Alexander Crummell

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Alexander Crummell

Alexander Crummell

@afrotrad

old fashioned, negro, duck - grits - foies gras - watermelon eater

Geecheeville, Negrolandia 1877 Bergabung Haziran 2012
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Alexander Crummell
Alexander Crummell@afrotrad·
2000 - 2005 - Black Nationalist and basically conservative. 2006 - 2014 Black Nationalist & Paleoconservative 2015 - Present Traditionalist & Reactionary Negro Tribalist ( for the lost tribe I was born into: the American negro)
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Alexander Crummell
Alexander Crummell@afrotrad·
@RolandGunnTN Most of my family were already professionals when they left the South, so they all had the option to go West but all that participated in the great migration move to New England or New York.
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Roland Gunn 🇺🇸
Roland Gunn 🇺🇸@RolandGunnTN·
The Southerner who dreams of the Golden sun-kissed West and the Southerner who craves the crowded burroughs of New York are very different breeds.
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Peter Burns
Peter Burns@PeterBurnsESPN·
Fascinating example of how social media works today… (LONG POST) Saw a display in the BHM airport honoring the Tuskegee Airmen. Like 99.999% of Americans, I’m Team 🇺🇸… especially over Nazis. Posted it. Most responses were what you’d expect likes, RTs, patriotism. Then the algorithm shifted. Started seeing a wave of replies saying: “Tuskegee success was a myth. Just PR. DEI BS” The argument? They had fewer aerial kills than other escort groups, so therefore it was all BS. So I paused and did a real deep dive looked for actual historical data from the official Air Force accounts and historians. Here’s what I found…. They were right. They did have less aerial kills the other fighter groups. However….. The SAME data being used to discredit them tells a completely different story if you read the whole reports. Yes, they had fewer kills. But here’s the data that they omitted: Bombers lost under escort (same theater, same aircraft): • Tuskegee Airmen: 27 • Other groups: ~49, 68, 88 That’s not spin. That’s the mission. Escort fighters weren’t there to run up kill counts, they were there to protect bombers. And by that measure, the 332nd was one of the most effective groups in the war. Why did they have less aerial kills? Was it because they were less skilled? Historians pointed out the 332nd was known for staying disciplined and stuck with the bombers while others groups tended to often peel off chasing kills. So both things can be true: • Fewer kills • More bombers protected But here’s the social media lesson: Same report. Same data. One side cherry-picks “lowest kills” = “they weren’t good” But they “conveniently” left out the part where they protected bombers better than anyone. What I observed? 2 things. 1) Most of the accounts pushing the “myth” angle? Burner accounts, fake names…,people that hid behind a vague account names 2) Setting the record straight wasn’t the goal of the “myth” posters, it was for them to get their personal beliefs off without the actual information they claimed to have used. Anyway… Team America 🇺🇸🫡
Peter Burns@PeterBurnsESPN

Everytime I fly out of Birmingham I’m reminded of one of the most bad ass quotes of all time. 🇺🇸

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Mark W.
Mark W.@DurhamWASP·
“What the reactionary says never interests anybody. Neither at the time he says it, because it seems absurd, nor after a few years, because it seems obvious.” Nicolás Gómez Dávila
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Haití en Español
Haití en Español@haitienespanol·
Joven haitiana estudio agronomía en la República Dominicana 🇩🇴 . Al terminar la carrera, regresó a Haití y transformó el campo de sus padres con múltiples cultivos. | Vídeo Hidden Sides of Haiti
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Tap Roots Provisions 🥩
Tap Roots Provisions 🥩@TapRootsFood·
@booksandbbq As I joke we’ve always led the nation on liberty/representative government. Not always for the right reasons, but always nevertheless.
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Alexander Crummell
Alexander Crummell@afrotrad·
@alancornett Whenever I see Kent, I think of this passage. It’s nothing special but it just stays in my head.
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Alan Cornett
Alan Cornett@alancornett·
Books that wouldn’t be published today.
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Alan Cornett
Alan Cornett@alancornett·
This really is the case for Italian/Euro food vs U.S. food. It’s not a “national pride” issue, it’s a “why do we keep poisoning our food?” issue.
Ames@VivaLaAmes11

As an American who lives in Italy now, I feel I can speak on this topic. Is the food quality different in Italy versus the US? Yes, wildly different. I’ve noticed it in pretty much everything. The fruit and vegetables taste stronger and sweeter. Yes, zucchini, broccoli, potatoes and cauliflower have a sweetness that I never knew about. Meat tastes “meatier,” and carbs never ever bog me down. In the U.S. I’d eat a serving of pasta, or bread and feel like I was bloated or needed a nap. Here, I eat pasta, or pizza or bread and I feel nothing out of the ordinary. The eggs have a totally different consistency. They’re very “creamy.” Even the American Cheese here is so wildly different. It’s so creamy that it sticks to the wrapper, it’s a mess trying to get it out. Clearly, they don’t use the stabilizers we do in the U.S. Another difference is the salt and sugar levels in processed foods. Nothing, not even the cookies and cakes are too sweet. It took me a while to get used to the Heinz ketchup here, because it’s nowhere near as sweet as the U.S. product. And crunchy snacks are not overly salted. The wine here is on another level. Even the “cheap stuff” is really good. You rarely, if ever will wake up with a headache, even if you’ve over indulged. The olive oil here has this peppery almost slightly spicy finish to it. It’s so good, unlike anything in the U.S. and another thing I noticed, I haven’t eaten “greasy” food since I’ve been here. And yes, I order fried and batter-dipped foods, but nothing ever feels heavy or greasy and I can’t figure out why. Aside from the taste of food, my overall feeling is healthier. I know part of that is because I’m much more active, walking so much. But I honestly can’t recall the last time I felt “bloated” - that feeling hasn’t happened here, but in the U.S. I had that “bloat” feeling all the time. Also, I had a lot of stomach issues in the U.S. I remember always having heartburn or a churning stomach and chewing on TUMS. So much so, that I actually brought a huge container of them with me when I moved here. Oddly enough, I haven’t had one single tablet in almost 2 years. Don’t get me wrong, I think so much of the food in the US is amazing. I love recreating US-style food here for my international friends. Im proud of my American food culture. I just think we’ve been screwed over by weird seed splicing, creepy fillers and stabilizers, artificial junk, and dyes, among many other unhealthy things.

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