

I'm just a Bill♦️🇺🇸
20K posts

@BillNavari
Hall of Fame sports broadcaster. Blue Heeler dad. Rugged Individualist. Followed by @ScottPresler @GuntherEagleman @unseen1_unseen @CynicalPublius @Shawn_Farash



Q: "Why didn't you tell U.S. allies…about the war before attacking Iran?" President Trump: "We wanted surprise. Who knows better about surprise than Japan? Why didn't you tell me about Pearl Harbor?"





📊 2028 National Democratic Primary Harris — 31% Newsom — 16% Buttigieg — 7% AOC — 6% Shapiro — 5% Kelly — 4% Booker — 3% Beshear — 2% Pritzker — 2% Klobuchar — 2% Moore — 1% Murphy — 0% Khanna — 0% Noble Predictive/Center Square | 3/2-5 thecentersquare.com/national/artic…

Longtime users are frustrated with X because it no longer works the way it used to. Back in the early days of Twitter, your reach was simple and direct. If you had 5,000 or 10,000,20,000 followers, your posts were delivered to them in real time. It was a true chronological feed—your tweets showed up in the order you posted them, and your audience actually saw your content. The “old” Twitter (pre-2016) was built around that real-time experience. Your voice reached the people who chose to follow you, without interference. Today, that’s no longer the case. X relies on an algorithm-driven, engagement-based feed, meaning even your own followers may never see your posts unless the system decides to prioritize them. That shift—from a guaranteed audience to an unpredictable algorithm—is why so many longtime users feel frustrated and disconnected.





