Kim Huntamer

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Kim Huntamer

Kim Huntamer

@KimHuntamer

Former Military and LE turned Educator Soccer Coach. 1A 2A, alovea MAGA MAHA at this point officially 2old4TS.

🇺🇸 Katılım Kasım 2022
655 Takip Edilen495 Takipçiler
Kim Huntamer
Kim Huntamer@KimHuntamer·
Sorry this is the scam Make space for more Learing Centers You have spend double on homelessness and triple the problem You push social problems so you can get paid for your social solution rather than make something and thus make the world a better place. Just go back to Russia you communist good for nothing. You did not even stand up to Hillary and you let Biden get elected just for power. Everything you have said and done is so pathetic and embarrassing to the people who supported you. I never have but I knew those who did and you really let them down and this is not how you make it better. Retire to your millions and be done with you. Don’t you have enough money yet?
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Bernie Sanders
Bernie Sanders@BernieSanders·
In the United States we need hundreds of new hospitals and health clinics. We need thousands of new child care centers. We need millions of new units of affordable housing. We do NOT need to spend another $500 billion on the military for endless wars.
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Pratik Dünya
Pratik Dünya@pratikdunya·
35 yaşındayım ve bu paketin nasıl doğru açıldığını ilk kez öğreniyorum. Siz bunu kaç yaşında öğrendiniz?
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Dr. Jebra Faushay
Dr. Jebra Faushay@JebraFaushay·
Remember when Mr. T sang this Mother’s Day song? No? Let me refresh your memory. 🎶🎶🎶
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Emotion & Music
Emotion & Music@Emotion78687·
One of the top ten performances in history, and all she does is stand there and sing—no dancers, no nose rings, no wild gimmicks, no auto-tune.
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Peter Girnus 🦅
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz·
I am a senior coordinating producer for the White House Correspondents' Association Dinner. I have worked eleven of these. I was backstage at the Washington Hilton when the shots were fired. The first thing I heard was not the gunfire. It was glass. A champagne flute hit the floor of the International Ballroom at approximately 9:47 PM. Then a second. Then the sound that I have since been told was a 12-gauge shotgun, which from inside the ballroom sounded like a heavy door slamming in a parking garage. Then the Secret Service moved. They moved the President, the Vice President, the First Lady through the east corridor in under ninety seconds, which is protocol, which is practiced, which is the one part of the evening that worked exactly as it was designed. Everything else was improvised. I know this because I ordered the wine. 94 tables. Two bottles per table. 188 bottles of a Willamette Valley pinot noir that the Association selected in February after a tasting committee spent three meetings debating between Oregon and Burgundy. Oregon won. The budget was $14,200. I signed the invoice. I can tell you the vintage. I can tell you the distributor. I can tell you the per-bottle cost because I negotiated it down from $89 to $76. What I cannot tell you is how 147 of those bottles left the building during an active shooter evacuation. I can tell you what I saw. A correspondent from a network I will not name picked up two bottles on her way to the east exit. Full bottles. One in each hand. She was wearing heels and she did not spill. A man in a tuxedo tucked one inside his jacket the way you'd shoplift a paperback at an airport bookstore. A woman picked up a bottle, looked at the label, put it back, and took a different one. She checked the vintage. During an evacuation. That's editorial judgment under pressure. The theme of the dinner was "A Free Press for a Free People." The banners were still hanging when the evacuation began. I know because I hung them. Twenty-three banners, navy blue, gold serif lettering, $11,400 for the set. They were still hanging when 2,600 guests were directed to the exits by Secret Service agents, one of whom had just taken a shotgun round in his ballistic vest and walked to the ambulance on his own feet. The agent's vest costs approximately $800. The wine that left the building was worth $11,172 at Association cost. At restaurant markup, roughly $29,000. The guests saved more in wine than the vest that saved the agent. That's priority. The video went viral by 10:15 PM. Not the video of the evacuation. Not the Secret Service response. The wine. Three guests in formalwear grabbing bottles off white tablecloths while being told to move toward the exits, while a man with a shotgun stood in the same motor entrance where John Hinckley shot Ronald Reagan 45 years ago. A woman near the service entrance was crying. She said "I just wanna go home." She was not holding wine. She was holding her phone. She was the only person I saw that night who looked afraid rather than inconvenienced. That's the distinction. The rest of the ballroom did not look afraid. They looked interrupted. An active shooter at the WHCD is a logistical problem. The dinner was disrupted. The timeline was off. The after-party at the French Ambassador's residence would need to be rescheduled. These are contingency matters. Contingency matters have solutions. Fear is for people who attend events without security details. I have produced eleven of these dinners. I have managed seating charts that require diplomatic-grade negotiations. I have handled comedians, cabinet secretaries, network anchors, and the editor of a major newspaper who once threatened to leave because his table was behind a column. I have never, in eleven years, seen a guest leave a $76 bottle on the table during an evacuation. I have also never seen a guest check the label first. Both observations are consistent. The bottle is worth taking. The evacuation is worth surviving. The instinct is to do both simultaneously. 188 bottles placed. 41 recovered. 147 unaccounted for. One agent shot. Zero guests injured. Zero bottles broken. A free press for a free people. The press is free. The wine was $76 a bottle. They took it anyway.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🇺🇸 A man allegedly stabbed a parking attendant twice in the head with a 6-foot wooden cane in San Diego. Police used non-lethal rounds and a K9 to bring him down. The victim suffered head lacerations but is okay. That dog is a freakin' unit!
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Kim Huntamer
Kim Huntamer@KimHuntamer·
It has to do with the speed of re entry. Jeff’s rocket barely made orbit and was not even that high. Slower speed less friction. Rub your hands together. Dragon to the ISS is going faster Rub hands a lot faster NASA from the moon is coming in really fast. They use the atmosphere to slow down enough that they can use small parachutes to slow down more before the use the big ones Also their space capsule is a lot bigger than Jeff’s little……….I digress. Just rub your hands so fast they catch on fire 🔥 Now you understand the difference. The water is also a bigger landing pad this way of doing things does not have as many options after takeoff. That is why Starship will replace airplanes for longer trips world wide. Think of it anyplace in the world would be a 30 minute flight. NY to Paris 27 min. Landing in the water also has other advantages. All of this is a choice. Once Jeff really gets into orbit he can use his yacht to pick up his capsule.
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Bruce
Bruce@bruce_barrett·
So apparently Jeff Bezos can land in a desert and NASA still goes old school with ocean landings. Seems legit to me.
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Kim Huntamer
Kim Huntamer@KimHuntamer·
@Rothmus No that would be space force if they had the scammed money from MN, CA and WA. That’s a bigger drain.
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Kim Huntamer
Kim Huntamer@KimHuntamer·
@MichaelARothman @MZHemingway Yes. And in math it is the vinculum the line that separates fractions another one the math teaches have forgotten. And even spell check does not recognize. I just noticed. Had to check the spelling. If you don’t believe me ask AI 🤖
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M.A. Rothman
M.A. Rothman@MichaelARothman·
𝐍𝐎, 𝐈𝐓'𝐒 𝐍𝐎𝐓 𝐀𝐈. 𝐈𝐓'𝐒 𝐂𝐀𝐋𝐋𝐄𝐃 𝐏𝐔𝐍𝐂𝐓𝐔𝐀𝐓𝐈𝐎𝐍. I see it constantly now. Someone reads a post or an article and spots an em dash — that long horizontal line — and immediately declares it was written by AI. 𝐓𝐡𝐚𝐭'𝐬 𝐚𝐧 𝐞𝐦 𝐝𝐚𝐬𝐡, 𝐝𝐞𝐟𝐢𝐧𝐢𝐭𝐞𝐥𝐲 𝐂𝐡𝐚𝐭𝐆𝐏𝐓. You know who else uses em dashes? People who actually learned how English punctuation works. I don't normally step on this particular soapbox — and I commit authorial malpractice by never trying to sell you my books — but I've authored over 30 of them. Many have been international bestsellers. Well over 𝟏,𝟎𝟎𝟎,𝟎𝟎𝟎 𝐜𝐨𝐩𝐢𝐞𝐬 in print, translated into 7+ languages, sold around the world. I am, amongst many other things, an actual author. So let me give you a quick education your grammar teachers apparently skipped. The em dash — this thing right here — is one of the most versatile punctuation marks in the English language. It's called an "em dash" because in traditional typesetting, it was the width of the capital letter M in whatever typeface you were using. It serves three primary functions. First, it sets off a parenthetical statement within a sentence — like this one — when you want more emphasis than commas provide but less formality than parentheses. Second, it signals an abrupt break in thought or a dramatic pivot. Third, it introduces an explanation or amplification of what came before it. Writers have been using it for centuries. Emily Dickinson used em dashes so obsessively her manuscripts look like they were attacked by a horizontal line. Mark Twain used them constantly in dialogue. So did F. Scott Fitzgerald. None of them had access to ChatGPT. Now for a bit of trivia most people never learn. There's also an 𝐞𝐧 𝐝𝐚𝐬𝐡 — slightly shorter, the width of the letter N. The en dash has a narrower purpose: it connects ranges. Pages 12–44. The years 1941–1945. The New York–London flight. It's the dash between two things that are connected but distinct. Most people have never heard of it, and most fonts render it just barely shorter than an em dash, which is why almost nobody notices the difference. Both have been part of formal typography since the invention of movable type in the 15th century. Gutenberg's typesetters used varying dash lengths to organize text. By the 18th century, printers had standardized the em and en dash as distinct glyphs with distinct grammatical functions. This isn't some modern AI invention — it's older than the United States. And if you use Microsoft Word, they're trivially easy to type. An en dash is Ctrl + Minus on the numeric keypad. An em dash is Ctrl + Alt + Minus on the numeric keypad. Word also auto-converts two hyphens (--) into an em dash if you have autocorrect enabled. That's why you see me use them in my books and in my posts — because I know they exist and I know the keyboard shortcut. The reason AI chatbots use em dashes frequently is because they were trained on well-written text — books, journalism, academic papers — written by people who knew the rules. The AI learned proper punctuation from proper writers. That doesn't make proper punctuation a sign of AI. It makes it a sign of 𝐥𝐢𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐚𝐜𝐲. For the record, the only things I use AI for are conjuring up a quick graphic — like the image on this post — or as a shortcut for preliminary research. Think of it as a Google accelerator. The writing? That's all me. It has been for 30+ books and countless social media posts such as this one. If you've reached the end of this post, you now know more about dashes than most people who graduated with an English degree. And the next time you see an em dash and your first instinct is to scream "AI" — maybe consider that what you're actually looking at is someone who paid attention in class. Or someone whose grammar teachers didn't fail them quite as badly as yours failed you. 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐞𝐦 𝐝𝐚𝐬𝐡 𝐢𝐬 𝟓𝟎𝟎 𝐲𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐬 𝐨𝐥𝐝. 𝐒𝐭𝐨𝐩 𝐛𝐥𝐚𝐦𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐢𝐭 𝐨𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐫𝐨𝐛𝐨𝐭𝐬.
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Kim Huntamer
Kim Huntamer@KimHuntamer·
She has a very good point and getting outside of ourselves allows us to see better what is important.
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Dave Blass
Dave Blass@DaveBlass·
Victor Glover is the embodiment of modern exploration: U.S. Navy Captain, test pilot, and NASA astronaut who piloted SpaceX Crew-1, the first operational Crew Dragon mission, helping restore human spaceflight from U.S. soil. He spent 168 days aboard the International Space Station, conducted multiple spacewalks. Coming back to earth today as the pilot for Artemis II, he’s is a true Hero of the Planet. 🚀
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Kim Huntamer
Kim Huntamer@KimHuntamer·
@philthatremains Yea that is why I have a AT 590 (lost in a terrible boating accident). For special people just like him.
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Phil Labonte 🇺🇸
Phil Labonte 🇺🇸@philthatremains·
some people are talking like this is a situation in which you would need a gun. it is not. this is a situation in which you call 911 and stay inside. if he breaks in, then you use a gun. NEVER go outside and confront a crazy person.
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Happy Captain
Happy Captain@EODHappyCaptain·
Less than a year ago, the Air Force unveiled a new PT test with a two mile run. Airmen took to social media to complain how the new increased length would cause injuries. This weekend, an Air Force Colonel, more than likely in their mid to late 40s, ran 5 miles up a mountain to escape the enemy. Running matters. You should do more of it.
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Ida Turan 🇮🇷 ایده توران
🛑 STOP reacting and panicking over President Trump’s harsh ultimatums. He is not speaking to ordinary Iranians. Right now, he is directly addressing his real adversaries, the corrupt elite who actually run the IRGC. Iran is practically being controlled by the IRGC, a mafia-like terrorist organization. It is not merely a military force; it also dominates large parts of the economy through illegal activities, smuggling, monopolies, and money laundering. The IRGC has clear layers: at the bottom are the brainwashed Shia jihadi foot soldiers, poor, low-IQ, and indoctrinated with apocalyptic ideology. They truly believe they must burn the world to bring back the Mahdi and see America as the Great Satan. But these soldiers hold no real power; they are simply tools. The real power lies with the top leaders. These men pretend to be religious and chant “Death to America” in public, yet they live a completely double life. While they brutally oppress millions of women over hijab, chant slogans in parliament, and order the killing of Iranians seeking freedom, their own daughters and families enjoy luxurious lives in US and the West, without hijab and like royalty. But how do they get all that money? They have built massive monopolies inside Iran. China and Russia have heavily invested in the market, with kickbacks flowing straight into their pockets. They sell oil through illegal networks in Dubai, pocketing half the money meant for “jihad” and missiles, while their own soldiers live in extreme poverty. President Trump understands this reality perfectly. These bosses do not care if America strikes missile sites or nuclear facilities. They do not care if their brainwashed Basiji soldiers die. What they fear is losing their personal wealth and foreign assets. If Iran is destroyed, their investments turn to ashes. That is why Trump is pressuring them: control your fanatic soldiers, prevent stupid and dangerous moves, and keep the Strait of Hormuz open. It is not only about the strait, it is also about the 400 kg of highly enriched uranium. I personally predict that soon there will be some sort of coup inside IRGC where these top gangsters get rid of those who no longer serve them. We Iranians have watched this hypocrisy for years. These terrorists have left no other path to save Iran. I hope they behave and get their act together. But if they don’t, the full responsibility for whatever happens will lie solely with this regime. President Trump’s enemy is not Iranian people, he has told us thousands of times. This regime is a cancer destroying its own host because it refuses to die. To save Iran, we need aggressive therapy before it is too late. Be brave and trust the process. 🆘 Please share and help us to hold the regime accountable and stop destroying Iran
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JeffXmemes
JeffXmemes@JeffXmemes·
We Got Him !! Praise God. 🙏✝️🇺🇸💪 New secret robot lure was used in rescue of F-15 crewman in Iran.
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Kim Huntamer retweetledi
🇺🇸𝕄𝔸𝔾𝔸 𝑵𝒂𝒏𝒄𝒚 ن ♱
They fought the enemy for 13 hours Multiple requests for help 🆘 DENIED Obama gave a stand-down despite assets being just 2.5 miles away They were abandoned to die as Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, slept soundly in her bed Don’t memory hole the betrayal of Benghazi
🇺🇸𝕄𝔸𝔾𝔸 𝑵𝒂𝒏𝒄𝒚 ن ♱ tweet media
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Wall Street Mav
Wall Street Mav@WallStreetMav·
2 years ago we had an administration celebrating Trans Day of Visibility. Today, the federal government is posting authentic Easter content about the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Don’t ever tell me elections and voting don’t matter.
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Craig Fuller 🛩🚛🚂⚓️
During World War II, Hitler was convinced that Americans lacked the will to fight and that any who did would be quickly overwhelmed. When early reports arrived from the battles in North Africa, German observers noted that Americans fought differently from the Europeans. Rather than charging aggressively and risking heavy infantry casualties, U.S. forces relied on overwhelming firepower—staying at a distance and expending vast quantities of artillery with little hesitation. Thanks to unmatched industrial production and logistics, fresh supplies were always available. This approach allowed relatively smaller American units to wear down much larger and well-entrenched enemy forces. In contrast, German and other European doctrines often emphasized aggressive maneuver and were sometimes more willing to accept high casualties to achieve objectives or preserve key equipment. This material-heavy American style surprised many Germans, including Hitler, who had long dismissed U.S. soldiers as soft and lacking in fighting spirit. He believed soldiers were cheap and expendable; he discovered too late that Americans fought to conserve lives by expending machines and ammunition instead. It was one of many reasons for Germany’s defeat—perhaps the hardest for some foreigners to fully understand. Americans place a high value on the lives of our soldiers. Equipment and shells could always be replaced.
Daniel Foubert 🇵🇱🇫🇷@d_foubert

Lose all this to rescue 1 pilot and call it your greatest military success of all time.

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