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Austin Achter
6K posts

Austin Achter
@Doctor_Achter3
Saved by Christ. The Ohio State University Alum. Love America more than you do.
Katılım Mayıs 2011
220 Takip Edilen285 Takipçiler

@SDCStormyNights @captive_dreamer This is of course true. But for some reason people feel he is a threat to MAGA, because he ran against him I guess? He would be an excellent executive.
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@captive_dreamer I don't think DeSantis is old dopey loser GOP at all though. Often times it feels like DeSantis is even further right than Trump.
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This is absolutely correct. They're soft shilling Rubio (who is great btw, he has said he won't run against Vance) and likely trying to do another push for DeSantis or Cruz. Very transparent.
They want to go back to the old GOP of Mike Pence and Mitt Romney. losers.
Jack Posobiec@JackPosobiec
If you look closely, many of the accounts that were anti-Trump in 2023 are now all shifting hard anti-Vance. The talking points have gone out. They’re activating the network that lost in Iowa 2024 for 2028. Good! This will be fun
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Austin Achter retweetledi

The plan of Marxist leaders:
1. Ensure that schools do not properly teach economics.
2. Create envy in the minds of economically illiterate citizens by asserting that there is a limited pie of national wealth and some people have too much of that pie.
3. Appoint themselves as the arbiters of wealth distribution and rely on the envy of the economically illiterate masses to achieve power.
4. Use that power to ensure that everyone is equally poor, except them of course because they deserve disproportionate wealth because of all the "responsibility" they shoulder.
5. Build that party dacha on the Volga River and eat caviar.
6. Profit.
_________________________
With respect to @elonmusk they are somewhere between steps #2 and #3.
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@IAPolls2022 Anyone thinking Ohio is a toss up is either dumb or just a democratic hack
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@RonDeSantis Have you read America’s Revolutionary Mind by C. Bradley Thompson? One of my all time favs
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I’d actually recommend (for a non-Wood 1776 book) The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution by Bernard Bailyn.
Read it and you’ll understand why they revolted over infringements far less than what many put up with on a daily basis today.
Fetty Bored Cynic@BoredFetty73823
@RonDeSantis Have you read 1776 by David Mccollough? Maybe that’s the third?
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@awfulannouncing I don’t go into the depths of hockey twitter but I have no idea why they hate McDonough, he’s electric.
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Sean McDonough: "These gentlemen would quiet all the critics wondering where they've been if they score the game-winner in overtime... THEY SCOOOOORE! SETH JARVIS QUIETS THE CRITICS AND IGNITES THE CROWD!" 🏒🚨🎙️ #StanleyCupFinal #NHL
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Austin Achter retweetledi

The richest man in America signed a document that could have gotten him hanged, and when someone sneered that he was safe because no one would know which Charles Carroll to come for, he picked up the pen and told the British exactly where to find him.
His name was Charles Carroll, and the colonies were crawling with men who shared it. His own father was Charles Carroll of Annapolis. So when the Declaration of Independence came to him for signing in 1776, a delegate made a cruel little joke. He said Carroll risked nothing by signing. There were so many Charles Carrolls that the King's men would never know which one to hang.
Carroll didn't argue. He leaned over the page and added three words to his signature: "of Carrollton." The name of his estate. His address. He was the only signer in the entire room who wrote down where he lived, and he did it on purpose, so that if the British wanted to come hang the traitor, they would know exactly which door to knock on.
That is who Charles Carroll of Carrollton was.
Here is what makes the moment even sharper. He was not a man with little to lose. He was the single wealthiest man in the thirteen colonies and the largest private landowner among them. While George Washington and John Hancock get talked about as rich men, it was Carroll who topped them all. When he signed, he was wagering the biggest personal fortune in America against a noose.
And he was the last man anyone would have expected to be there at all. Carroll was Catholic. In colonial Maryland, a colony founded as a Catholic refuge that had since turned on its own, Catholics could not vote. They could not hold public office. They could not worship in public. The most educated, wealthiest man in America was, in the eyes of the law, a second-class subject barred from the very government he was helping to create. He had spent seventeen years being educated by Jesuits in France and spoke five languages fluently, and back home he still could not legally cast a ballot.
So he became the only Catholic to sign the Declaration of Independence, putting his name on a revolution that he hoped would build a country with room for men like him. That was its own enormous bet, made by a man the existing system had already shut out.
Then he simply outlived everyone.
Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both died on the same astonishing day, July 4, 1826, exactly fifty years after the Declaration. When they were gone, Charles Carroll of Carrollton was the last living signer left on earth. For six more years he was the final human link to that room in Philadelphia, the last hand that had signed, a living relic of the founding that ordinary Americans traveled to see and shake.
He finally died in November 1832 at the age of ninety-five, fifty-six years after he wrote his address on a treason document and dared the empire to come find him.
The richest man in America. The only Catholic. The last one standing. He had more to lose than any of them, every legal reason to stay quiet, and he signed his full address anyway.
We remember the names we were handed in school. We forget the man who made sure his couldn't be mistaken for anyone else's.
Which Founding Father do you think history shortchanged the most?

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Austin Achter retweetledi

One of the big reasons for the current lack of patriotism and pride in our nation’s history is that about 40 years ago our most prominent storytellers in Hollywood just basically stopped telling stories about American history altogether, unless it has something to do with WW2, civil rights, or slavery. I mean they just released a movie about the meteorologist who did the weather report for D-Day. They’ll give WW2 weathermen their own movies before they tell a story from any other era of American history.
The Right has attempted to counteract this a little bit, but “conservative” attempts at American history films and TV shows are invariably hokey and kid friendly, the kind of thing you can watch with your grandmother and your 5 year old, and you’ll all be equally informed and bored by the experience.
We need R-rated adult-oriented American history stories. Daniel Boone should have his own series. It would be gritty and violent and not for children, but it would also be phenomenally entertaining and put an American legend back on the cultural map, so to speak. The fact that Daniel Boone hasn’t been depicted on screen at all since like the 60s is a travesty. Throw a dart at that guy’s Wikipedia page and you’ll land on something that could be its own feature length trilogy.
That’s just one example. How is there not a great R-rated movie or series about Antietam? Or Kit Carson? Or the Panama Canal? How does Theodore Roosevelt not have like 10 movies about different periods of his life?
You could go much farther back to pre-American history. A movie about Cortes’s conquest of Tenochtitlan would be tremendous and horrifying and fascinating, and it would introduce into the public consciousness one of the world’s most incredible stories that most Americans know next to nothing about. And on and on.
The possibilities are literally endless. All of these movies, if they’re executed to even a B+ level, could make hundreds of millions of dollars and transform the culture in a way that a million podcast monologues never could. If the Right actually wants to reclaim the culture, this is the place to start.
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Austin Achter retweetledi

@christopherrufo @scipio1776 But they aren’t the “top 535” at their jobs. Also, the Founders never envisioned Congress being a profession, but a temporary job of representing the People.
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@scipio1776 Yes. The top 535 people in virtually any other profession make much, much more than $174,000 a year.
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Austin Achter retweetledi

FINAL | Thanks for the hospitaLLLity, Ann Arbor 🧹
The Buckeyes sweep the Wolverines in Ann Arbor for the first time since 1994‼️
#GoBucks

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@KylePorterNS @DataGolf I don’t think people understand just how incredible Tiger was. 25% win percentage is just bonkers
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Rory turns 37 today.
Here are some Rory-Tiger-Phil numbers on their 37th birthdays. PGA Tour + major championships only. All numbers from @DataGolf.

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Austin Achter retweetledi
Austin Achter retweetledi

Meanwhile, legacy media and mainstream Democrats keep promoting people who call Trump a pedophile, a rapist and traitor.
BNO News@BNONews
NEW: Cole Allen wrote a manifesto saying he was targeting Trump officials: "I am no longer willing to permit a pedophile, rapist, and traitor to coat my hands with his crimes."
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Austin Achter retweetledi

Retards starting tweeting that the assassination attempt was "staged" 10 seconds after it happened. No evidence for that claim. No reason to make it. Nothing at all. Just a narrative constructed out of whole cloth. They have the guy in custody, alive. And yet they'll still say this was somehow a hoax. You have to understand that, for a lot of people in this country, the truth just doesn't matter. It makes no difference to them. The truth is whatever they want it to be. These are the same people who spent years claiming that men can give birth the babies. They're living in fantasyland. They cannot differentiate between the things they wish are real and the things that are actually real. They don't recognize the distinction between these categories. They're toddlers in adult bodies. Their brains and souls are malformed. There's no saving them.
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Austin Achter retweetledi
Austin Achter retweetledi

The Eric Swalwell situation is a Prime example of how effective and ruthless the Democrat Party is
Eric was infiltrated by a Chinese Spy in his rise to power
No Problem
Eric has been an awful person both policy wise AND on a personal level,(as the latest allegations seem to validate), for 13 years in Congress
No Problem
Eric Decides to Run for Governor in CA and now with all of the Democrats in the Primary, his presence will likely cost Democrats the Governors Office with their goofy Primary System
Once he is no longer an asset for them, open up the closet and watch the skeletons they ignored for decades fall out
The Speed and effectiveness is astounding...the politicians and the media ruin the dude in a day
None of this is new, none of this is "shocking", they decided he is no longer useful and they curb stomped him
There is a lesson there for everyone on the left, but I don't think they will see it
Rep. Eric Swalwell@RepSwalwell
Hear it directly from me. These allegations are flat false. And I will fight them.
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