Mr Mike MightBeRight

5.1K posts

Mr Mike MightBeRight

Mr Mike MightBeRight

@HugeMike3

New York, USA Katılım Temmuz 2009
1.2K Takip Edilen224 Takipçiler
P Schmidt
P Schmidt@The_P_Schmidt·
@Mrgunsngear Next he'll get a ticket for talking on his phone while driving.
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Mrgunsngear
Mrgunsngear@Mrgunsngear·
*graphic warning* A man's hand was cut off in a reported assault in Rochester New York yesterday✋🏼 He was transported to the hospital and is now fine outside of not having a hand. Police were searching for the suspect in a nearby apartment and found a 12'' knife believed to be the weapon used in the attack. No arrests have been made; shocker 🤨 Train and arm yourselves accordingly... #CityLife #rochester #crime #hand #enrichment #decay #3rdWorld #TQ #urban #NewYork #democrats
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Mr Mike MightBeRight
Mr Mike MightBeRight@HugeMike3·
@PopularLiberal Definitely an on paper scam. If it wasn't you would see insane rockets taking off and being caught, wildly advanced electric cars everywhere you look and a awesome new global wifi system that he has used to safe countless lives in a myriad of places across the world... all fake!
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Popular Liberal 🇺🇸
Popular Liberal 🇺🇸@PopularLiberal·
WOW! THE NUCLEAR MATH BOMB: Elon Musk just lost $350 billion in one week from his SpaceX IPO Ponzi. Let me put that in perspective for you: He takes $38 billion from your tax dollars in government contracts. That's $104 million per day, $730 million per week, $3.1 billion per month, and $38 billion per year. And what did he do with it? He built a $1.75 trillion valuation scam that just blew up and vaporized $350 billion of investor money in 7 days. SpaceX lost $4.3 billion in Q1 2026 alone. Starlink lost $2.5 billion in Q1. xAI is burning $14 billion a year. He became the world's first "trillionaire" on a fake valuation—then lost $350 billion in a week while still cashing $104 million of your money every single day. That's not capitalism. That's not innovation. That's the biggest Ponzi scam in American history—and Donald Trump is his co-conspirator. Your taxes built his rocket. His lies stole your 401k. And he's still grifting.
Popular Liberal 🇺🇸 tweet media
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Adam
Adam@Adam00xx·
Top 5 Ohtani moments in MLB. One question: Who is your favorite playerin MLB? 🌟 Drop your pick in the comments and let’s see who gets the most support! 👇🔥
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Lucy Biggers
Lucy Biggers@LLBiggers·
Looking at the discourse around this heat wave, you'd think there had never been a heat wave before. But I know from researching for my book that in 1911, France endured 70 days of heat that killed an estimated 40,000 people. Temperatures up to 116°F (47°C) were recorded, which is 2 degrees above the 114°F everyone is currently losing their minds over. Luckily, today we know how to survive heat. That's why millions of people live in the deserts of Arizona and Nevada. The problem is that because this heat is somehow considered "our fault," many people refuse to consider adaptation. AC units cost about $150, which—as @Marian_L_Tupy points out in Superabundance—requires a blue-collar worker to save a little over five hours of labor. Right now, France could be saving lives if more homes had installed air conditioning after the last time they saw 114°F in 2019. If we were going through a cooling period and experienced above-average snowfall a few years in a row, by the second or third year I'd buy a snowblower. Air conditioning shouldn't be any different. This heat wave is above average, but it is not unprecedented, and we have existing technology that save lives. But you can't tell that to the people in the comments section of every fearful heat-wave post, lamenting the end of the world, and gathering for climate grief circles. It would be funny if it weren't so sad.
Lucy Biggers tweet media
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Handre
Handre@Handre·
For fifty years the economic establishment has told you that deflation is a disease. Falling prices, they warn, freeze spending, crush wages, spiral the economy into a tomb. Then there's Switzerland, which has spent decades doing the forbidden thing and somehow refuses to die. The Swiss franc bought you roughly 0.23 dollars in 1970. Today it buys you about 1.20. The currency appreciated against the dollar by a factor of five while Swiss living standards rose to among the highest on earth. Consumer prices in Switzerland have repeatedly turned negative: 2015, 2016, 2020. Each time the Keynesian commentariat predicted catastrophe. Each time the Swiss kept buying watches, building tunnels through the Alps, and running a current account surplus that would envy any German. Here's what a strong currency actually does to you. Your savings grow without you lifting a finger. The chocolate bar that cost five francs holds its value or gets cheaper as Lindt's productivity improves. You are not robbed in your sleep by a central bank printing your purchasing power into the pockets of the politically connected. A Swiss worker who stuffs francs under the mattress is rewarded for thrift, the oldest bourgeois virtue, the one Washington and Frankfurt have spent a century punishing. Free market thinkers explained this generations ago. Prices fall because production rises. When a factory makes more shoes per hour, shoes get cheaper. This is not a malfunction. This is the entire point of an economy. The "deflationary spiral" the IMF dreads requires people to indefinitely postpone eating, heating, and clothing themselves in anticipation of a 0.8 percent price drop. Humans don't do this. The Swiss certainly don't. So when the European Central Bank tells you it must hit two percent inflation forever to keep you employed, understand what it is confessing. It needs your money to lose value because its entire model depends on debtors outrunning savers, on stimulus over thrift, on the quiet transfer running underneath the floorboards. The Swiss declined the offer. Their reward sits in every vault in Zurich, getting heavier while everyone else's gets lighter.
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Mr Mike MightBeRight
Mr Mike MightBeRight@HugeMike3·
@drantbradley And then you can Amir Khan to came to America broke, washed dishes, learned, took risks, worked, worked worked and now owns an NFL football team, a UK soccer team, and an auto parts empire. But yea capitalism is ONLY evil!
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Anthony Bradley
Anthony Bradley@drantbradley·
This is one of the best illustrations of what socialism (in any form) does to the poor. It promises a ladder of programs & benefits but can’t lift people out of poverty. No country on earth has made the poor better off under socialist governments.
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Jon Levine
Jon Levine@LevineJonathan·
Truly wild stuff from a local NYC coffee shop — the city has become a very broken place Can't help but also notice Dan Goldman's thoroughly dignified response Also wondering @TheLeoTerrell @HarmeetKDhillon if this legal
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
In the 1980s, California spent around seventy-four million dollars of public money building the Kern Water Bank, a vast underground reservoir meant to hold water for cities to fall back on in a drought. Today it largely waters almonds and pistachios for a single billionaire couple. Stewart and Lynda Resnick own the Wonderful Company, the outfit behind Wonderful Pistachios, POM juice, Halos mandarins and Fiji Water, and the biggest nut growers in the United States. In 1994, across a few days of closed-door talks on the Monterey Peninsula, that taxpayer-built water bank was quietly moved out of public hands. When the dust settled, a Wonderful subsidiary held a 57 percent controlling stake. The same deal let water be banked, traded and sold like a commodity, and stripped cities of the priority they used to hold in a shortage. So in a dry year the Resnicks can sell water back to the very public that paid to store it, at a premium. The rest gets poured onto permanent orchards in the semi-arid western San Joaquin Valley, ground that sits close to desert and survives only on imported water. An almond drinks roughly a gallon apiece, and a nut tree cannot be left fallow when the rain fails the way a field of lettuce can. The thirst is locked in for decades. None of this happened by accident. The Resnicks have poured millions into politicians of both parties and sit among Gavin Newsom's largest donors. Water in California is supposed to belong to the public. They worked out that whoever owns the land and the paperwork owns the water, and they bought both.
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Elon Musk just proved that ownership in America is a legal fiction. Musk: “You get taxed on what you earn, you get taxed on what you buy, and you get taxed on what you own.” Think about what property tax actually means. You worked for decades. Paid it off in full. The deed is in your name. Stop paying the government its annual fee. Watch them take it and sell it to someone who will. You never owned that house. You were leasing it from an entity you never signed a contract with. Income tax tells the same truth in softer packaging. The government does not take a portion of your earnings. They decide how much of your own labor you are permitted to keep. That is not semantics. It is a confession of who the system believes your time belongs to first. Sales tax buries itself in the receipt. Two people exchange value voluntarily. A third party who contributed nothing takes a cut simply for allowing it to happen. Now stack all three. Taxed when you create. Taxed when you spend. Taxed when you hold. Taxed again when you die and try to pass it to your children. At no point in that cycle does the system recognize your output as yours. Because money is not an abstraction. It is crystallized human lifespan. Every dollar taxed is an hour you already lived, already bled for, already gone. The state is not managing an economy. It is claiming dominion over time you will never get back. And spending it on systems you never asked for and actively oppose. The institution extracting all of it faces zero obligation to perform. A contractor who delivers nothing gets fired. A bureaucracy that burns through trillions gets a budget increase the next fiscal year. SpaceX pays taxes to the agencies that obstruct its launches. Tesla funds the regulators drafting rules to shield its competitors. The builders are not subsidizing government. They are financing their own friction. The tax code is 74,000 pages long. Not because the economy demands it. Because the extraction had to be buried in enough complexity that you would stop asking who it was designed to protect. The past belonged to the people who taxed the world. The future belongs to the people who build it.
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Hunter Biden
Hunter Biden@HunterBiden·
Dear Joe, I wish I could sit down with you face to face and explain why so many of us were offended by the UFC fight on the South Lawn of the White House. For me, it had nothing to do with the UFC or who showed up for the fights. The brand you and Dana have built is a bona fide American success story. More power to you. As for the fighters, in my book, anyone brave enough to put it all on the line in the arena is remarkable to witness. Their dedication and discipline inspire me. I don’t understand anyone who can’t admire that. And as for the people who attended, I, for one, love Shane Gillis. I think he’s hilarious and brilliant. It was a show. A once-in-a-lifetime spectacle. I can’t blame anyone for wanting to witness it firsthand. My problem is that I believe some of our public spaces are sacred. And unlike many of the great powers that came before us, these American monuments belong to all of us. Not to whoever happens to hold power at the moment. The White House does not belong to Donald Trump. It does not belong to any President. It belongs to the people. To treat it as Caesar treated the Colosseum is antithetical to everything our founding fathers fought for. This is not Rome. Presidents are not emperors doling out bread and circuses for the peasants. The White House is the People’s House. This “celebration” could have happened in any stadium within a stone’s throw of the South Lawn. No one would have had an issue with it. But that was obviously Donald Trump’s whole point. By holding the event on the South Lawn, what he was saying to the rest of us is: “This is my house. I own it. I will do with it what I please. I’ll build a colosseum and have the gladiators fight under my gaze. I’ll tear down the East Wing. I’ll pave over the Rose Garden. I’ll cover everything in gold and marble. I’ll erase the names of all the men who came before me.” The fights were an exhibition of imperial domination, not a celebration of our 250th anniversary as a democracy. The White House is not Buckingham Palace. It is not the Palace of Versailles. It is not the Forbidden City of Beijing. It does not belong to an emperor, or a king, or a commissar. The White House belongs to us. All of us. The person who sits behind the Resolute Desk in the Oval Office is nothing more than an honored guest. A temporary caretaker. The President is our servant. Not our Caesar. Respectfully, Hunter P.S. Cage match between me and Don Jr.? Your call on the venue. Anywhere but the South Lawn.
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The Best
The Best@TheBestqueenx·
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Sam
Sam@Sam93590343·
@HaterReport WNBA players need to only be talking about women’s basketball. ESPN is a joke for having her on. 🤦🏻‍♂️
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Hater Report
Hater Report@HaterReport·
Becky Hammon on why the Knicks can’t win a championship: “They don't have a dude... you got to have a 1A dude." Perkins: "They do have that dude…Jalen Brunson." Hammon: "He too small. If your best player is small, you're not winning."
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Croxxed Out
Croxxed Out@FLCons·
Bike race, guy hits the grass and a puddle, pulls his bike back to recover, and takes out almost half the other racers as a result. At what point does disqualification not seem like enough? Do you think it was intentional or just a really bad decision?
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Governor Kathy Hochul
Governor Kathy Hochul@GovKathyHochul·
Dream. Team.

After years of planning, the World Cup is finally here.

What a day.
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