Brayton

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Brayton

Brayton

@BraytonAD

34/Pan/Single & Looking. Involved in various fandoms and communities. Go ahead and ask https://t.co/19SmROeJYD DM for contact

Not Here Katılım Temmuz 2011
709 Takip Edilen288 Takipçiler
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LimitLess
LimitLess@LimitlesCobz·
🚨 THIS IS MASSIVE AND NO ONE IS COVERING IT. Former Navy SEALs and Special Forces operators were running a murder-for-hire program out of a $7,000,000 San Diego mansion. $1,500,000 per month. $40,000 per operator. Bonuses per kill. A lawsuit was just UNSEALED in federal court. Here's what nobody is telling you: 💀 The company was called Spear Operations Group. Incorporated in Delaware. Run by a former commando out of San Diego. 💀 Their client was the UAE government. 23 targets. Multiple confirmed kills. 💀 The team flew chartered jets from New Jersey to carry out assassinations overseas. 💀 They brought body armor, explosives, booby-trapped vehicles, and whiskey. 💀 Drone footage was used for pre-hit reconnaissance and to document the strikes. 💀 The founder admitted everything on record: "There was a targeted assassination program. I was running it. We did it." ⚠️ The US State Department never authorized this. It is illegal under federal law. ⚠️ The operators tried to incorporate into the UAE military as legal cover. It failed. ⚠️ Despite all this, ZERO operators have gone to prison. The lawsuit is from the VICTIM. Do you understand the scale of what's happening? ⚠️ These operators were trained at US taxpayer expense. They then SOLD that training to a foreign government as a marketing pitch for assassination contracts. ⚠️ The target who survived has been living in exile for 10 years. He missed his daughter's graduation. He missed his sister's funeral. ⚠️ The founder's whereabouts? Currently unclear. The operators? Marketing themselves on LinkedIn as "tactical consultants." They're showing you "private security firms protecting US interests." They're NOT showing you that former US special operators are selling assassination services to foreign governments from American soil with near-zero legal consequence. Here's the logic chain: → US trains elite operators at massive cost → Operators go private → Foreign governments buy their services → Operators use US legal cover while executing foreign government hit lists → Victims have no recourse except a lawsuit a decade later → The system that trained them takes no responsibility If this program was illegal, why has no one been prosecuted? If the State Department "never authorized" this, why haven't the operators been charged? Complete silence. This is not a rogue contractor story. This is an accountability crisis — the moment America lost control of the weapons it built.
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Cincymilla
Cincymilla@CincyShadow·
What these neo-nazi aligned freaks won't tell you is that the blanket property tax repeal is a trojan horse designed to decimate the public sector so that private entities can swoop in and take over. If that happens, say goodbye to personal liberty and financial stability.
Lysander@UnderCoercion

Let’s make history

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Lucas
Lucas@ILucasK·
“No such thing as right wing grift” “Left grifting is more profitable and much easier” What planet or universe did you come from? Or you just suck at being a right wing creator along with everyone else in your podcast. Gaslighting is real today.
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Coby DuBose | DuBose Defense
I tried the criminal case. The officer lied on the stand and was only caught because my client happened to have a dash cam secretly recording. The State stubbornly took Justin to trial in criminal court and the officer’s lies on the stand hurt him bad in the federal case.
Institute for Justice@IJ

In 2021, independent journalist Justin Pulliam was arrested while filming a police encounter. He teamed up with IJ to file a First Amendment lawsuit in federal court. Last week, we won!

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Cabot Montana
Cabot Montana@AmanitaFugax·
>run on no wars >start war >run on anti corruption >pardon exclusively white collar criminals committing fraud >run on exposing Epstein list >never release Epstein files, even when compelled by courts >run on supporting farmers >import beef, close Chinese market, end farm aid
FactPost@factpostnews

Trump's 2027 budget proposal includes $82 million in cuts to USDA's Rural Business Service. This program supports economic development, boosts farms, and creates job opportunities in rural communities.

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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Peanuts in Coke is one of the most accidentally perfect food pairings in history, and the chemistry explains why this guy can't go back. Coca-Cola sits at pH 2.5, roughly the same acidity as stomach acid. When you drop roasted peanuts into that, the phosphoric acid partially denatures the surface proteins on the nut, releasing free glutamate. You're generating umami in real time inside the glass. The salt on the peanuts suppresses bitter taste receptors on your tongue, which amplifies your perception of sweetness without adding a single gram of sugar. Coca-Cola already has 39g of sugar per can. Your brain registers it as even sweeter because the salt is clearing the noise from competing flavor signals. Then carbonation does two things. CO2 dissolved in liquid forms carbonic acid, which triggers pain receptors (TRPA1), not taste receptors. That mild irritation resets your palate between sips so you never get flavor fatigue. Every sip hits like the first. Second, the bubbles physically agitate the peanut surface, accelerating the protein breakdown and glutamate release. The longer the peanuts sit, the more umami you extract. The fat content seals it. Peanuts are 49% fat by weight. Fat is the only macronutrient that activates CD36 receptors, which your brain interprets as richness and satisfaction. Mix that with sugar, salt, acid, umami, and carbonation and you've accidentally triggered every major reward pathway in the human taste system simultaneously. Georgia farmers in the 1920s did this because they needed one hand free while working. They stumbled into the optimal salt-acid-umami-fat-carbonation loop a century before food science could explain why it worked.
猫山課長@nekoyamamanager

30年前くらいに村上春樹のエッセイで、アメリカではコーラにピーナッツを入れて飲むのがポピュラーだと書いてあった。「ふぅん」と思ってから長い時間が経ったが、ついにやってみた。 何だこれバカ美味いんでやんの。 これ以外でもうコーラ飲みたくなくなるレベル。

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💜 Endroxicon 💜
💜 Endroxicon 💜@Endroxicon00·
What's got you so distracted?
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かみぱっぱ
かみぱっぱ@kamipapa2·
アメリカではコカコーラとペプシコーラの2強だと思ってたんだが…意外と群雄割拠だな
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Lana/Winter
Lana/Winter@rsetamlana·
the pup just wants some love 🥺
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Ara
Ara@Ara_Squawks·
Furry slander
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snooperboopVR🔞
snooperboopVR🔞@snooperboop9898·
🏖️💙
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Brayton
Brayton@BraytonAD·
@StyBusty Oh yeah, that's entirely normal. I might just be used to it but I don't even pay it any mind; give them a smile and act as friendly as possible. Kill them with kindness and also pretend to try for them.
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BustyValiant
BustyValiant@StyBusty·
@BraytonAD Mostly customers, I just don't understand the entitlement or the notion that I owe them something.
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BustyValiant
BustyValiant@StyBusty·
I've never felt such disdain and resentment for a job than my current one. How can working at a hotel cause such anguish for me!?
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