KC Woods
14 posts

KC Woods
@KCWoods17
Hard working small business owner who likes fishing.
Katılım Nisan 2022
1 Takip Edilen0 Takipçiler

@decentralised82 @FoxNews He didn't accept the plane bro. The US accepted the plane after careful considerations.
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@SenatorDurbin You think the American people are as mentally challenged as you?
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@MrFreeNChrist @FoxNews I am against men in women's sports, including transgender. Admittedly, you bring up an excellent point. I think it's related more to, does a woman, or a biological woman declaring to be a man seek membership in the men's group. Two different aspects, both wrong.
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Are feminists going to back off of these?
Augusta National Golf Club (Georgia, USA, home of the Masters Tournament): All-male for over 80 years. It faced prolonged criticism and protests (notably from women's rights activist Martha Burk in the early 2000s). In 2012, it admitted its first women members: Condoleezza Rice and Darla Moore. More have joined since (at least 6–7 known female members today, including business leaders like Ginni Rometty and Heidi Ueberroth), ending the exclusion under sustained public and media pressure.
Olympic Club (San Francisco, founded 1860): A 130-year-old men's club agreed to admit women in 1990 after years of legal battles and threats from the city of San Francisco over discrimination policies.
That's just two. There are hundreds of others, men's clubs that were forced to take women. Feminism is getting exactly what it deserves!
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'I WAS FUMING': Former Utah State volleyball star Kaylie Ray faces off against a Democrat state senator, who claims she would have "welcomed" a man on her team and questioned Ray's competitiveness.
Ray fired back during the hearing, telling the Arizona leader, "when men are allowed access into women's sports and spaces, it's not women's sports and spaces anymore."
The former college athlete tells FOX News Digital about the encounter: "Common sense is not so common here."
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@jean_twenge @SouthwestAir @AlaskaAir @AmericanAir @Delta Your belief that SW is blocking other airlines is simply misguided. They are not blocking other airlines. I fly them all the time. What you are attributing to be intentional is simply coincidence. I can tell you SW has the worst wifi and internet connectivity in the industry.
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Infuriating: @SouthwestAir now blocks other airlines' websites from their inflight wifi. On my flight yesterday, the @AlaskaAir page did not load at all, and both @AmericanAir and @Delta loaded but then froze on the booking page. What is this, North Korea? Not the way to keep business travelers, Southwest.
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@IrnaEnglish Who knows what this video really is? Even if it is the downing of a US drone. One would be a fool to think Iran isn't going to get a few shots in. But advanced defense systems? Advanced more than what? Zimbabwe?
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@RataganCan @archeohistories Are u kidding? Dems are the ones who want drugs in this country. Trump is fighting drugs like never before and the dems are upset and screaming about it.
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This haunting photograph from 1926 reveals the raw human suffering inside a Paris opium den. Men and women lie scattered across the room, their faces vacant and bodies limp, caught in a silent escape from reality. Some slump in chairs, others collapse onto crude beds, completely disconnected from the vibrant city outside. This image strips away the glamour of the roaring twenties, exposing the darker struggles hidden beneath the surface.
In 1926, while Paris dazzled the world with jazz, champagne, and the glow of the Roaring Twenties, a single photograph revealed a truth many preferred not to see — the dim, smoke-choked interior of an opium den. In this hidden corner of the city, the glamour of the era disappeared, replaced by heavy air and silence, where men and women lay stretched across crude beds, faces vacant, bodies motionless.
Each person in that room was chasing brief relief from a life that had grown unbearable. The opium smoke offered escape, not freedom — a haze that numbed pain while slowly tightening its grip. These were not criminals, but casualties of a postwar world scarred by loss, trauma, and quiet despair, drifting far from the lively streets just outside the walls.
Opium dens existed across the globe at the time, from ornate rooms in China to concealed basements throughout Europe and North America. In Western cities, they lived in the shadows — lit by small lamps, marked by long pipes, and wrapped in secrecy. Some catered to wealth with soft cushions and attentive hosts; many more were cramped, fragile spaces where the poor and broken sought a few hours of peace. Introduced through colonial trade routes, opium became a silent presence in society, thriving where poverty and the aftershocks of the Great War left people vulnerable.
The individuals frozen in these photographs remind us how fragile the human spirit can be. They were mothers, fathers, and laborers, pulled into a world that flourished in darkness while the surface of 1920s society shone bright.
To look at these images today is to see beyond history’s sparkle and acknowledge the pain hidden beneath it — and to remember those who vanished into the fog. Their stories ask for empathy, reminding us that even in the brightest cities, shadows always exist, waiting to be seen and understand.
© History Pictures
#archaeohistories

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@jakubwiech China? Who cares? They lie and cheat. Enslave their people. As such r an economic power. But that's it. We could step on them like a piss ant. Chinese people hate their government.
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Today in Davos we saw a US president who, by his own choice, wants to lose the energy war with China. Just take a look at this:
🇨🇳„I haven’t been able to find any wind farms in China” - China already has over 600 GW of installed wind power capacity in operation, making it the world’s leading country in this technology.
🇨🇳„They sell it to the stupid people that buy them” - well, when it comes to installed wind turbine capacity and electricity generation from these units, the United States ranks second in the world.
🇨🇳„They don’t spin, they don’t do anything. They use a thing called coal mostly” - electricity generation from coal in China fell by 1.6% in 2025, partly because the country added as much as 100 GW of new wind power capacity in that single year (for comparison, the United States has around 160 GW of total installed wind capacity in operation).
🇨🇳„They are starting to look at nuclear a little bit” - in 2030 China plans to have more nuclear power capacity than the United States.
But there is one thing I agree with president Trump on: China is making a fortune from exporting zero-emission technologies. For several years now, it has been earning more from this than the United States does from exporting all fossil fuels combined.
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This is why inflation keeps going higher. Democrats have no idea what they are doing. Or do they?
Combatting inflation: Mayor Bowser announces raise in DC minimum wage wjla.com/news/local/inf…
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Kamala Harris breaks silence on 51 Texas migrant deaths, says Abbott 'went straight to politics' fxn.ws/3ytXXfe
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