Chris Lewis

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Chris Lewis

Chris Lewis

@CJL2012

Christian. Husband to @kaliekristine and dad of Caleb. Aggie '12. AnCap. Stars Fan.

Katılım Mart 2011
296 Takip Edilen184 Takipçiler
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Chris Lewis
Chris Lewis@CJL2012·
You do not advance the kingdom of God by placing your faith in the kingdoms of the world.
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Andrew Torba
Andrew Torba@BasedTorba·
You have to understand that this is Ben's entire purpose. This is what a decade of him building up the trust of well meaning conservatives was for. This moment. To shill for Israeli interests when it matters most. He doesn't give a damn about America, the American people, or the "browning of America" (his words) he cares about his ethnic homeland and sending your kids and your tax dollars to protect it.
Chris Menahan 🇺🇸@infolibnews

Ben Shapiro—after telling his audience for months that bombing Iran wouldn't lead to a wider war, and then claiming the war was just going to be a quick bombing campaign—is now telling Americans to prepare for a long war. "There is no way to extricate ourselves from this situation right now." Americans only got "tired" of Vietnam after 50,000 troops died, he says. "Our" military members are "heroes" because they're willing to "sacrifice" their lives "for a greater good"—a future world where "energy will become cheap again because the Strait of Hormuz will be free again."

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dom 📈
dom 📈@domluszczyszyn·
With an especially crowded Norris field this season, it's high time that the NHL creates a defenseman award that specifically rewards defensive excellence. Here's who would be in the running for that long overdue award this season. nytimes.com/athletic/71472…
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Chris Lewis
Chris Lewis@CJL2012·
@BiblicalAnarchy @LCIOfficial Austin has always rejected the NAP. It’s no surprise that he would eventually reject the foreign policy position that is based on it.
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Hassan Mafi ‏
Hassan Mafi ‏@thatdayin1992·
Those who did this to Gaza are lecturing Iran about "international law" and not targeting "civilian homes."
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Chris Lewis
Chris Lewis@CJL2012·
@SaltyCrip @DallasStars @AACenter @victoryplustv @dfwticket @fliff Firstly, that’s not equivalent. A different business buying tickets is not same as the organization itself hosting a themed night and highlighting a topic. Secondly, I would expect there to be some dress standards at the AAC such that parents don’t have to be concerned.
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I’ve Got Questions
I’ve Got Questions@SaltyCrip·
@CJL2012 @DallasStars @AACenter @victoryplustv @dfwticket @fliff So, I take it you have had an issue with the organization all the way back to 1993 and a local business strip club owner having a group of season tickets where he brings his "girls" to the game every night to promote his business because "your kids" could haven been there? 🤷🏻‍♂️
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Chris Lewis
Chris Lewis@CJL2012·
@PMizunoMP64 Go ahead. Define sexual orientation without any reference to behavior.
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Paul
Paul@PMizunoMP64·
@CJL2012 I dont think you can comprehend the definition of sexual orientation vs sexual behaviour. This is about celebrating a group of people who have been ridiculed and not welcomed because of sexual orientation. Nothing to do with sexual behavior, even though "you" believe that...
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Chris Lewis
Chris Lewis@CJL2012·
@PMizunoMP64 Please, do explain how drawing attention to sexuality is not related to sexual behavior.
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Paul
Paul@PMizunoMP64·
@CJL2012 Your judgement is clouded by your beliefs. What you said is outrageous and misguided, naive and moronic. "Highlight sexual behaviour." So delusional, Chris.
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Joshua Smith from Break The Cycle
Joshua Smith from Break The Cycle@JoshuaAtLarge·
Let’s stop pretending the situation with Iran is some random outbreak of chaos. It’s not. It’s the result of deliberate decisions—made by powerful governments—that people today conveniently ignore. In the early 1950s, Iran was not an extremist state. Under Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh, it was moving toward democracy, self-governance, and independence from foreign exploitation. He was elected by his people. And his “crime”? Nationalizing Iran’s oil so it would benefit Iranians instead of foreign corporations. That was enough. In 1953, CIA and MI6 orchestrated a coup to remove him. Not because of “freedom” or “stability”—but because Western powers didn’t want to lose control over oil. They replaced him with Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, an authoritarian monarch who ruled with repression, secret police, and the full backing of the West. For decades, Iranians lived under a regime that jailed, tortured, and silenced dissent—all while being propped up as a “strategic ally.” And then people act shocked at what happened next. In 1979, the Iranian people revolted. Not because they wanted extremism—but because they were suffocating under dictatorship. But revolutions don’t come with guarantees. The power vacuum didn’t lead to liberal democracy—it led to the rise of the Islamic Republic. And once that regime consolidated power, it didn’t liberate the people—it crushed them. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps became a tool of enforcement, imprisoning and executing dissidents, including students, reformers, and leftists—the very people who helped overthrow the Shah. Think about that. The same population that fought for freedom got caught between two systems of oppression—one installed with foreign backing, the other born from the chaos that followed. And yet today, we’re fed cartoon narratives about “good guys” and “bad guys” by the same circles that helped create the conditions in the first place. The loudest voices pushing confrontation now—the self-proclaimed “defenders of democracy,” the bloodthirsty interventionists, the neoconservative war architects—are the ideological descendants of the same mindset that greenlit the 1953 coup. Different decade, same playbook: destabilize, intervene, and deal with the consequences later. And when it comes to Israel, criticism is constantly dismissed as something it’s not, instead of being engaged with honestly. The accusations of "jew hate" instead of actually addressing the zionist's gnashing of teeth at the thought of genocide against it's enemies is just a smokescreen to cover for evil intentions. There are real geopolitical strategies, real military calculations, and real human costs involved—especially when tensions with Iran escalate. Ignoring that complexity and reducing everything to slogans only makes meaningful discussion impossible. Here’s the uncomfortable truth: you cannot repeatedly interfere in a region for strategic gain, undermine its democratic movements, and then act surprised when instability, resentment, and extremism take root. This isn’t about defending regimes. It’s about understanding cause and effect. History didn’t just “happen” to Iran. It was shaped—by coups, by foreign policy decisions, and by people who never had to live with the consequences. And we’re still watching those consequences unfold in real time.
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Matt Walsh
Matt Walsh@MattWalshBlog·
Today Lindsey Graham, who for some reason has been the White House's top spokesman for this war, went on TV and invoked Iwo Jima while calling for more escalation in Iran. Iwo Jima of course involved 26 thousand US casualties. It's extremely troubling that Graham has so much influence with the administration and has been so empowered to speak on its behalf. He is not conservative, he is not America first, he has never done a single thing in his career to advance the interests of actual American citizens, and he clearly wants this war to continue indefinitely and doesn't care how many Americans die in the process. He should have no influence and no say over anything. He's one of the worst people in all of congress and that includes the Democrats.
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