Brian Weaver

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Brian Weaver

Brian Weaver

@BrianWeaver

Not the Christian Music guy. I follow back but I do not follow back businesses.

North Carolina, USA Katılım Kasım 2013
173 Takip Edilen150 Takipçiler
Brian Weaver retweetledi
Trumps Nephew
Trumps Nephew@ForgiatoBlow47·
PAUL RYAN, WHO PROPOSED RAISING THE RETIREMENT AGE TO 70, RETIRED AT 48 WITH A FULL GOVERNMENT PENSION.
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Susan
Susan@emma6USA·
This isn’t the Straits of Hormuz… This is the Gulf of America. 🇺🇸 Hundreds of supertankers from Every corner of the planet are racing to Texas & Louisiana to fill up on the sweetest, cheapest, most American oil on Earth. The globalist chokehold is Broken. America is the new gas station for the planet. 🔥🔥🔥
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Brian Weaver
Brian Weaver@BrianWeaver·
#SpectrumDown 1100 block Pickett Rd 28540 . Repairman fixed neighbors 4 doors down and took out rest of block. They have an orange cable for theirs. Everyone else phone and Internet DOWN. Been over 24 hours. Good job. #Spectrum
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Brian Weaver
Brian Weaver@BrianWeaver·
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories

The Great Migration: How the Foundations of the English-Speaking World Were Laid ​Ever wonder why we speak English and not a Roman or Celtic tongue? The answer lies in a chaotic, transformative period between the 5th and 7th centuries. When the Roman Empire’s grip on Britain slipped, a vacuum was left behind—one that was filled by the bold seafaring tribes of Northern Europe: the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes. ​This wasn't just a military invasion; it was a total cultural reset. From the shores of modern-day Denmark and Northern Germany, these tribes crossed the treacherous North Sea to seek new land, eventually pushing the native Britons to the fringes and creating the "Heptarchy"—the seven kingdoms that would one day become England. ​Whether you're a history buff or just curious about where our modern traditions and language began, this map tracks the very first steps of the journey that would eventually reach the shores of America centuries later. ​The Foundations of a New World: The Anglo-Saxon Migration (449–600 CE) ​To understand the United States today—its laws, its literature, and its primary language—one must look back nearly 1,600 years to the foggy coastlines of the North Sea. The migration of the Germanic tribes to the British Isles is perhaps one of the most consequential movements of people in Western history. It was a period marked by the collapse of an old superpower, the arrival of opportunistic warriors, and the slow, grinding birth of a new identity. This is the story of how Britain became "England" and how the seeds of the English-speaking world were first planted. ​In 410 CE, the Roman Empire was crumbling. Under pressure from "barbarian" tribes closer to home, the Emperor Honorius sent a letter to the cities of Britain, famously telling them to "look to their own defenses." For nearly four centuries, Rome had provided a professional military, legal infrastructure, and a sense of global connectivity. When the legions left, they took the stability with them. ​Britain was left vulnerable. To the north, the Picts and Scots began raiding deeper into the lowlands. According to the monk-historian Bede, a British leader named Vortigern made a fateful decision: The invited Germanic mercenaries from the mainland to help defend his lands. He offered them territory in exchange for protection. It was an invitation that changed the course of history forever. Once the first wave of warriors realized how fertile and poorly defended the island was, the trickle of mercenaries turned into a flood of settlers. ​As shown in map, the migration was primarily driven by three distinct groups, each bringing their own dialects and customs. Hailing from the region of Angeln (modern-day Schleswig-Holstein in Germany), they were perhaps the most numerous. They settled in the north and east, founding the kingdoms of Northumbria, Mercia, and East Anglia. It is from this tribe that names "England" (Engla-lond) and "English" (Englisc) are derived. ​Coming from the sprawling plains of Northern Germany, the Saxons were fierce warriors and prolific settlers. They moved into the south and west of Britain, establishing Wessex (West Saxons), Sussex (South Saxons), and Essex (East Saxons). Their legacy survived in the title of the "Anglo-Saxon" people and heavily influenced the legal and social structures of the early English state. ​The smallest of the three main groups, the Jutes traveled from the Jutland peninsula (modern Denmark). They settled in Kent and the Isle of Wight. Though fewer in number, they maintained a distinct cultural identity for generations, and the Kingdom of Kent became a vital gateway for the reintroduction of Christianity to the island later on. ​#archaeohistories

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Eli Brooks
Eli Brooks@elibrooks0·
🚨BREAKING: Stephen Miller, a senior Trump Advisor, is trying to exclude illegal aliens from the U.S. census, which removes House seats from Blue states like California, New York etc. Do you support excluding illegals from the U.S. census? 1. Hell Yes 2. No
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Libs of TikTok
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktok·
Ketanji Brown Jackson's argument justifying birthright citizenship: "If I steal someone's wallet in Japan, the Japanese authorities can arrest me and prosecute me... I'm still locally owing allegiance in that sense." Umm... WHAT?!
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OSINTdefender
OSINTdefender@sentdefender·
U.S. President Donald J. Trump is set to set the stage for an off-ramp for the ongoing conflict with Iran in the Middle East. Amongst other things, the president is expected to announce that the military objectives of Operation Epic Fury have not only been met but surpassed during his 9 p.m. ET address tonight.
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Brian Weaver retweetledi
Secretary of the Navy John C. Phelan
.@POTUS has been clear: America will dominate the seas. The @USNavy and @USMC deliver the combat power that deters our enemies, protects our way of life, and secures the homeland. Adm. Caudle, Gen. Smith, and I recognize that the heart of our naval force is not found in the Pentagon, it starts at home - it is in the family and friends who support them. Our Nation's safety, prosperity, and the values we hold dear are upheld by the strength of our military families. Thank you for standing behind our warfighters.
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Sanam Naraghi Anderlini, MBE now on Blue Sky
@astrooalert So beautiful. If there is life on Jupiter, please warn them against us earthlings - especially the human species. It seems we are destined to destroy, trash and ruin the wonders of this planet. We should not do it to theirs.
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The Astronomy Guy
The Astronomy Guy@astrooalert·
🚨: NASA has Released a New Image of the planet Jupiter taken by the James Webb Space Telescope.😮
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Alice
Alice@Aliceshaw25·
Should drivers be legally protected to drive through aggressive crowds blocking roads if they fear for their life?
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Wake Up America
Wake Up America@wakeupusa·
EVIL: This assault was caught on camera! Why do you think this wasn't shown on mainstream media?
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Astronomy Vibes
Astronomy Vibes@AstronomyVibes·
🚨 Astronomers Just Found a Structure Bigger Than Everything We Thought Existed The universe may be far more interconnected than previously imagined. Astronomers at the University of Hawaiʻi, analyzing motion data from over 56,000 galaxies, propose that the Milky Way might lie within a gravitational structure ten times the volume of the already immense Laniākea supercluster. This newly suggested region, anchored by the massive Shapley concentration, challenges current models of cosmic structure and extends the boundaries of our mapped universe. The discovery, published in Nature Astronomy, invites a rethinking of how galactic movements are influenced on a colossal scale. The researchers liken the cosmos to a system of rivers and basins, where galaxies flow along gravitational currents shaped by immense attractors. This analogy paints a picture of the universe as a dynamic and interconnected web, with invisible gravitational highways guiding galaxies over billions of light-years. The findings suggest that our current maps may capture just a fraction of a deeper cosmic architecture, hinting at the existence of even larger structures—and perhaps a more unified universe—than science has yet observed. Source: R. Brent Tully et al., “Identification of a Possible Basin of Attraction Beyond Laniākea,” Nature Astronomy.
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Black Hole
Black Hole@konstructivizm·
Right now, more than 24 billion kilometers from Earth, a tiny spacecraft is drifting through the darkness—Voyager 1, the most distant object we've ever sent into space. Launched in 1977, it's been traveling for nearly half a century, carrying with it a golden record filled with Earth’s sights, sounds, and greetings—just in case it meets intelligent life. No spacecraft has ever gone farther. No signal takes longer to reach us—over 22 hours just for a one-way message. Yet it still speaks to us. Voyager 1 is a silent witness to the vast unknown… a lonely ambassador of humanity, moving deeper into the stars. Just imagine: something we built is out there… forever exploring.
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All day Astronomy
All day Astronomy@forallcurious·
🚨: A new physics research says the universe is built on three dimensions of time — not a single linear arrow.
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Sadie
Sadie@Sadie_NC·
Gavin Newsom while speaking to African Americans, on his “severe dyslexia”: “I don’t read very fast… I cannot read a speech.” Also, Gavin, while talking to whites on the 326-page book *Fight* by Allen & Parnes: “I devoured it in a quick hour and a half, almost two hours.” Bro… the audiobook is 11 hours long, but he finished it in 2 hours. He either just set the world record for speed-reading while dyslexic, or he’s a pathological liar who thinks we’re all idiots. I’ll let you decide which is more believable.
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Brian Weaver retweetledi
A Man Of Memes
A Man Of Memes@RickyDoggin·
Mark Your Calendars ! FEBRUARY 28, 2026 Don't forget to look up the planets will drift quietly across the sky, reminding us how beautifully the universe can align.
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Brian Weaver retweetledi
Dr. Maalouf ‏
Dr. Maalouf ‏@realMaalouf·
Dominican actress Massiel Taveras was prevented from showing her cape with an image of Jesus on the Cannes red carpet. If it were the flag of Palestine, they would allow it.
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