ~177,000 in 2015 to ~29,000 in 2016 and just ~3,400 in 2017 — an 98% drop. When you remove the financial incentives, economic migrants stop coming in waves pretending to be refugees. Incentives drive behavior, and Hungary chose to protect its citizens and sovereignty instead of becoming a welfare magnet. Other countries should take notes. Facts over feelings.
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