Big Sherm

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Big Sherm

Big Sherm

@AudibleThatAss

Taste the ashes of your kin, bootlickers.

Georgia Katılım Ocak 2025
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Frances 'Cassandra' Coppola
Frances 'Cassandra' Coppola@Frances_Coppola·
The ICC issued arrest warrants for three Hamas leaders. Israel killed all of them. Since they are dead, they cannot be brought to trial. You either have a short memory, or you're lying. Which is it?
Sarah Scialom@sarah_scialom

Le Jerusalem Post révèle aujourd'hui, sous la plume de Mathilda Heller, la communication déposée devant le Bureau du Procureur de la Cour pénale internationale, au titre de l'article 15 du Statut de Rome, au nom d'un client palestinien de Gaza. J'ai eu l'honneur de la rédiger et de la signer aux côtés de mes confrères @ElliotMalin et Eli M. Rosenbaum, ancien Counselor for War Crimes Accountability au Département de la Justice américain. Notre client a perdu son épouse, ses enfants et plusieurs membres de sa famille pendant la guerre. Nous demandons l'ouverture d'une enquête à l'encontre de quatorze dirigeants du Hamas pour crimes de guerre et crimes contre l'humanité commis contre la population palestinienne elle-même. La communication documente l'utilisation systématique de civils palestiniens comme boucliers humains, en violation directe des Conventions de Genève de 1949, ainsi que l'enrôlement d'enfants, les exécutions sans procès, la torture, la persécution et l'extermination. À ce jour, le Bureau du Procureur n'a poursuivi aucun dirigeant du Hamas pour les crimes commis contre les Palestiniens. Cette asymétrie n'est pas tenable. La crédibilité de la justice pénale internationale se mesure à sa capacité à protéger toutes les victimes relevant de sa compétence, sans hiérarchie politique. jpost.com/middle-east/ar…

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kayz3d
kayz3d@kay_z67·
I wonder how people felt at 11:59 p.m. of dec. 1999 before crossing over to the year 2000.
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Mistress Dividend
Mistress Dividend@mistressdivy·
Why is every single town getting in America getting a data center, nothing has ever expanded this quickly in American history with no public approval.
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Mehdi Hasan
Mehdi Hasan@mehdirhasan·
I’m trying to imagine any Republican governor in America doing the equivalent of what Jared Polis just did. This is why Democrats lose.
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Sara McGee for Texas HD 132
Sara McGee for Texas HD 132@SaraForTexLege·
If this is what we’re doing - my opponent is 61 and has never been married and has no children. He was raised in New Jersey and has zero ties to the district he pretends to represent, while I was not only raised here, but also raised my two children here and built my life here. If being 36 and childless is a disqualifier, then clearly HD132 has no choice but to choose me as our next State Representative. I don’t make the rules. Just live by them. 😉
AmericanFawn@AFAWNF

@mavsmarie 36 years old and no verified relationship ever? Cmon

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Jason Chaffetz
Jason Chaffetz@jasoninthehouse·
Data Center in Box Elder County I am fully supportive of the data center project in Box Elder County. When I first learned of the project, I had some of the same questions you might have. I, too, worry about people, water, power, the health of the Great Salt Lake, and why it would be good for Utah. I had an opportunity to meet with the people bringing the project here and to get those questions addressed. I was impressed by their answers so I introduced them to my friend, Kevin O’Leary, who later decided to move forward with the project. I believe it is going to a be huge net positive for the State of Utah. Here’s what was shared with me and why I’m excited about it: Energy · This project is not taking anything out of the existing power grid. · The price Utahns pay for power should not go up because of this development. · More than a decade ago, a 42” pipeline from Wyoming called the Ruby Pipeline, with Natural Gas, was constructed. It’s already there - permitted and installed underground. Regulatory standards are already in place at the state and federal level. · The data center may even feed surplus power back into the grid and other renewable power sources may be deployed. Water · When the developers put the private land under contract, they agreed to paying a premium price, multiple times greater than market rate for the area. They were candid about the potential. The project uses the existing private water rights that were in use by the previous landowners. · It doesn’t need additional water beyond what already belongs to that property. · The water they’ll be using currently does not feed into the Great Salt Lake. · There might be a net increase of water going into the Great Salt Lake by using the water supply and flowing it down to the Great Salt Lake rather than being used for agriculture. · The water available to that property is currently low quality and brackish. · Water put into the Great Salt Lake would need to be higher quality and treated. Those are the concerns. But what is most exciting are the opportunities. Tax revenue · The 40,000 acres was generating roughly $250,000 annually in taxes for Box Elder County. · When fully implemented, it’s anticipated the county will receive more than $100 million annually in tax revenue from those 40,000 acres. Today the Box Elder total budget is less than $80 million. · The state, via sales tax, will receive hundreds of millions of dollars annually when fully developed. All Utahns benefit from that. This is all new revenue to the state. HAFB · The proximity of the data center makes Hill Air Force Base (HAFB) a more attractive asset for the Pentagon. · That accessibility may protect Hill from future BRAC closure threats. In a rapidly changing world, data centers in the USA are safer for Americans. Having them in Utah helps with jobs, viability long-term for Hill, and providing a national security asset. · The data center supports the mission of both HAFB and the Utah Test & Training Range (UTTR). · ”Top of Utah” is heavily dependent on Hill for a whole ecosystem of jobs and businesses. Keeping our economy vibrant in northern Utah is an imperative. That’s good for Utah jobs (thousands of new jobs in Top of Utah), our economy, and national defense. We have to be able to process data. This facility will do so with minimal disruption to the taxpayers who benefit from it. It’s off the beaten path in an area that is hard to make productive. It will also bring additional private sector companies and advanced manufacturing our state can not support because our current energy supplies are not big enough. It can be done cleanly, supporting our state with jobs, revenue, and making Utah a leading place to do business while supporting our quality of life.
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Reservation Ridge Rider
Reservation Ridge Rider@RsrvtionRidge·
If Utahns haven’t connected the dots yet, Jason Chaffetz post is pretty revelatory. November 2025 Jason Chaffetz joins American Global Strategies, a DC consulting firm specializing in AI, defense, etc. Per Kevin OLearys comments he has been working on this for 5 months. Per Chaffetzs post he was the one to brought the opportunity to his “friend”. Put those 2 together and we see Chaffetz brought this to OLeary late 2025. May 2026 the plan is revealed to the public. There is major local opposition. May 15 American Global Strategies publishes an article about how it is an AI race between us and China, directly mirroring the narrative that OLeary has been pushing: americanglobalstrategies.com/ai-american-po… May 15 Chaffetz posts a long message about how this data center is great. Doesn’t disclose any financial interest. O’Leary immediately reposts it and says how great it is that the project is gaining local support. @jasoninthehouse would you like to clarify if you are being paid to consult on this project as a member of American Global Strategies? Because it seems pretty obvious you got paid to post that.
Jason Chaffetz@jasoninthehouse

Data Center in Box Elder County I am fully supportive of the data center project in Box Elder County. When I first learned of the project, I had some of the same questions you might have. I, too, worry about people, water, power, the health of the Great Salt Lake, and why it would be good for Utah. I had an opportunity to meet with the people bringing the project here and to get those questions addressed. I was impressed by their answers so I introduced them to my friend, Kevin O’Leary, who later decided to move forward with the project. I believe it is going to a be huge net positive for the State of Utah. Here’s what was shared with me and why I’m excited about it: Energy · This project is not taking anything out of the existing power grid. · The price Utahns pay for power should not go up because of this development. · More than a decade ago, a 42” pipeline from Wyoming called the Ruby Pipeline, with Natural Gas, was constructed. It’s already there - permitted and installed underground. Regulatory standards are already in place at the state and federal level. · The data center may even feed surplus power back into the grid and other renewable power sources may be deployed. Water · When the developers put the private land under contract, they agreed to paying a premium price, multiple times greater than market rate for the area. They were candid about the potential. The project uses the existing private water rights that were in use by the previous landowners. · It doesn’t need additional water beyond what already belongs to that property. · The water they’ll be using currently does not feed into the Great Salt Lake. · There might be a net increase of water going into the Great Salt Lake by using the water supply and flowing it down to the Great Salt Lake rather than being used for agriculture. · The water available to that property is currently low quality and brackish. · Water put into the Great Salt Lake would need to be higher quality and treated. Those are the concerns. But what is most exciting are the opportunities. Tax revenue · The 40,000 acres was generating roughly $250,000 annually in taxes for Box Elder County. · When fully implemented, it’s anticipated the county will receive more than $100 million annually in tax revenue from those 40,000 acres. Today the Box Elder total budget is less than $80 million. · The state, via sales tax, will receive hundreds of millions of dollars annually when fully developed. All Utahns benefit from that. This is all new revenue to the state. HAFB · The proximity of the data center makes Hill Air Force Base (HAFB) a more attractive asset for the Pentagon. · That accessibility may protect Hill from future BRAC closure threats. In a rapidly changing world, data centers in the USA are safer for Americans. Having them in Utah helps with jobs, viability long-term for Hill, and providing a national security asset. · The data center supports the mission of both HAFB and the Utah Test & Training Range (UTTR). · ”Top of Utah” is heavily dependent on Hill for a whole ecosystem of jobs and businesses. Keeping our economy vibrant in northern Utah is an imperative. That’s good for Utah jobs (thousands of new jobs in Top of Utah), our economy, and national defense. We have to be able to process data. This facility will do so with minimal disruption to the taxpayers who benefit from it. It’s off the beaten path in an area that is hard to make productive. It will also bring additional private sector companies and advanced manufacturing our state can not support because our current energy supplies are not big enough. It can be done cleanly, supporting our state with jobs, revenue, and making Utah a leading place to do business while supporting our quality of life.

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The okayest poster there is
Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuck you She tried to disenfranchise the voters of Colorado and you don't give a shit because your brain is libertarian mush. Glad you're happy with your legacy being letting Tina Peters off easy because you don't have the balls to say no to Trump. Congratulations!
Jared Polis@jaredpolis

Why would I want to run from it or redefine it? I’ll always stand for free speech and to make sure that we live in a country that no matter what your viewpoints are, you are not incarcerated longer because of them; the very democracy our clerks aspire to protect and defend through capably administering our gold-standard election system.

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Pedro L. Gonzalez
Pedro L. Gonzalez@emeriticus·
I think this episode perfectly encapsulates the new right: Trump says he doesn't care about Americans. JD Vance is asked what he thinks about that, and the quote is read to him word for word, but all he can do, because he has no spine, no moral compass, no self-respect for himself as an American, is deny that Trump said it at all. Then Trump doubles down, knowing full well that his base will swallow his contempt for them, and that no one around Trump, least of all dogs on leashes like Vance, would dare ask him to mask his hatred for the average person, while conservative media from The Blaze to The Daily Wire will praise Trump for being so refreshingly candid about how much he hates this country and its people, which they will also call patriotism.
Aaron Rupar@atrupar

Trump on saying he doesn't think about Americans' financial situation: "It's a perfect statement. I'll make it again. Everybody agrees."

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Gavin Newsom
Gavin Newsom@GavinNewsom·
Democrats NEED to be talking more about the GUTTING of the Voting Rights Act. MAGA is silencing voters and carving up Black districts all across the South to hold onto power. This is Jim Crow 2.0. Silence is NOT an option.
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BTC Clips
BTC Clips@BTC_clips·
.@brotherjones_: "“We still have Democrats were acting like this is early 2000 politics. That world of normalcy is gone. This is a war for the future of our democracy. And the South is the front line in that battle… I would say to the governors and to the lawmakers in those [blue] states that this is a moment to put our morals above our manners. What is moral is to act, not just for us, but for generations who are counting on us, what we do in this moment. I think we're going to be judged not by what we do, but by what we don't do.”
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L. Louise Lucas
L. Louise Lucas@SenLouiseLucas·
I have spent my entire life looking for good trouble, from being a youth leader in the civil rights movement after my school was closed during massive resistance all the way until today. I’ve learned to never back down and I will always lead ten toes down fighting for you.
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Anonymous
Anonymous@YourAnonNews·
Help Jackie & Gabi from Elevate Utah out! They're the ladies that confronted Billionaire Kevin O'leary for calling them Chinese Agents. For their epic own of that piece of shit, & to help stop the data center insanity give them some love! @ElevateUtahPAC linktr.ee/elevateutah
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MeidasTouch
MeidasTouch@MeidasTouch·
Tina Peters went to prison for illegally letting a Mike Lindell associate copy sensitive Dominion voting machine data in her Colorado county to chase fake 2020 fraud claims, causing passwords and secrets to leak online. Not for her "strange beliefs."
Acyn@Acyn

Polis on Tina Peters: She has very strange beliefs. She'll probably continue to have them. We don't punish people in this country for having strange beliefs. The place to resolve those differences is by debate, by discourse, by arguing with her, with by disputing her, not for keeping her behind bars simply because of what she believes or says

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Acyn
Acyn@Acyn·
Wow Bret Baier plays Trump’s statement where he said he doesn’t think about Americans’ financial situation. Trump’s Response: That’s a perfect statement. I’d make it again.
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