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Adam From Austin
1.1K posts

Adam From Austin
@AdamFromAustin1
Hype Man * Native Austinite * Lacrosse Guy * Small Business Owner * Proud Texan
Austin, TX Katılım Mayıs 2019
835 Takip Edilen146 Takipçiler

@LacrosseNetwork @FlowGo37 @CascadeLacrosse @PremierLacrosse @PLLChaos The “Face Off Rule Change” of helmets .😐
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.@CASCADELACROSSE IS DROPPING A BRAND NEW HELMET 🚨🔥
The “Z” is the first lacrosse helmet to feature a flip-up mask — set to hit PLL fields next week!

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Adam From Austin retweetledi
Adam From Austin retweetledi

What is the secret to the lacrosse success of so many players who hail from the @SixNationsGR Reserve? Watch and learn!
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@diggstape Panel stickers for the win!
Bacharach would be proud.
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THIS is how you do a throwback look btw

Christopher Deutsch@Chris_Deutsch
@diggstape Hop had the best throwback buckets when they had the oldschool simulated panels on them
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Adam From Austin retweetledi

Hop v UVA tomorrow. One of the crazier plays of our rivalry during our 4 years - Dixon making a save (shot was buns), and Tilman squaring up w/ no stick in goal and actually tracking that joint! If that’s on cage he actually may have punched it, which is wild. Not sure folks talk about how damn good he was. Anyway, Go Jays!
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@statesman @Dan_Dawer tHe pArTy oF sMaLL gOveRnMeNt aNd lOcAL cOnTrOL
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Citing a federal order, Austin painted over a rainbow crosswalk. Crestview neighbors brought color back to the corridor. statesman.com/news/local/art…
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@EvilMopacATX @WalkerATX For the record, I’ve been here since 1976.
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@BoringBiz_ Sounds like predatory lending.
With a dash of insider trading.
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Adam From Austin retweetledi

No blueprint. No backing. No problem. Anderson Moore became the first Alabama native to ever make a USA Lacrosse National Team.
His story hits different.
Watch @USALMNT Behind the Shield Episode 4 link in bio.
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Adam From Austin retweetledi
Adam From Austin retweetledi
Adam From Austin retweetledi

@DonHuffines Did you disclose to them that you own the pedophile ranch previously owned by your good friend Epstein? Did you tell them you haven't let investigators onto the property to find the corpses of Epstein's victims? Why would you buy that property of all properties? Whatcha hiding?
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Adam From Austin retweetledi

90s games vs. today's games: How they shaped our brains differently. The impact is wild. 🎮🕹️👾🧠
#Gaming #90sGames #RetroGaming #BrainFacts #VideoGames
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This post came up today because a young man going through some issues in HS reached out to say thanks. He’s starting his senior year in college lacrosse. Never stop checking on the kids.
OMR@onemanride
I did a podcast for 3 years about Midwest HS Lacrosse ( niche market) and it changed my life in so many ways I cant describe it. I always enjoyed the ride. 🙏🏻
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Adam From Austin retweetledi

@RepPatFallon Voter ID is already used in states like ours Pat. You know that. I use my voter ID card that the state sends every year. Then I also have to show my DL when voting. You are forcing a poll tax on people because we have to purchase a passport and/or Birth Certificate to vote.
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@Diabach1972 @manjitghuman58 Some would argue that he was not ahead his time, we are just far behind.
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@manjitghuman58 He was way ahead of his time and spot on.
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Adam From Austin retweetledi

In 1783, King George III asked an American painter what George Washington would do now that he had virtually won the war. The painter replied that the General intended to return to his farm in Virginia. The King was stunned. He reportedly said, "If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world."
Throughout history, victorious generals almost always seized the throne. From Caesar to Cromwell, military success usually meant political dictatorship. The concept of voluntarily walking away from absolute power was practically unheard of. But George Washington wasn't like other men.
By December 4, 1783, the British surrender at Yorktown was past, and peace was finally assured. Washington commanded a powerful, seasoned army that adored him. Conversely, many of his officers were unpaid and angry at the inefficient Congress. They had the guns, the manpower, and the loyalty to install a new monarch. He could have been King George I of America.
Instead, on this day in history, Washington walked into the Long Room at Fraunces Tavern in lower Manhattan. The room was filled with his most loyal officers—men like Henry Knox and Baron von Steuben—who had frozen with him at Valley Forge and bled with him for eight long years.
The atmosphere wasn't celebratory. It was heavy with inevitable separation. Washington, usually stoic and commercially reserved, poured a glass of wine and looked at his brothers-in-arms with visible emotion. "With a heart full of love and gratitude, I now take leave of you," he said, his voice shaking. "I most devoutly wish that your latter days may be as prosperous and happy as your former ones have been glorious and honorable." He didn't order them. He didn't demand their allegiance. He hugged them.
One by one, the hardened soldiers wept openly. Washington embraced each man in silence. There was no pomp, no ceremony, and no speeches about future conquests. It was just a quiet goodbye between warriors who had done the impossible. Immediately after leaving the tavern, Washington didn't march on Congress to demand payment or power. He rode to Annapolis, Maryland, resigned his commission, and went home to Mount Vernon to plant crops.
He did the impossible.
He refused the crown.
He trusted the people.
By stepping down, he ensured that the United States would be a republic ruled by laws, not a kingdom ruled by force. He proved that the military serves the people, not the other way around. It was the final, and perhaps greatest, victory of the Revolution.
The world watched in awe as the American Cincinnatus returned his sword to its sheath, proving that character is the strongest constitution of all."
#archaeohistories

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