Barnard

3.9K posts

Barnard

Barnard

@Barnard178

Katılım Temmuz 2023
269 Takip Edilen132 Takipçiler
Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@MarcusGustavus We are considering flying for vacation later this year with young kids. I am struggling to estimate how much the airfare will cost us before booking a flight. Between the baggage fees & making sure we get the ticket level that guarantees we can all sit together it is a challenge.
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Mark Gustav
Mark Gustav@MarcusGustavus·
Airlines would be way more profitable if they stopped charging bag fees. Must have been a management consultant who thought up that brilliant idea.
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Barnard retweetledi
Nate Fischer
Nate Fischer@NateAFischer·
Eviction and housing discrimination laws make many potentially useful housing models non-viable. When the only legal gate to protect a landlord and community is price, only relatively expensive options will remain attractive.
Midwest Antiquarian@Eric_Erins

We used to have these. They were called Apartment Hotels. They’d consist of a single room with a bathroom, housecleaning, a cafeteria and lounges. Imagine being able to rent month to month and not need to furnish an apartment. It was ideal. Nuts we got rid of these.

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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@MrsPiousPatrol The stereotype has been getting mocked for 20 years at least and they still won't adapt to a different model.
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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@AlexBerenson @TheAtlantic Between this and the gambling story, where he claims he was sucked into chasing an obvious scammer around Vegas for tips to make a few hundred bucks, Coppins is either shameless liar or at best a naive midwit. Either way, no one should be listening to what he says on any topic.
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Alex Berenson
Alex Berenson@AlexBerenson·
I’m not sure what’s sadder, that a guy who thinks he’s a serious journalist could fall for months for the “There’s a Drug Cartel Olympics and the losers ALL GET SHOT” hoax - Or that his buddies at @TheAtlantic are glazing him for the story he wrote about how credulous he is.
McKay Coppins@mckaycoppins

Last year, I met a Mexican athlete who told me an incredible story—that he’d been kidnapped in 2023 and forced to compete for his life in a secret tournament of cartels. Once I started reporting, the story only got more surreal. For the May issue: theatlantic.com/magazine/2026/…

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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@rightwingnutrs I think the point was always about getting attention seeking people more attention. I had read back when it aired the first Bachelor took the part because he didn't get picked for Survivor. In the "influencer" age they have gotten even more open about it.
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Old Tory Right - Scholastic Fundamentalist
The entire point of these shows was that a single man or woman struggling to find a match would have dozens of people of the opposite sex thrown at them and hopefully they’d fall in love with one of them.
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Old Tory Right - Scholastic Fundamentalist
How was a divorcee even selected for the role? By definition, a divorcee is not a bachelorette. There’s no romance in society anymore. It’s so sad.
People@people

🔗: bit.ly/4lI1sFV ABC has canceled Taylor Frankie Paul's season of The Bachelorette just three days before it was set to premiere, PEOPLE can confirm. 📷️: Disney/Getty

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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@BonifaceOption Instead of 38 year old men claiming to be in high school to avoid deportation they will now claim they are over 65. Murkowski will try to get them Social Security and Medicare to go with it.
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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@mckaycoppins @JustinMacmahan @TheAtlantic If you want people to believe that fine, but you don't get to confine it to sports betting. If your judgement is that bad & you are that easily sucked in by an obvious scammer, there is no reason to trust your judgement on any issue. You shouldn't be writing on public policy then
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McKay Coppins
McKay Coppins@mckaycoppins·
That’s not a criticism I can really “address,” because it boils down to you saying “what you wrote was in bad faith” and me saying “no it wasn’t.” I wrote a 13,000-word story detailing how and why my betting became more reckless as the experiment progressed—if you choose to believe it was disingenuous, there’s no way I can convince you.
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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@DanRosenheck @mckaycoppins Coppins continued dishonesty on this point is disturbing. His points could have been much better made without the gimmick nature of him intentionally blowing $10k of the Atlantic's money.
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Dan Rosenheck
Dan Rosenheck@DanRosenheck·
The problem with @mckaycoppins’s piece, which AFAIK he has not addressed, is that his betting strategy actually seemed to be working out sort of OK—until the NFL season was about to end, he needed a good ending for his story, and so he abruptly bet more than half his bankroll 1/2
McKay Coppins@mckaycoppins

It's been one week since @TheAtlantic published my April cover story on America's sports betting boom. The reactions have been really interesting. A few observations below:

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Greg Jones
Greg Jones@LAJoneser·
@DanRosenheck @mckaycoppins This exactly. He clearly had an agenda to lose or there is no story. He didnt even take two minutes to Google/Twitter search Sean Perry. It would have been obvious what a BS artist he is
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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@realJeremyCarl Why do you think NY Times readers can be reasoned with? They continue to prove they cannot.
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Jeremy Carl
Jeremy Carl@realJeremyCarl·
The most popular comments from the liberal New York Times readership on my conversation with Ross Douthat illustrate my point as well as anything said in the interview itself. It's just a bunch of people claiming that because White Americans continue to do reasonably well overall in terms of jobs/finances/status etc. that there couldn't be discrimination or racism against them. Or other people talking about conditions in America decades or even centuries ago rather than dealing with the reality of what is going on today. None of these people would claim that anti-Semitism doesn't exist because Jews, on average, are doing well financially and professionally. None of these people would claim that anti-Asian racism doesn't exist because Asian Americans on average, are doing well financially and professionally. But they think they can make this same claim about White Americans without offering any contrary evidence or disputing the evidence I offer in this interview or in my book. And that, my friends, is a textbook example of anti-White racism.
Jeremy Carl@realJeremyCarl

1/ Shortly after my U.S. Senate hearing, I sat down with Ross Douthat from the New York Times to discuss my work on anti-White discrimination and to talk about issues around White identity. Ross asked tough but fair questions, and it was a good conversation (linked below)

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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@MallardReborn Foundation drift has happened so many times at this point you can't justify setting up an open ended one. If they want to fund something, it should be a specific goal with a limited scope and set period of time.
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🟪The Mallard Reborn🟪
🟪The Mallard Reborn🟪@MallardReborn·
Your kids might squander it, if you haven't raised them right, but leaving your wealth to some foundation, even one with your own name on it, pretty much guarantees it will end up being wasted on things that would horrify and enrage you if you could see it.
Syd Steyerhart@SydSteyerhart

The point of wealth is to leave it to your children. That is its only value, it has no other value, but it has many forms of anti-value, like leaving it to a charity. Lynch was a good man. He understood the assignment.

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Barnard@Barnard178·
@realJeremyCarl @DouthatNYT You had a huge miss when you mentioned entertainment in not mentioning replacement of historic white characters with blacks. Current ex. is PBS Count of Monte Cristo made Haydee black even though Dumas described her as Greek. Maybe you mention it in the book.
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Jeremy Carl
Jeremy Carl@realJeremyCarl·
2/ "So I am challenging the notion, quite explicitly, that diversity is our strength." You can check out the discussion here. Thanks to @DouthatNYT for having the genuine conversation about these issues the Dem. Senators didn't want to have. nytimes.com/2026/03/19/opi…
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Jeremy Carl
Jeremy Carl@realJeremyCarl·
1/ Shortly after my U.S. Senate hearing, I sat down with Ross Douthat from the New York Times to discuss my work on anti-White discrimination and to talk about issues around White identity. Ross asked tough but fair questions, and it was a good conversation (linked below)
Jeremy Carl tweet media
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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@InezFeltscher I assume the most likely solution for Dems is ballot stuffing to make sure the chosen candidate gets to November.
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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@InezFeltscher I agree but it seems harder in this case. What could they say about Porter that would get her to drop out? It is already on record she abused her ex. Swalwell also is insane. Threaten to send them to prison? A cushy well paid NGO job may not even work with them.
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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@BWLH_ The Thursday and Friday afternoon games in 98 were epic. Bryce Drew buzzer beater, Washington, Cincinnati and Richmond all won on games that went down to the last shot.
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Because We Live Here 🇺🇸
1998 Convinced a teacher to let us each lunch in his classroom to watch the NCAA Tournament games for a glorious 30 minutes. On a crappy TV like this one. Don’t remember the games we watched, but years later people still laughed that I pulled it off.
Because We Live Here 🇺🇸 tweet media
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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@realJeremyCarl @curtis_yarvin You are really making more of a case that society needs to start discriminating against the average NY Times reader than that discrimination against racial minorities is still a real problem today.
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Jeremy Carl
Jeremy Carl@realJeremyCarl·
There are still people who discriminate against various racial minorities. However, *net* racial discrimination in 2026 is strongly against Whites. Both statements are true. But the average NYT reader won't even consider the truthfulness of the second statement if you don't acknowledge the first. And my goal in this interview is to make them consider the truthfulness of the second statement.
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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@womperspoon A big part of the reason why is that so many like this dumb woman will keep voting for the candidates who makes their lives worse. Even in Dem primaries.
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Womperspoon
Womperspoon@womperspoon·
If democrats were willing to break with their base on like 20% of issues (let's say, no cash bail, teachers unions, and even the most minimal landlord protections) they really could be a force. Lucky for us, they're constitutionally insane.
7News DC@7NewsDC

Veronica Hegens thought she’d made a sound financial decision in September 2023 by renting out her row house in Southwest D.C. Now the retired Army major is in danger of losing the property to foreclosure because of a tenant who hasn’t paid rent since October and who also has no immediate plans to leave. bit.ly/4bfbEC6

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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@herandrews In The Idealist Nina Munk has a passage where a group of men refuse to do manual labor because as "descendants of Abraham" it is beneath them. I think they were living in a refugee camp.
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Helen Andrews
Helen Andrews@herandrews·
African foreign students in the U.S. in 1961 “expressed surprise that Americans were proud to do almost any type of work.” “One student said, ‘I think now that we should have more dignity of labor. Africans usually are not working to capacity.’ Students commented that during their stay in the United States they learned for the first time that labor could be dignified.”
Helen Andrews tweet mediaHelen Andrews tweet media
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Barnard
Barnard@Barnard178·
@NateAFischer Also, he was still wearing a mask in 2022. Could be the most damaging part of the video for him.
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Nate Fischer
Nate Fischer@NateAFischer·
To Talarico, life must consist of endless sacrifice and penance for the burden of our existence and our ancestral sins. The opposite of a life where we can enjoy the many blessings of our world and our inheritance. This is moralistic guilt without grace or vitality.
Bobby LaValley@Bobby_LaVallley

In 2022, James Talarico said it’s “existential” to reduce meat consumption to fight climate change. "I am proud to say that our campaign has officially become a non-meat campaign... We are only buying vegan products from our local vegan businesses."

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