Proletergeist
7.7K posts






Almost a year after release, this book is still top-10 in Historical Study. Check it out! Are the mainstream media and academic narratives surrounding slavery, white flight, Native American pacifism, hippies, the Red Square, and the benefits of the sexual revolution for women...at all real? Maybe not. amazon.com/Lies-My-Libera….


93% of all job-related fatalities are male 93% of all job-related fatalities are male 93% of all job-related fatalities are male 93% of all job-related fatalities are male 93% of all job-related fatalities are male


This should have been the end of it. Don't blame Democrats. Mitch McConnell and Kevin McCarthy could have ended this. They chose not to.

Yeah calling someone a “fucking bitch” after killing them is the classic sign of a committed Christian and family man.








Welp, we lost minority voting rights today. Lost since leftists started voting 3rd party in 2000: -Voting rights -Climate change legislation -Abortion rights -Minority voting rights -3 forever wars -Progressive taxation Is this the revolution Susan Sarandon assured was coming?


Lady came running into the hospital covered head to toe in mud saying she hit this dog and it went running into the swamp so she had to catch it. Took me a minute before I said “guys I don’t think this is a dog.” So anyway, placed my first IV in a coyote🥴😭





ICE agent who shot Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis is ‘committed’ Christian, ‘tremendous’ father and husband, family says trib.al/51RG7fe




“Last March, a fog took hold in my head and never left. It settled there somewhere between the moment a DHS agent asked me, ‘Are you Mahmoud Khalil?’ and the moment I realized that I would miss the birth of my first child,” writes Khalil. A year ago, the Trump administration unlawfully arrested Khalil at his home and detained him for 104 days. “I walk free now, only after an army of lawyers sued the administration for targeting me because of my pro-Palestine speech. But the government is relentless in targeting me,” he writes. “So when I walk, I watch my back.” “When strangers approach me and ask, ‘Are you Mahmoud Khalil?’ — the same words in the same expectant tone the DHS agent used before the handcuffs — I do not know if they want to shake my hand or spit in my face. I do not know whether they will say, ‘Thank you for what you're doing,’ or follow me through midtown aggressively shouting, ‘Am Yisrael Chai.’ Both have happened. At first glance, I can never tell them apart.” In a new essay, Khalil writes about grappling with these two truths: “That I walk through the city afraid and that the city, in small and persistent ways, tells me I am welcome. That I am watched and that I am seen.” Read it in full: nymag.visitlink.me/tM03B5
















