Trey Alan MacQueen

6.3K posts

Trey Alan MacQueen banner
Trey Alan MacQueen

Trey Alan MacQueen

@Alan1136651

Proud member of the MacQueen clan. Proud Texan. Proud patriot. Pure blood.

Somewhere in Texas. Katılım Ekim 2024
1.3K Takip Edilen578 Takipçiler
Chris Walker
Chris Walker@WalkerATX·
Good morning, Austin!
English
1
8
89
1.9K
Trey Alan MacQueen
Trey Alan MacQueen@Alan1136651·
@WeezSays @harukaawake You should tell that to the black people here in America. Most racist people I've ever met in my life. And that's saying something because it use to be Asians.
English
0
0
0
19
Mike. No, the other one.
@harukaawake Shut up, you conservative bitch. No one cares about your opinion there, let alone here. You can keep your racist shit in Japan. We have enough of our own. We aren't like you. You come for one of us, you come for all of us. You can't break these lines with your bullshit.
English
1K
2
56
129.6K
鈴森はるか 『haruka suzumori』 🇯🇵
🇯🇵 As a Japanese person, I am more than glad to lose all respect from leftists worldwide. We don't want respect from communists. We just want you to know that we don't like you.
鈴森はるか 『haruka suzumori』 🇯🇵 tweet media
English
2.8K
5.6K
68.3K
873.2K
Trey Alan MacQueen
Trey Alan MacQueen@Alan1136651·
@cy954 Been there a couple times when I was younger. It's awesome. Did you see the butt crack rock by the entrance?
English
0
0
0
14
Trey Alan MacQueen
Trey Alan MacQueen@Alan1136651·
@UnleashedG23066 It's called dragging a violine bow across guitar strings... It's not fucking rocket science. Hippies and fucking drugs man.
English
0
0
2
201
Guitar Gods Unleashed
Guitar Gods Unleashed@UnleashedG23066·
Halfway through this song, Jimmy Page pulls out a violin bow and drags it across his guitar on live French TV 1969. The audience had no idea what they were watching. Nobody did.
English
66
363
2.5K
119.2K
AlphaFox
AlphaFox@alphafox·
Can you spot the issue here? 🤔
AlphaFox tweet media
English
633
30
531
55.2K
Victor Bigham 🇺🇸
Victor Bigham 🇺🇸@Ravious101·
Walking through South Highlands in Shreveport and you can't help but stop and stare at this absolute legend on Slattery Street. Planted back in 1938 by two neighbors who decided a tree would make a better "fence" than wood ever could it's now an 88-year-old live oak with the wildest, lowest-twisting branches you've ever seen. Gnarled, graceful, and full of character. Kids climb it, families snap portraits in front of it, and locals admire it on every walk, wondering about its story. Shreveport's quiet treasures like this just hit different. Nature doing what it does best growing beautifully over time. #SlatteryTree #Shreveport #SouthHighlands
English
59
211
2.9K
285.8K
Trey Alan MacQueen
Trey Alan MacQueen@Alan1136651·
@RichOToole Lived here my entire life almost. It sucks dick now. It's becoming more and more like a ghetto version of Austin. But then again Austin is getting more and more ghetto by the day too.
English
0
0
1
23
Trey Alan MacQueen
Trey Alan MacQueen@Alan1136651·
@WalkerATX @fox7austin Trust me the homeless hobos and shit haven't forgotten about it. Use to go when I was young and the last time I went it was a shithole. Don't go there with cigarettes...
English
0
0
10
586
Chris Walker
Chris Walker@WalkerATX·
It’s 1987 in Austin, and you’re just learning that the city buried an entire creek from the downtown map 📽️ THE DEATH OF LITTLE SHOAL CREEK AUSTIN, Texas (@fox7austin) — Hidden beneath the glass and steel of downtown Austin lies a forgotten world where the city’s natural history remains preserved in the dark. While thousands of residents walk or drive atop the pavement daily, few realize they are traveling over a vanished landscape that was once a central feature of the city's early geography. The decision to erase this creek from the surface was finalized exactly 110 years ago today. On April 27, 1916, Austin City Council officially voted to encapsulate Little Shoal Creek, approving a $50,000 project to redirect the water into a massive subterranean tunnel. The move effectively "entombed" the waterway, allowing the city to pave over the natural banks that had once hosted landmarks like the 1905 Gilfillan House, which originally stood as a waterfront estate. Before it was forced into the shadows, Little Shoal Creek was a surface-level stream that originated from a natural spring on what is now the University of Texas campus. From its source, the water cut a path south through the city, flowing along Nueces and San Antonio Streets. This natural corridor served as a landmark for early residents until the 1916 project began the process to permanently redirect the flow into the dark. As the city grid expanded, the engineering was so massive that workers didn't bother tearing down the original stone bridges that spanned the creek. Instead, they built the modern streets directly over them. While the entrance to the system is modern concrete, the deeper one ventures into the darkness, the more the past reveals itself. These hand-cut 19th-century limestone arches—which once carried horses and buggies across the water—still stand 35 feet below the surface before the tunnel finally dumps out into the active Shoal Creek channel near the Google Building. While the historic limestone sections remain a silent testament to early Austin craftsmanship, the modern concrete portions of the drainage system have taken on a new, vibrant identity. These sprawling concrete corridors have become a labyrinth for Austin’s graffiti artists, with decades of colorful tags and massive murals covering the walls. This hidden gallery has become a centerpiece of the city's underground culture; many Austin youth now use these modern sections as a destination for secret raves and parties.
English
23
108
1.1K
74.8K
Trey Alan MacQueen
Trey Alan MacQueen@Alan1136651·
@CaptKylePatriot Looked it up. Everywhere online says rule the world. This guy is just nuts or uploaded a video to say that.
English
0
0
0
3
Capt Kyle
Capt Kyle@CaptKylePatriot·
It was definitely rule the world! Yikes🥴
English
622
480
2.8K
138K
Barack Obama
Barack Obama@BarackObama·
Although we don’t yet have the details about the motives behind last night's shooting at the White House Correspondents Dinner, it’s incumbent upon all us to reject the idea that violence has any place in our democracy. It’s also a sobering reminder of the courage and sacrifice that U.S. Secret Service Agents show every day. I’m grateful to them – and thankful that the agent who was shot is going to be okay.
English
45.6K
22.9K
278.6K
79.2M
Bo French
Bo French@bofrench·
A foreign, Muslim company is behind the historic water crisis in Corpus Christi. In Texas we know water is a precious resource. Democrat-donating Jim Wright gave them millions of gallons. No Republican would put an Islamic company ahead of Texans. Totally unacceptable.
English
169
2.5K
5.6K
136.4K
Trey Alan MacQueen
Trey Alan MacQueen@Alan1136651·
@TheAKGuy The last I heard they only have like 4 working ships in their navy at the moment. What on earth could they do? They can't even stop boats of immigrants coming every day.
English
0
0
0
77
Amy
Amy@20th_Centurygal·
Who's the most surprising opening act you’ve seen blow the headliner away?
English
599
5
213
35.1K
AlphaFox
AlphaFox@alphafox·
Here's what happens when you fast for 48 hours - highly recommended once in a while to clear your system:
English
13
54
235
18K