Adam Proffichols

90 posts

Adam Proffichols

Adam Proffichols

@AProfficho8594

Katılım Şubat 2025
4 Takip Edilen3 Takipçiler
Adam Proffichols
Adam Proffichols@AProfficho8594·
@EmilySm43 She cant drive, buy alcohol... board a plane... as an adult? Sounds more like a mentally challenged person. And probably shouldn't be voting on who controls the entire planet.
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Emily 🦋
Emily 🦋@EmilySm43·
What's your response to Joe Scarborough?
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Adam Proffichols
Adam Proffichols@AProfficho8594·
@GunnyP1775 @B7frankH @truth_teller58 The videos are videos... they only show what happens. What people take away is only what they see. If they have a previous inclination, its based on thier life experience. When I see fire... I dont touch it.. my life experience. When I see a group of people... life experience.
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Gunny P
Gunny P@GunnyP1775·
@B7frankH @truth_teller58 We need better race relations in America. Not selective videos that aim to divide and demoralize our country from within.
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Frankie™️🦅
Frankie™️🦅@B7frankH·
Everybody is there to record. But Nobody is there to help. No help came as usual. Poor boy learned life lesson in hard way that day: the saddest thing about betrayal never comes from enemies. This is USA There is no one coming to your rescue if things go sideways. This is it.
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🎹 Ames™ 🎹
🎹 Ames™ 🎹@Real_Ames·
A Texas attorney was held in contempt of court after allegedly repeatedly using the N-word during a custody trial in Brazoria County. The judge ruled it crossed the line, imposed a suspended jail sentence and fine, and ordered written apologies. After leaving the courtroom, the attorney was confronted in the hallway by activists Dr. Candice Matthews and Quanell X, leading to the now-viral footage making rounds online.
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Mary
Mary@Mary1417796·
Hey I'm from USA and you? USA Russia UK India South Korea Canada France C Japan Brazil Germany Australia Italy Russia Mexico Spain China Singapore Saudi Arabia Turkey Indonesia Philippines Netherlands Sweden New Zealand Thailand Malaysia Poland RD Colombia Belgium Portugal Egypt Ireland Morocco
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Adam Proffichols
Adam Proffichols@AProfficho8594·
@DavidForKauai Good point. But even if every acre was utilized, everything still needs to be shipped out to the mainland for processing and then shipped back for sale... the few private processors here block anyone but them from benefiting. Too much red tape keeping co-ops out. We've tried.
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David Hazlebeck
David Hazlebeck@DavidForKauai·
@AProfficho8594 I completely agree. Ending the jones act will change a lot but unfortunately it’s not controlled by the state legislature. My point is we need to do more to make ranching (and other industries) possible again. There is so much ag land not used and we need to diversify the economy
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Adam Proffichols
Adam Proffichols@AProfficho8594·
@Jarhead_8387 @Sofia50020Sofia See... thats what I thought. Then I googled it. It's Baboons. ... And somehow that makes way more sense... politically speaking. I just realized that I'm exhausted with all of it.
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Sofia
Sofia@Sofia50020Sofia·
WHAT DO YOU CALL A GROUP OF RATS?
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LadyValor
LadyValor@lady_valor_07·
Describe Hitler in just one word?
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Mary
Mary@Mary1417796·
COURTS ARE BLOCKING MAPS VOTED ON AND PASSED BY THE PEOPLE WHILE PROTECTING MAPS DRAWN BY POLITICIANS TO DILUTE BLACK VOICES... WE CANNOT, AND WE WILL NOT SIT BACK AND LET IT HAPPEN." DO YOU AGREE WITH HER? A. Yes 👍 B. No 👎
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Unchaind_app
Unchaind_app@unchaind_app·
Number 1 App to quit Porn
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Adam Proffichols
Adam Proffichols@AProfficho8594·
@wakeupusa Pizza, sandwiches, tacos, nachos... I just lost a bit more respect for
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Wake Up America
Wake Up America@wakeupusa·
I eat with my hands… how are you supposed to hold a fork?
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Adam Proffichols
Adam Proffichols@AProfficho8594·
@trumplicans2024 I am! With all the cool things you could have added... nothing. Super racist! At least the redskins get a headdress! Could have thrown a Norse helm on there or something!
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Esha
Esha@EshaAA33·
Singer P!nk calls MAGA an “insult to humanity” and says, “If you’re a Trump supporter, then don’t listen to my music.” What is your Response to her ??
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
Lucy Hicks Anderson lived her life with a kind of certainty that most people—even today—struggle to claim. Born in 1886 in Kentucky, she was assigned male at birth, but from early childhood insisted she was a girl. At a time when even the language to describe her identity didn’t exist, her mother did something quietly radical: she listened. A doctor advised raising Lucy as a girl, and from that point on, she moved through the world exactly as she knew herself to be—without apology. By the early 20th century, Lucy had built a life that many would have considered aspirational. She eventually settled in Oxnard, California, where she became known not just as a skilled chef, but as a successful entrepreneur and a well-connected social figure. She ran a boarding house and hosted gatherings that drew in members of the local community, including prominent white residents—no small feat in an era defined by both racial segregation and rigid gender norms. Lucy wasn’t hiding. She was visible, respected, and very much in control of her own narrative. But visibility came with risk, and that risk caught up to her in the 1940s. When Lucy married a man named Reuben Anderson, their relationship drew the attention of authorities. At the time, same-sex marriage was illegal, and the state moved to prosecute them—not by acknowledging Lucy’s identity, but by trying to erase it. Officials charged her with perjury, arguing that she had falsely represented herself as a woman on her marriage license. What happened next is what cements Lucy Hicks Anderson as such a powerful historical figure. In court, she didn’t retreat or soften her truth to protect herself. She stated plainly: “I am a woman.” It wasn’t a performance. It wasn’t defiance for its own sake. It was a simple declaration of reality, spoken in a world that had no intention of recognizing it. The court, unsurprisingly for the time, ruled against her. Lucy and her husband were convicted and eventually forced out of Oxnard. But what’s striking isn’t just the injustice—it’s that even under legal threat, she refused to compromise her identity. She didn’t frame herself as confused or mistaken to gain sympathy. She didn’t try to fit into the narrative the court wanted. She held her ground. Her story sits at the intersection of multiple struggles: race, gender identity, and the rigid social systems of early 20th-century America. And yet, it never reads as just a story of victimhood. Lucy Hicks Anderson lived boldly, built a life on her own terms, and demanded to be seen as she was—decades before there was any meaningful protection or recognition for people like her. © Women In World History #archaeohistories
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