Cindy C

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Cindy C

Cindy C

@Igardn

❤ Gardening - Facts, Science, Education 👍 Former School Bd Chair & State School Bd Assoc President, Budget Cmte Chair. Volunteer. New England born n raised

New Hampshire and Florida Katılım Ocak 2012
889 Takip Edilen526 Takipçiler
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Cindy C
Cindy C@Igardn·
Don't blame me. I didn't vote for him, and I tried to warn you but groceries were a few dollars more.
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Angela Morabito
Angela Morabito@AngelaLMorabito·
Tonight is the 251st anniversary of Paul Revere’s midnight ride. If he were to make the same journey from Boston to Lexington today, he could stop at 7 Dunkin locations. (via Reddit)
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American History Central
The Battle of Lexington — Let it Begin Here Date and Time — April 19, 5:00 a.m. The British Expedition stopped about a half mile east of Lexington, at Vine Brook, to load their muskets. When they were done, the march resumed, with Major John Pitcairn at the head of the column. Thomas Willard was visiting Lexington that morning. Willard testified that he saw “…about four hundred…regulars in one Body, coming up the road, and marched toward the north part of the common back of the meeting house…” — Deposition #2. John Robins, a member of the Lexington Militia who was wounded in the battle, said he estimated the number of British troops to be “…About a Thousand…” — Deposition #5. As the British marched into Lexington, they saw roughly 80 men, with weapons, assembled on the Green, out in the open. Most were from the Lexington Militia, but a handful, including Sylvanus Wood, were from Woburn. According to legend, Captain John Parker told his men, “Stand your ground, do not fire unless fired upon,” Parker told his men. “If they mean to have a war, let it begin here.” In his April 26 report to General Gage, Major Pitcairn said: “When I arrived at the head of the advance Company, two officers came and informed me, that a man of the rebels advanced from those that were assembled, had presented his musket and attempted to shoot them, but the piece flashed in the pan. On this I gave directions to the troops to move forward, but on no account to fire, or even attempt it without orders; when I arrived at the end of the Village, I observed drawn up upon a Green near 200 rebels; when I came within about 100 yards of them, they began to file off towards some stone walls on our right flank.” A shot was fired, and the British Light Infantry rushed at the Lexington Militia with their bayonets fixed, firing as they attacked Captain John Parker and his men. Most of the militia fled from the Green, but a few returned fire. William Draper was visiting Lexington and testified “…the Commanding Officer of the troops (as I took him) gave the command to the troops to ‘fire! Fire! Dam you fire!’…” — Deposition #11. Another eyewitness, Timothy Fessenden, testified that a British officer brandished his sword and “…pointed it Down towards said Militia, and immediately on which the said Regulars fired a Volley at the Militia…” — Deposition #12. When order was restored, the British reformed the column and resumed the march to Concord. However, eight Americans were killed in the brief skirmish, and 10 more were wounded. Timothy Smith of Lexington said he witnessed “…eight of the Lexington-men who were killed & lay bleeding at a considerabele distance from each other; and several were wounded…” — Deposition #9. Levi Mead and Levi Harrington also testified that “…Eight men belonging to said Company were Killed and several wounded…” — Deposition #10. After the British had marched away, Captain Parker gathered his men and planned to engage the British column when it returned later in the day. In his sworn testimony, Parker recalled: “I…ordered our Militia to meet on the common in said Lexington, to consult what to do, and concluded not to be discovered, nor meddle or make with said Regular Troops (if they should approach) unless they should insult us; and upon their sudden approach, I immediately ordered our Militia to disperse and not to fire. Immediately said Troops made their appearance, and rushed furiously, fired upon and killed eight of our party, without receiving any provocation therefore from us.” — Deposition #4. Benjamin Tidd of Lexington and Joseph Abbot witnessed the British firing on the Lexington Militia. They testified that “…the regulars fired first a few guns which we took to be pistols from some of the Regulars who were mounted on horses and then the said Regulars fired a volley or two before any guns were fired by the Lexington Company…” — Deposition #6. Soon after the British left, more militiamen from Woburn arrived, led by Major Loammi Baldwin. The Woburn men were close enough to Lexington that they could hear the battle during their march and rushed to the aid of Captain Parker and his men, but they arrived too late. The Woburn Militia helped tend to the wounded and then marched west in pursuit of the British. However, they did not march along the Bay Road, they passed through the countryside to avoid coming into direct contact with the British.
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Ed Krassenstein
Ed Krassenstein@EdKrassen·
BREAKING: Tyler Robinson’s defense attorneys just told the judge that while the FBI and ATF claimed in the probable cause statement that Robinson’s DNA was found on the rifle’s trigger, ammunition round casings, and multiple towels, the prosecution never turned that evidence over, in physical or digital form, to the defense. Is that because it doesn’t exist? More conspiracy theories claiming that Trump staged his own assassination attempt will surely arise from this.
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Neil Stone
Neil Stone@DrNeilStone·
The idea vaccines cause autism was invented by Andrew Wakefield in 1998 and was so thoroughly debunked he lost his license for gross malpractice And here we are 27 years later RFK Jr and his fans dredging up the same nonsense Such a tiresome waste of time
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TheSteadyState Substack: @SteadyState1
Hungary lesson: Don’t debate Trump on policy. Name the corruption—and threat to democracy. Connect it to people’s lives. $3,800/household from tariffs. $2.5B gutted from the CDC. Billions in Trump family crypto profits while your grocery bill climbs and your kid’s school loses funding. Say it plainly. Repeatedly. Everywhere.
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James Tate
James Tate@JamesTate121·
He totally reflects the stupidity of 77 million Americans wearing stupid red hats made in China that say, Make America Great Again. 🙄
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David Meuse
David Meuse@JdmMeuse·
“Republicans are never happier than when running against phantoms, whether they’re imagining violent immigrants, trans women lurking in public restrooms, teachers channeling Che Guevara — or the prospect of a new or higher tax.” #NHPolitics newhampshirebulletin.com/2026/04/15/des…
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Jon Brooks
Jon Brooks@jonbrooks·
Florida real estate could drop 35% from peak over the next 3-4 years. Migration to Florida is already down 93% from its peak. The people who were going to move here... already did. There's no second wave coming at today's prices.
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Cindy C
Cindy C@Igardn·
Students who live 9 months out of the year (at a minimum) at college are considered residents & are legally domiciled in that community & can vote. They can use their out-of-state licenses to vote too w/proof of college housing - this law just makes it harder to legally vote
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Marc E. Elias
Marc E. Elias@marceelias·
🚨BREAKING: A federal judge Tuesday blocked Indiana’s ban on using student IDs for voter identification, a victory that will make it easier for students and young voters to cast ballots in the upcoming midterm elections. democracydocket.com/news-alerts/ju…
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Marc E. Elias
Marc E. Elias@marceelias·
🚨BREAKING: Federal Court BLOCKS Indiana law banning the use of a student ID for voting. A huge victory my law firm, our clients Count US IN and Women4Change Indiana, and the voters of Indiana. Another reminder that when we fight we win! democracydocket.com/cases/indiana-…
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Angry Staffer
Angry Staffer@Angry_Staffer·
Periodic reminder that the president has lost his fucking mind
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blue
blue@bluewmist·
One of the best things my therapist ever told me was: Stop assuming that people are mad at you.Stop attempting to read people's minds. Stop trying to manage the thoughts and emotions of others. Let people be in charge of themselves.If they have something to say to you, they will.And if they don't, it's their responsibility, not yours. If you needed to hear that, maybe this account can help.
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Republicans against Trump
Republicans against Trump@RpsAgainstTrump·
BREAKING: Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán called opposition candidate Péter Magyar to congratulate him on winning the election. Big win for Hungary, Europe, and the free world Everything Trump touches dies.
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Amy Siskind 🏳️‍🌈
Amy Siskind 🏳️‍🌈@Amy_Siskind·
The Dream Team failed. Total shock. We sent two of our most mediocre real estate developers and a fraud. Who could’ve guessed this outcome?
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Cindy C
Cindy C@Igardn·
Accurate! 👍
James Tate@JamesTate121

Very well written essay on the MAGA voter. This is what we are up against. Sam is 61 years old and lives in a town where the Applebee’s closed in 2014 and people still mention it like it was a natural disaster. The old factory shut down years ago, but Sam keeps his faded employee badge in a kitchen drawer because he considers it proof that America peaked sometime around 1987, right between the release of Top Gun and the invention of low-flow toilets. He firmly believes the country began collapsing the moment they stopped letting people smoke in restaurants and started putting kale in things. He wakes up every morning at 5:12 a.m., not because he has anywhere to be, but because decades of shift work, untreated sleep apnea, and permanent low-grade outrage have hardwired his body into a permanent state of agitation. He shuffles into the kitchen wearing camouflage pajama pants and a T-shirt that says “I Stand for the Flag” even though he has not stood up quickly without groaning since 2009. He pours himself coffee strong enough to power farm equipment and settles into his recliner to begin his daily ritual of becoming personally offended by things happening hundreds or thousands of miles away. Within half an hour, he is enraged about crime in Chicago, drag queens in Seattle, wind turbines in California, and a college professor in Vermont he has never heard of and never will again. Sam spends most of his time marinating in an ecosystem of Facebook memes, talk radio, Fox News, chain emails, YouTube clips, and badly designed websites with names like Patriot Eagle Freedom Truth News. By noon, he has shared seven posts warning that America is under attack by socialists, immigrants, vegans, pronouns, electric stoves, and people who use the phrase “lived experience.” He believes every story because every story confirms what he already feels: that the country has been stolen from people like him and handed over to people he does not understand. Sam is absolutely convinced he is one of the last remaining “real Americans,” despite living in a county entirely populated by people who also think they are the last remaining real Americans. He misses the America of his youth, which in his memory was a magical place where every man had a factory job, every woman made tuna casserole, every child respected authority, and nobody had tattoos, gluten allergies, or opinions about gender. He is nostalgic for a version of the country that mostly exists as a combination of old pickup truck commercials, Toby Keith songs, and stories his grandfather exaggerated after three beers. His truck is the size of a military vehicle and has never once carried anything heavier than mulch and emotional baggage. His pickup truck is so large that small birds alter their migration patterns to avoid it. The truck has never hauled lumber, gravel, or equipment, but it does haul an enormous amount of political anxiety. The back is covered in bumper stickers warning that he is armed, angry, and deeply suspicious of the federal government, except for when it comes to Medicare, Social Security, highways, farm subsidies, police funding, veterans’ benefits, and keeping its hands off his lawn. He likes to tell people he is “not political,” which is impressive considering his entire personality has become an endless loop of cable news grievances. He cannot attend a barbecue, church picnic, football game, or grandchild’s birthday party without eventually bringing up inflation, Hunter Biden, gas stoves, “the border,” or how nobody can say Merry Christmas anymore even though literally everyone still says Merry Christmas. Then Trump arrived, descending from his golden escalator like a casino-themed prophet sent by God to sell steaks and grievance. Sam had finally found his perfect candidate: a billionaire from Manhattan with multiple mansions, gold-plated bathrooms, and a private jet, who somehow convinced Sam that he understood the pain of a man screaming at the self-checkout machine in Walmart. Trump was loud, angry, theatrical, and constantly under investigation, which only made Sam admire him more. Every lawsuit, scandal, or indictment was not evidence of wrongdoing. It was proof that Trump was fighting the deep state, the media, the elites, the globalists, the FBI, the Democrats, the RINOs, and possibly the ghost of George Soros. Every scandal, every lawsuit, every indictment, every accusation became proof that Trump was fighting the corrupt establishment on behalf of “real Americans” like Sam. At this point, Sam does not support Trump because of policy details. He supports Trump because Trump has become the human embodiment of his anger, nostalgia, confusion, and Facebook feed. Trump says the world Sam remembers can come back, that the people Sam dislikes can be punished, and that all of Sam's frustrations are someone else’s fault. To Sam, Trump is no longer just a politician. He is a lifestyle brand. He is a martyr, a warrior, a stand-up comedian, a victim, a patriot, and the lead singer of a traveling grievance festival. Sam owns at least three Trump hats, two Trump flags, a Trump coffee mug, a “Never Surrender” T-shirt, and a giant “Let’s Go Brandon” sign in the garage that he insists is “not political, just funny.” For Sam, that is not politics. That is therapy. Trump is not just a candidate anymore; he is an emotional support billionaire. He is a spray-tanned security blanket with a private jet. He is the gold-plated, fast-food-fueled mascot Sam clings to whenever the modern world feels confusing, threatening, or insufficiently patriotic. Trump gives him a ready-made explanation for every disappointment in his life: it is not aging, bad luck, economic change, or his own choices; it is the immigrants, the liberals, the media, the globalists, the vegans, the people with pronouns, and whoever is ruining Christmas this week. Supporting Trump lets Sam believe there is still someone out there fighting for him.

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Cindy C
Cindy C@Igardn·
The "Lake" spends so much time complaining about 1st Ammendment rights he doesn't like, he totally misses the biggest event of the year. ICE OUT! #Winnipesaukee
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