Hammerjack

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Hammerjack

Hammerjack

@Hammerjack90

Author of HAMMERJACK and PRODIGAL. https://t.co/auvmWNvRfm Check out my new high-tech thriller CANDIDATE Z! https://t.co/cet0s5gclJ

Florida Katılım Mart 2012
697 Takip Edilen1.7K Takipçiler
Clifford Asness
Clifford Asness@CliffordAsness·
Perhaps only the NYT could drop this in the middle of a story, spend not a moment musing about it, and move on.
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Hammerjack
Hammerjack@Hammerjack90·
With the talk of Thomas or Alito possibly retiring soon, and hints from Donald Trump that he would like @RonDeSantis to have a role in his administration…could DeSantis possibly be a potential Supreme Court nominee? 🤔
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Walter Kirn
Walter Kirn@walterkirn·
I asked him to keep the rumors of my intriguing secret life coming -- and he has!
Ben Carlisle@WriteInMayorBen

@walterkirn No Walter, you are not a full-blown secret agent. You, like @AlexBerenson, do contract work with the CIA to disseminate propaganda. They let Alex be sorta right about Covid to get street cred w/ freedom lovers on the right. You are not impressive; but you are occasionally spot on

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Hammerjack
Hammerjack@Hammerjack90·
When you see crap like this, you understand why Western powers haven’t won a war in decades. Infrastructure that helps the enemy carry out its war efforts is a legitimate target. Period.
BBC Radio 4 Today@BBCr4today

"You don't hit schools, you don't hit energy sources, you don't hit bridges: those are war crimes." UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher criticises actions in the Iran war and says leaders have chosen 'game show gambling' over humanity by hitting civilian infrastructure.

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Hammerjack
Hammerjack@Hammerjack90·
@BradRTorgersen We don’t even have to imagine what that would be like. Remember DARK FATE?
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Hammerjack
Hammerjack@Hammerjack90·
@ATRightMovies The Sci-Fi Channel promotional special for THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT was a lot better than the actual movie.
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All The Right Movies
All The Right Movies@ATRightMovies·
Which horror movie stayed with you for days?
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Hammerjack
Hammerjack@Hammerjack90·
@damintoell @BridgetPhetasy Damin, you’re just weird with an odd mayo fixation—not retarded. Quit trying to appropriate retard culture.
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Bridget Phetasy
Bridget Phetasy@BridgetPhetasy·
I fought the retard left. And I see I’m gonna have to fight the retard whatever this new thing is too.
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Wokal Distance
Wokal Distance@wokal_distance·
The reason the left prosecuted the David Daleiden for a decade, sued a Colorado baker for 13 years, and deposed the DOGE boys the moment doge ended, is to send a message: "If you succeed at conservative politics we will come after you forever and we will never leave you alone."
LifeNews.com@LifeNewsHQ

BREAKING: Final Charge Dismissed Against David Daleiden for Exposing Planned Parenthood Aborted Baby Part Sales lifenews.com/2026/04/02/fin…

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Hammerjack
Hammerjack@Hammerjack90·
King himself didn’t care for Kubrick’s adaptation of THE SHINING, ostensibly because it strayed from the themes and characters in the book (King himself wrote a screenplay that Kubrick rejected). Ironically, King’s vision would later be realized in a two-part miniseries on ABC, which to me was every bit as boring and forgettable as Siskel claimed the feature film to be.
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PoIiMath
PoIiMath@politicalmath·
My teens wanted to watch a horror movie so we watched The Shining, which sent me down a rabbit trail Critics *hated* The Shining when it was released. Siskel gave it 2 stars. Variety said Kubrick "destroyed all that was so terrifying about the King novel". One critic called it "Shallow, self-conscious, and dull. Read the book". Kubrick was nominated for "Worst Director" at the first Razzie awards I find all of this insane. In imdb, The Shining is rated as one of the top 100 movies of all time. It is seared into our collective memory with "all work and no play" and "Here's Johnny" and "red rum". Somehow Kubrick made a horror movie that every "smart" person hated when it came out and yet endured as one of the great movies of all time. How do you do that?
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Damin Toell
Damin Toell@damintoell·
Anything ever happen with that Greenland deal?
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Bite-Sized Nostalgia
Bite-Sized Nostalgia@landofthe80s·
Was there a more odd nickname on a sitcom this his? 😳
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Hammerjack
Hammerjack@Hammerjack90·
@YesternightPost @DrewPavlou @MaxNordau The first of the modern age. Unless you were there, you really don’t know how much of a grip that had on the public consciousness—and the absolutely bat-guano stuff that people believed had happened.
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YA
YA@YesternightPost·
@Hammerjack90 @DrewPavlou @MaxNordau Satanic conspiracies are a powerful myth of the American zeitgeist. They are cemented in our psyche like UFOs. The satanic panic flap of the 80s probably wasn’t the first.
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Hammerjack retweetledi
Bonchie
Bonchie@bonchieredstate·
The current state of The Bulwark. People who spent a decade promoting the Iraq War are now certain that a month-old conflict of total military domination has been lost because it's not over yet.
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Hammerjack
Hammerjack@Hammerjack90·
@Shawn_Farash Trump hinted a couple of weeks ago that he’d like Ron DeSantis serving in the administration. Just sayin…
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Shawn Farash
Shawn Farash@Shawn_Farash·
Bondi has been "reassigned" and will remain a part of the admin, but will not be the Attorney General going forward. DAG Todd Blanche will be the acting AG in an interim role. I'd love to see Lee Zeldin named as the permanent replacement at the AG position.
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Hammerjack
Hammerjack@Hammerjack90·
We didn’t create the problem. Iran did. And how freely do you think oil would be flowing through the Strait of Hormuz once the mullahs got nuclear weapons and had the IRBMs to lob them at Europe? They’d be holding a quarter of the world economy hostage and nobody would be able to do anything about it.
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Pembroke Street Capital
Pembroke Street Capital@Pembrokestcap·
NATO was established as a defensive alliance. This is an offensive action, at best a prophylactic action, which we spent no time trying to build support for with our allies. Oil and other products were flowing freely before, now they aren’t as a result of our actions (whether justified or not - that’s just a factual statement). And we are now saying all our allies must get involved in this action to fix the problem we created. So the refutation to this argument is fairly straightforward, and indeed, is being articulated by all our allies.
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Clifford D. May
Clifford D. May@CliffordDMay·
I'm pro-NATO. But I can't think of a single argument to refute what @MsMelChen says here. Not one. If others can, please weigh in.
Melissa Chen@MsMelChen

Let’s be real here. Europe has spent decades freeloading on American security. Even now, with every NATO member finally hitting the 2% GDP target in 2025. But beyond the financial contributions, the real rupture is philosophical and the Iran crisis has shown a spotlight on it. Europe worships process. Endless committees, consultations, and “predictability.” Macron actually calls it a virtue. For Trump, this is paralysis as his style is to articulate a threat, fix a target, and act. The Americans are men of conviction and purpose. Europe on the other hand lives by bureaucratic liturgy and in high-minded abstractions. Sure, Americans might make mistakes when acting. But Europe never considers what the costs of not acting actually are. Just look at how their nations are doing on various fronts, especially on the border crisis, and you see the same cancerous rot that undergirds their foreign policy approach play out domestically. It's the same problem on a different scale. Iran is currently holding the Strait of Hormuz hostage, choking 20% of global oil and spiking prices past $100 a barrel. Meanwhile, the regime is bleeding from strikes, its nuclear ambitions are still alive despite degraded capability, and its proxies are firing missiles at allies and oil tankers. If this isn’t a clear and present danger to the global economy - of which Europe is a part - then I don’t know what is. Yet when Washington asked to use European bases to finish the job - bases the US has defended for generations, the response was hesitation and hand-wringing. The US did strike from RAF Fairford, but only after warnings that British soil could become a “legitimate target.” If you cannot agree that a theocratic regime with eschatological ambitions who have shown no restraint in hitting out at Gulf countries and threatening the world’s energy jugular is an enemy worth confronting, then what, exactly, are we allies about? Europe loves to preen about being tough on Russia. They issue condemnations and speeches and slap sanctions that hardly work to cripple the Russian economy. Now here was a chance to do something concrete: let the Americans use the bases they already pay for, help clear the Strait, and actually degrade the Iranian war machine that arms Moscow’s proxies. Turmp didn’t ask for boots on the ground or any kind of more offensive action. All he wanted was permission to operate from the infrastructure America has underwritten for decades. They couldn’t even manage that. So can you blame the Americans for seeing NATO for what it is? A paper-tiger alliance that expects Washington to bleed and pay while Brussels and London convenes and deliberates. If Europe refuses to treat Iran as the threat it is while happily letting American power keep the Strait open and the lights on, then the alliance is already dead. Trump is simply stating the obvious and the Americans are becoming very reluctant to subsidize the European delusion any longer.

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