Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼

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Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼

Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼

@FireBobcat

Denver-born & well-traveled. Masters in religion/theology. Small Business manager & sub teacher. Disney fan. Pro-Democracy, Pragmatic, Progressive. GO AVS/NUGS

Colorado, USA Katılım Temmuz 2011
244 Takip Edilen112 Takipçiler
Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
@32nds @RichardHanania Lmao just seeing this response. Look, I didn’t invent the dictionary where yes, “mid-decade” means 2025 and not 2022. And I didn’t invent reality where states don’t get census data until mid to late 2021 and the New York mess was part of that. Argue on facts or take the L, bye 👋🏻
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Jaime Griesemer
Jaime Griesemer@32nds·
@FireBobcat @RichardHanania "This current mess" starts on your specific timeline and anything before that doesn't count. This allows you to reach the conclusion you pre-determined. Great. Later.
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Richard Hanania
Richard Hanania@RichardHanania·
He’s talking about Democrats. Democrats are the ones who want to imprison their enemies. No, seriously. This is what he says. It’s hard to think of a dumber way to be right wing.
Mike Solana@micsolana

all of their ideas now are like “should we dissolve the government, imprison our opponents, and seize every lever of power in the country? we’re the good guys remember, if we don’t do this the bad guys will win (an election)” like they don’t even talk about healthcare anymore lol

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Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
@32nds @RichardHanania Well my memory maybe isn’t as sharp as it used to be but you’re still factually wrong lmao. The February 2022 situation in NY wasn’t a “mid decade redistricting,” that was literally just the standard 2020 Census redistricting which turned into a drawn-out clusterfuck.
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Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
@32nds @RichardHanania You’re just factually wrong about redistricting. Texas started the mid-decade wars in 2025 at the request of Trump. There is even an article on Wikipedia dedicated to the whole fiasco. You pay Elon for a blue check, ask Grok if you must.
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Jaime Griesemer
Jaime Griesemer@32nds·
Now who is projecting? NY and CA tried redistricting first, they are just incompetent. Trump explicitly called to end the filibuster in response to the Democrats saying they would do it when they re-take power. Regardless, I'm glad that you are now admitting that there are bad people on both sides.
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Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
@32nds @RichardHanania For fun - I’m skeptical of expanding courts, but Republicans have done it in 3 states now. I think mid-decade redistricting and more aptly gerrymandering is bad, which Republicans started this year in TX. And I’m maybe for ending the filibuster, which Trump had also called for 🤷🏻‍♂️
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Jaime Griesemer
Jaime Griesemer@32nds·
Your presidential front runner for 2028 just held a conference call to talk about packing the court and eliminating the electoral college and ending the filibuster. No idea was considered too extreme to consider to take power. The man who wants to be Speaker said he is going to war and listed similarly outrageous tactics. Your best political consultant said to stop talking about these extreme tactics (because they are rightly unpopular) and just do them. Just because your head is in the sand doesn’t mean we can’t all see it happening.
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Brain
Brain@AstrosBrain·
@micsolana @gfodor their supporters’ sense of concern is hopelessly mis-calibrated, having been steeped for 10 years in Trump-is-Hitler
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Mike Solana
Mike Solana@micsolana·
all of their ideas now are like “should we dissolve the government, imprison our opponents, and seize every lever of power in the country? we’re the good guys remember, if we don’t do this the bad guys will win (an election)” like they don’t even talk about healthcare anymore lol
Pat Adams@PatAdams96

Kamala Harris is now calling for Democrats to hold a “No Bad Idea Brainstorm” where they discuss: - Abolishing the Electoral College - Packing the Supreme Court - Making Puerto Rico and D.C. states “We’ve got to neutralize these red states from cheating!”

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Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
@32nds @RichardHanania Lmao he is not clearly correct and you have a laughably broad definition of the word “tried.” Points for imaginination I guess, though it seems to be bordering on paranoia which is concerning.
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Jaime Griesemer
Jaime Griesemer@32nds·
Democrats just tried to lower the retirement age of the VA Supreme Court to 54 so they could completely remake the court so they could illegally redistrict so they could disenfranchise slightly less than half the state so they could win the House so they can invent some charges to impeach the President and throw him in prison. Solana is clearly correct.
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Kyle Clark
Kyle Clark@KyleClark·
UPDATE: Recess Beer Garden in Denver says it will not host an unvaccinated singles mixer by the group Unjected, citing the organizers' failure to comply with their policies for large groups and "escalating safety concerns."
Kyle Clark tweet mediaKyle Clark tweet media
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Dilan Esper
Dilan Esper@dilanesper·
Obviously, the campaign against "suicidal empathy" is sociopathic (and if you like it, please, stop talking about politics and see a psychiatrist), but beyond that, it's also empirically false. We're clearly getting less and less empathetic. Social media is making us bigger jerks
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James Medlock
James Medlock@jdcmedlock·
Conservatives love to say charity will replace the welfare state, and then if someone suggests billionaires should give back to the common good they melt down and call them a Marxist-Leninist.
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Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
@jdcmedlock Even more sad are the number of conservative *Christians* who respond this way. Wolfe calling charity evil is on brand for him. He would have been incensed at Jesus telling the rich man to sell all his stuff, give to the poor, and follow him.
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Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
@mattyglesias It’s funny (sad, telling, etc) that two of these screen-capped responses are by prominent “Christians.” They apparently haven’t read Luke 12:48 or like most of the Bible? Wolfe calling charity “evil” is especially on brand for him. He would have called Jesus evil in Matthew 19.
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Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
@Wario64 To be fair, I’ll still buy this and my hope is it’s essentially a reboot that will lead to a legit sequel if it (hopefully) sells well now that they have a full StarFox engine built. But damn how many times do I have to save the Lylat system from Andross? 😂
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Wario64
Wario64@Wario64·
"Star Fox" announced for Nintendo Switch 2, based on the Nintendo 64 game. Visuals update & characters redesigned
Wario64 tweet mediaWario64 tweet mediaWario64 tweet mediaWario64 tweet media
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Jim Hanson
Jim Hanson@JimHansonDC·
@Timodc I assume you think Israel forced Trump into this war as well Both are absurd as Trump does nothing except by his choice often to the consternation of advisers and allies. But enjoy your caricature
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Bryan M 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
@RyanHoliday Summary of John’s post: I read a few books about Trump so I am far too sophisticated to stoop to calling him “bad.” Look at how superior and above the fray I am. In fact he’s actually good. Cringe and wildly lacking any semblance of virtues or moral compass.
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Ryan Holiday
Ryan Holiday@RyanHoliday·
Ryan Holiday tweet media
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad

Ryan was once a friend. He’s been out sailing on my boat. I helped him sketch the initial pivot to writing about the Stoics. Sadly, this isn’t his most shocking video. That distinction belongs to the ones featuring his kids at Trump rallies. He’s a smart guy and a deep thinker, but Trump has him tied up in knots. What made him popular is the unique, insightful advice he gives. That earned him a roster of “celebrity” friends, mostly authors, who reciprocated with network connections and advice of their own. His closest friend is @RobertGreene, who is genuinely a great person. Ryan worked as his assistant, and Robert introduced us. Both are voracious readers. Problem one: Robert is a dork (the best kind), while Ryan is the kind of guy everyone in high school liked. Put another way: Ryan is socially motivated. Robert is introspective and observant. Problem two: Robert had brutal experiences in the workforce and wrote The 48 Laws of Power, in essence, to understand why he kept getting screwed by alpha males. He wants to help people understand the world around them. He isn’t tilting at windmills. He’s offering insight grounded in historical context. Ryan wants to actually improve the world itself. I genuinely believe his motives are good, but unlike the actual Stoics, he lived a normal life that turned into a very charmed one. Ryan’s social radar is phenomenal. He reads trends and knows how to ride them in a modern context. But I don’t think this is an act. He genuinely seems to believe Trump is a monster. How did he arrive at that false conclusion? I don’t know for sure, but we share many mutual friends, and I can trace where our thinking began to diverge. What made me reject the popular “Trump is bad” narrative in our old friend group is the Bronx. My childhood there always lingers in the background. I was (briefly) an EMT in the Bronx. My mother was a visiting nurse in the projects. My father was a firefighter when the Bronx was burning. I’ve thought hard about the liberal policies, and a few conservative ones, that produced the war zone surrounding me. I’ve spent decades working alongside people with hard jobs: soldiers, first responders, offshore oil drillers, merchant mariners. I understand why Trump’s base loves him. I understand why they agree with his policies. Even that wasn’t enough. After January 6th, I had to reevaluate my feelings toward Trump. I hated the Democrats’ slide toward Marxism. But could I keep supporting Trump after so many first-term failures? So I read roughly a dozen biographies, not just about Trump, but by his friends and associates. People who loved him. People who hated him. A truer sense of the man began to emerge. Not all “good,” but realistic, intelligent, and possessed of a deep love for Americans of every type. What makes Ryan so smart is the sheer historical context he carries from a lifetime of reading. He can plug real, useful historical lessons into almost any problem. But you absolutely must understand the full context of a problem in order to fix it. And like the actual Stoics, you have to index the good you want to do against the first-hand disasters you have actually seen. Ryan genuinely wants to fix America, but he is unbalanced. His historical context runs deep. His modern context is superficial. Here he’s trying to solve a problem he has incorrectly indexed as “Trump is bad,” without firsthand exposure to the sufferings of real Americans who have lived through real danger and tragedy. He’s plugging that deep historical context into a superficial understanding of the problems Trump is actually trying to solve. The result? Frustration, anger and rhetorical bombardment that’s almost the polar opposite of stoicism.

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