Senator Jeremy England, MS51

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Senator Jeremy England, MS51

Senator Jeremy England, MS51

@JeremyEnglandMS

Light, refreshing, and a little bit spicy. Adjectives: fast/strong

St Martin, MS Katılım Aralık 2018
644 Takip Edilen1.6K Takipçiler
Senator Jeremy England, MS51
Senator Jeremy England, MS51@JeremyEnglandMS·
I’m glad and thankful to see that @tatereeves signed this bill I drafted this year, SB2588, “The SHIELD Act.” This bill certainly strengthens election integrity here in Mississippi, and it should help improve voter confidence in knowing that only US Citizens are on our voter rolls here in our State. I’m also thankful for the assistance of my House counterpart, Chairman Noah Sanford, from my friend, Whitney Lipscomb, and of course my friend, @MichaelWatsonMS. This was certainly a team effort.
Governor Tate Reeves@tatereeves

While states like California and New York flood their voter rolls with illegal aliens, Mississippi will do the opposite and defend Americans’ right to determine the outcome of elections. This shouldn’t be a controversial issue, but it is. And it’s because Democrats are desperately trying to appease their growing radical base and outsource the management of our country to those who shouldn’t be here. That’s why I’ve signed SB 2588 – the SHIELD Act. It requires local officials to verify citizenship when someone registers to vote and the state of Mississippi to conduct an annual audit of voter rolls to ensure American citizens are the only ones voting. This is another win for election integrity in Mississippi (and America). We will continue to do everything in our power to make it infinitely harder - with a goal to make it impossible - to cheat in our elections! We will always put American citizens first.

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Senator Jeremy England, MS51
Senator Jeremy England, MS51@JeremyEnglandMS·
My wife demanded that I stop acting like a flamingo. So I had to put my foot down.
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Collin Rugg
Collin Rugg@CollinRugg·
NEW: Kentucky family rejects $26 million offer to convert part of their farm into a data center despite the offer being about 10 times the going rate for farmland in the area. "If it's my way, I'll stay and hold and feed a nation. 26 million doesn't mean anything." "As long as I'm on this land, as long as it's feeding me, as long as it's taking care of me, there's nothing that can destroy me if I've got this land." Video: Local 12 WKRC
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Mississippi GOP
Mississippi GOP@MSGOP·
Great to have members of the MSGOP Minority Outreach Committee in Jackson today for their quarterly leadership meeting. The @MinorityMSGOP looks to continue their growth by reminding Mississippi voters of the Republican Party’s values and proven record on delivering: 🇺🇸Historic Tax Cuts 🇺🇸Historic Criminal Justice Reform 🇺🇸Common Sense Social Issues 🇺🇸Border Security ⬇️JOIN TODAY with the link below⬇️ docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAI…
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Robert W Malone, MD
Robert W Malone, MD@RWMaloneMD·
If true, this is amazing work by the Mossad - and pretty much implies that almost all the leadership in Iran is marked for death. This would be why Saudi Arabia was glad to support the regime change and even lobby Trump for it. This was finally a real chance to get the Iranian government out. The Middle East is done with radicalism. Iran was a destabilizing force and a danger. The Saudi prince knew the plan for regime change would work this time. Because it was and is brilliant - still to be confirmed of course. Every single person high up in the Iranian government must be very, very scared right now. Death is at their doorstep, unless they negotiate now.
Israel Now@neveragainlive1

You’re not gonna believe this latest story. Over the past few years mossad undercover agents infiltrated as doctors and dentists in Iran. The Dentists gave priority to. Key military, and elite Iranian personnel. While doing a routine dental check up, they implanted tracking devices as fillings for cavities. On the other side, Gastro doctors implanted similar devices in their elite patients. Yesterday mossad knew exactly where each one of them were ( komayne’s wife and family members included )and sent missiles at them. Over 400 elite military in government personnel were eliminated in the first few moments ( maybe that’s one of the reasons why they knew where he was hiding )when Israel attacked.

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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86·
They did not bomb Iran. They waited for Iran’s entire leadership to sit down in the same room and then they bombed Iran. Months of intelligence. Thousands of hours of surveillance and signal intercepts. One variable: the moment the Supreme Leader, the President, and senior military command gathered in a single location at the same time. That moment was 8:15 this morning. Daylight. Every previous Israeli strike on Iran came at night. June 2025 launched in darkness. October 2024 after midnight. Iran’s entire air defense doctrine is built around the assumption that Israel attacks in the dark. Israel attacked in broad daylight because the target was not infrastructure. The target was a meeting. Reuters confirms strikes targeted Khamenei and Pezeshkian. CNN confirms months of joint US-Israeli planning. Israeli officials confirmed the strike hit the location where Iran’s top officials were gathered. Whether Khamenei was moved before the strike or extracted after is the most consequential unknown on the planet right now. If before, someone inside Tehran’s inner circle told Jerusalem when and where the meeting would happen. If after, the strikes hit the room and he survived. Both scenarios are catastrophic for the regime. Because Iran’s leadership now knows three things. Israel knew where they were meeting. Israel knew when they were meeting. Israel knew who would be in the room. And everything we watched over the past month, the F-22s at Ovda, the tankers at Ben Gurion, Al Udeid emptied to zero, 270 transport flights, all of it was the delivery architecture for one precision strike on one gathering. Every future meeting of Iran’s senior leadership now carries one question: does Israel know about this one too. This is not a military operation. This is the destruction of institutional trust inside a regime. Every general who sits with Khamenei tomorrow will wonder who told Jerusalem about today. Every IRGC commander who receives a meeting summons will calculate whether attendance is duty or a death sentence. Every secure facility in Tehran has been proven insecure. In June 2025 Israel killed 30 generals in the opening minutes. That was brute force across dispersed targets. This was a scalpel. One meeting. One moment. Months of patience. Iran fired missiles at six countries in retaliation. Most intercepted. One civilian dead from debris in Abu Dhabi. Saudi Arabia responded by pledging all its capabilities against Iran. The Gulf coalition that did not exist yesterday exists today because Tehran built it by attacking everyone simultaneously. Israel traded one morning of precision strikes for the permanent destruction of Iran’s command cohesion. That is not a battle. That is checkmate disguised as a first move. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

Iran just fired missiles at five countries simultaneously. Here is what actually happened to each of them. Bahrain. Confirmed hit on the US Navy Fifth Fleet headquarters. Bahrain’s own state news agency reported the strike. No casualty figures released yet. This is the command center for every American naval operation in the Persian Gulf. It was struck. UAE. Multiple missiles intercepted by Emirati air defenses. One civilian killed in Abu Dhabi from falling debris. The UAE defense ministry confirmed the intercepts. The Emirates just absorbed an act of war on its sovereign territory from a country it shares a maritime border with. Qatar. Missile intercepted. Zero damage. The Qatari Interior Ministry confirmed. The same country Iran just attacked is the country that hosted Al Udeid for twenty years as a gesture of regional balance. That balance ended this morning. Kuwait. KUNA state news agency confirmed missiles were “dealt with” in Kuwaiti airspace. No reported damage. Kuwait, which stayed neutral through every Gulf crisis since 1991, just had Iranian ballistic missiles flying over its cities. Jordan. Two Iranian ballistic missiles shot down by Jordanian military. Confirmed by the Jordanian armed forces directly. Jordan intercepted Iranian missiles in June 2025 as well. That was in defense of Israel. This time Iran targeted Jordan itself. Saudi Arabia. Fars News claims strikes. No confirmation from any Saudi source. No Tier 1 or Tier 2 verification. Either it did not happen or Riyadh is not yet ready to say it did. Both possibilities carry enormous implications. Now understand what Iran just accomplished strategically. In attempting to retaliate against Israel and America, the IRGC fired missiles at six sovereign nations in a single morning. Not one of those nations attacked Iran. Bahrain did not bomb Tehran. The UAE did not launch strikes on Isfahan. Qatar hosted diplomatic back channels. Kuwait maintained neutrality for three decades. Jordan was mediating. Iran just converted every neutral and semi-neutral state in the Gulf into a potential co-belligerent. Every nation whose airspace was violated, whose civilians were killed, whose sovereignty was breached now has legal and political justification to join whatever coalition forms next. And the damage tells the real story. One civilian dead from debris. Intercepts across four countries. No confirmed destruction of any US military asset. No reported American casualties among 40,000 troops in theater. Iran fired at the entire Gulf and the Gulf caught almost everything. Compare this to what Israel did to Tehran this morning. Precision strikes on the IRGC Intelligence Directorate. Explosions near the Supreme Leader’s office. Three detonations in central Tehran confirmed by Iranian state media itself. One side hit what it aimed at. The other side hit one civilian with debris. This is the asymmetry that will define the next 72 hours. Iran demonstrated intent to strike everywhere and capability to hit almost nothing. The Gulf states demonstrated they can defend themselves. And now those states must decide whether the country that just fired ballistic missiles across their borders gets to do it again. They will not let it happen again. Watch for the joint statement. Watch for airspace coordination between Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, Manama, and Kuwait City. Watch for the coalition that Iran just built against itself with a single salvo. Iran did not retaliate against Israel this morning. Iran gave every country in the Middle East a reason to retaliate against Iran.

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Desiree
Desiree@DesireeAmerica4·
This is actual brotherhood. NHL star Johnny Gaudreau was killed by a drunk driver before he could play for this Olympic team. When Team USA won gold yesterday, they didn’t just hold his jersey. They pulled his two babies onto the ice and put them right in the center of the world's biggest stage. A completely heart-wrenching moment
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Bilbo Baggins
Bilbo Baggins@Jbanklestankle1·
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Dudes Posting Their W’s
Dudes Posting Their W’s@DudespostingWs·
This is the moment Doc Watson realized Michael Cleveland had a gift for playing the fiddle…
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Senator Jeremy England, MS51
Senator Jeremy England, MS51@JeremyEnglandMS·
It’s been a long week and a hard week. Legislating can be rewarding sometimes, and it can take a lot out of you sometimes. I have a lot more gray hairs to attest to that. I do love this job serving in the Senate tremendously, and I am proud to be here. It is an honor. The one thing that is the toughest and will always be the toughest is being away from family. I’m so proud of them. I missed Levi’s first tennis match yesterday, and I sure hate I couldn’t cheer him on from the side of the court. He’s been working hard, and he’s doing great for his first year. I’m so glad he has a great momma and a great sister, and awesome grandparents and aunts/uncles that can support him in my absence. These are the toughest moments to miss. Levi will probably be mad for me sharing his pics, but I’m so proud of him, his sister, and especially his momma. I love them so much. I am blessed.
Senator Jeremy England, MS51 tweet mediaSenator Jeremy England, MS51 tweet mediaSenator Jeremy England, MS51 tweet media
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Leading Report
Leading Report@LeadingReport·
BREAKING: Kid Rock adds a verse to viral hit “‘Till You Can’t.” “You can give your life to Jesus and he’ll give you a second chance… ‘til you can’t.”
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Matt Wyatt
Matt Wyatt@RadioWyatt·
Happy National Weatherperson’s Day
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ArchaeoHistories
ArchaeoHistories@histories_arch·
In 1783, King George III asked an American painter what George Washington would do now that he had virtually won the war. The painter replied that the General intended to return to his farm in Virginia. The King was stunned. He reportedly said, "If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world." Throughout history, victorious generals almost always seized the throne. From Caesar to Cromwell, military success usually meant political dictatorship. The concept of voluntarily walking away from absolute power was practically unheard of. But George Washington wasn't like other men. By December 4, 1783, the British surrender at Yorktown was past, and peace was finally assured. Washington commanded a powerful, seasoned army that adored him. Conversely, many of his officers were unpaid and angry at the inefficient Congress. They had the guns, the manpower, and the loyalty to install a new monarch. He could have been King George I of America. Instead, on this day in history, Washington walked into the Long Room at Fraunces Tavern in lower Manhattan. The room was filled with his most loyal officers—men like Henry Knox and Baron von Steuben—who had frozen with him at Valley Forge and bled with him for eight long years. The atmosphere wasn't celebratory. It was heavy with inevitable separation. Washington, usually stoic and commercially reserved, poured a glass of wine and looked at his brothers-in-arms with visible emotion. "With a heart full of love and gratitude, I now take leave of you," he said, his voice shaking. "I most devoutly wish that your latter days may be as prosperous and happy as your former ones have been glorious and honorable." He didn't order them. He didn't demand their allegiance. He hugged them. One by one, the hardened soldiers wept openly. Washington embraced each man in silence. There was no pomp, no ceremony, and no speeches about future conquests. It was just a quiet goodbye between warriors who had done the impossible. Immediately after leaving the tavern, Washington didn't march on Congress to demand payment or power. He rode to Annapolis, Maryland, resigned his commission, and went home to Mount Vernon to plant crops. He did the impossible. He refused the crown. He trusted the people. By stepping down, he ensured that the United States would be a republic ruled by laws, not a kingdom ruled by force. He proved that the military serves the people, not the other way around. It was the final, and perhaps greatest, victory of the Revolution. The world watched in awe as the American Cincinnatus returned his sword to its sheath, proving that character is the strongest constitution of all." #archaeohistories
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