Aaron Birch

460 posts

Aaron Birch

Aaron Birch

@AaronSeeingGood

Katılım Ocak 2026
120 Takip Edilen173 Takipçiler
James Power
James Power@Rultpwr·
"These Soldiers are using "Call on Me" which is one of the most famous electro house songs there is by Eric Prydz to apparently hype themselves up for training or deployment. I'm not sure if they actually know that this song is based on a sample of the 1982 Steve Winwood song "Valerie", and was inspired by a similar track created by the French duo Together"
Suzie rizzio@Suzierizzo1

These Soldiers are using “War Pigs” which is one of the most famous Anti-War songs there is by Black Sabbath to apparently hype themselves up for training or deployment. I’m not sure if they actually know that this song is a Protest song against War profiteers and Generals!

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Aaron Birch
Aaron Birch@AaronSeeingGood·
And we also launched 4 people on a trip around the moon. The last 6 months have been a show of force to put all the doubters to shame. America is the greatest nation on the planet.
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Aaron Birch
Aaron Birch@AaronSeeingGood·
The US showed it could annihilate an enemy's political and industrial infrastructure, economy, and military. Russian and Chinese aid couldn't do squat about it. We also arrested the terrorist dictator of Venezuela, spent half a billion dollars rescuing one pilot,
Owen Shroyer@OwenShroyer1776

The war appears to be winding down, which I obviously hope is true. But this war has been a disaster. It will have cost us about $60 billion, loss of life, plus economic & geopolitical damage that could be irreversible. Who benefitted? Think your life will be much different?

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North Korean Liberation Front
I wonder in the next episode of Gachiakuta is the blonde girl going to tattle on the ginger girl and get her in trouble for shooting people
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Aaron Birch retweetledi
Handre
Handre@Handre·
Cash for Clunkers destroyed 690,000 functional vehicles in 2009, creating an artificial scarcity that rippled through used car markets for over a decade. The Obama administration sold this $3 billion program as environmental salvation and economic stimulus, but any free market economist could predict the real outcome: massive wealth destruction disguised as progress. The program forced dealers to pour sodium silicate into engines, permanently destroying cars that poor families could have afforded. Politicians eliminated the bottom tier of the used car market overnight. Suddenly, a reliable $3,000 Honda Civic became a $7,000 Honda Civic (if you could find one). The supposed beneficiaries — working-class Americans who needed affordable transportation — got priced out entirely. Government intervention always creates unseen victims, and Cash for Clunkers delivered them by the millions. Single mothers, college students, and minimum-wage workers watched their mobility options vanish as used car prices soared 30% between 2009 and 2014. The environmental gains proved negligible too: most clunkers averaged 15-17 MPG while replacements hit 24-25 MPG. Destroying half a million cars to improve average fuel economy by 8 MPG represents the kind of central planning that would give Soviet bureaucrats a hard-on. The wealth destruction extended beyond sticker prices. Higher transportation costs forced people into longer payment terms, creating a debt cycle that persists today. Cash for Clunkers normalized 84-month auto loans, turning cars from depreciating assets into multi-year financial anchors. Bureaucrats congratulated themselves for moving inventory off dealer lots while condemning an entire generation to transportation poverty.
Handre tweet media
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Aaron Birch
Aaron Birch@AaronSeeingGood·
Add on top of this infinite immigration completely flooding the demand for cheap vehicles. Good luck finding a cheap reliable car!
Handre@Handre

Cash for Clunkers destroyed 690,000 functional vehicles in 2009, creating an artificial scarcity that rippled through used car markets for over a decade. The Obama administration sold this $3 billion program as environmental salvation and economic stimulus, but any free market economist could predict the real outcome: massive wealth destruction disguised as progress. The program forced dealers to pour sodium silicate into engines, permanently destroying cars that poor families could have afforded. Politicians eliminated the bottom tier of the used car market overnight. Suddenly, a reliable $3,000 Honda Civic became a $7,000 Honda Civic (if you could find one). The supposed beneficiaries — working-class Americans who needed affordable transportation — got priced out entirely. Government intervention always creates unseen victims, and Cash for Clunkers delivered them by the millions. Single mothers, college students, and minimum-wage workers watched their mobility options vanish as used car prices soared 30% between 2009 and 2014. The environmental gains proved negligible too: most clunkers averaged 15-17 MPG while replacements hit 24-25 MPG. Destroying half a million cars to improve average fuel economy by 8 MPG represents the kind of central planning that would give Soviet bureaucrats a hard-on. The wealth destruction extended beyond sticker prices. Higher transportation costs forced people into longer payment terms, creating a debt cycle that persists today. Cash for Clunkers normalized 84-month auto loans, turning cars from depreciating assets into multi-year financial anchors. Bureaucrats congratulated themselves for moving inventory off dealer lots while condemning an entire generation to transportation poverty.

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Aaron Birch
Aaron Birch@AaronSeeingGood·
@adam_ebberts Agreed, but it's nice to see someone helping normies understand what's going on inside fragrances and all the variations available. It gives us somewhere to start, besides wandering around a store sniffing samples
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Aaron Birch
Aaron Birch@AaronSeeingGood·
I went to Burger King and got a Whopper and it was actually good. Is the nation healing?
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Aaron Birch
Aaron Birch@AaronSeeingGood·
@OldUncleEllis @pimomormon I remember when I was 12 and I discovered that being annoying created some level of attention and makes you feel like you have some control over the people around you, even if it's just controlling their frustration and discomfort. Most boys grow out of it after a couple years
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Ellis
Ellis@OldUncleEllis·
@pimomormon You give away hours of your life in pursuit of schadenfreude? You only get one life, man.
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Ellis
Ellis@OldUncleEllis·
Little Adi looks like a sensitive young man who was radicalized later in life but Joey looks like a psycho from birth. Hate to say my money’s on Joe.
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Aaron Birch
Aaron Birch@AaronSeeingGood·
Did my first tour of Yellowstone as a child with my grandparents shortly after the fire. I remember all the charred lodgepole pines, with little green saplings growing in between them. I just thought it would be forever to look like it once had. Those trees are going on 40 now.
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Adam
Adam@adam_ebberts·
I had a dream last night, and in that dream I had a dream. First time I think that’s ever happened And while dreaming I knew that I was dreaming, and had dreamed about dreaming.
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Aaron Birch
Aaron Birch@AaronSeeingGood·
Whose idea was it to let Captain Moroni write the letter to negotiate a prisoner exchange?
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