Kirlz

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Kirlz

Kirlz

@Kirlz

Christian Zionist non-vaxxed pure human. Retired with more time to comment. Genesis 12.

Katılım Aralık 2008
3.7K Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
frontpagemag.com/nuking-japan-s… My uncle was part of the planned invasion force. I heard it all directly from him. They are still using the 1.5 Million Purple Hearts which were ordered for the expected casualties. Argue the point with me for immediate blocking as a damned liar.
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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@mikepompeo Pretty difficult to advance American interests when those “allies” have veto power over our use of the bases we financed, built, maintain, etc.
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Mike Pompeo
Mike Pompeo@mikepompeo·
NATO has been a key instrument in securing America's superpower status. We have every right to insist that our NATO allies pull their weight, but should always remember the principal reason we've invested so heavily in the alliance to begin with: advancing our own interests.
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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@BreitbartNews Can she possibly be that dumb? And that dipshidiot Barnes thought she’d be so great. But then, he spews a lot of 🐂 💩 words too.
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Breitbart News
Breitbart News@BreitbartNews·
KETANJI BROWN JACKSON: Your view of birthright citizenship turns on what the status of the parents is, not the child. Help us understand why we wouldn't see a mention of parents in the text of this Amendment. US SOLICITOR SAUER: I think it's well understood that newborns cannot form domiciles.
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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@RepEliCrane So, you a duginite or what?
Scott McMahan@BiggerTruth

Isn't it interesting that the same exact congressmen who met with these Russian Duma last week and gave them an unauthorized tour of @SpeakerJohnson's office without him present, entering through the balcony, also platformed Putin-linked propagandists on Capitol Hill in December? Said @ChuckGrassley at the time: “I understand that representatives of the Russian Orthodox Church are on Capitol Hill this week falsely claiming persecution by the Ukrainian government. This is because of a law requiring churches in Ukraine to stop taking directions from the patriarch in Moscow, who was a KGB agent and reports directly to Vladimir Putin.” Who do @realannapaulina, Eli Crane, and @derrickvanorden really represent? Their constituents in Florida, Arizona, and Wisconsin? Or Putin and Dugin?

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Andrew Fox
Andrew Fox@Mr_Andrew_Fox·
@Bullfish13 @riachi_jean Manageable security threat vs military threat. Not the same. We will not end the security threat through participating in this war.
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Jean Riachi
Jean Riachi@riachi_jean·
What is striking today is Europe’s blindness. While the United States confronts a regime that is not driven by ordinary strategic calculations, Europe hesitates, equivocates, and hides behind a façade of prudence. This is not a Cold War–style ideological rivalry. We are dealing with a regime whose worldview is deeply shaped by a theological and eschatological dimension, where political decisions are intertwined with a belief in a quasi-divine mission. Treating such an actor as if it were a purely rational state is a fundamental mistake. History shows that inaction in the face of regimes driven by absolute conviction does not prevent conflict, it only postpones it and makes it worse. Refusing to support the United States today is choosing short-term comfort over long-term security.
Department of State@StateDept

SECRETARY RUBIO: NATO wasn’t just about defending Europe, but allowing us to have military bases in Europe for our national security. If we’ve reached a point where the NATO alliance means that we can’t use those bases to defend our interests, then it’s a one-way street.

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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@freddiejh8 So he longs for the warm comfort of Bernie’s oligarchs. It shocks me that people fear their own agency.
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Freddie Hayward
Freddie Hayward@freddiejh8·
I recently managed to ferret my way into a green room where Robert De Niro was waiting to speak at an anti-Trump rally. I found a man confused, angry and bewildered at what America had become. He just could not understand who or what Donald Trump really was. He thinks someone like Trump should’ve just been banned from standing. After all this time, that was his solution:
Freddie Hayward tweet mediaFreddie Hayward tweet media
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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@EYakoby That’s how the apex predator negotiates! I’m for it.
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Eyal Yakoby
Eyal Yakoby@EYakoby·
BREAKING: President Trump says that Iran has a new president and has officially asked the United States for a ceasefire.
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Ambassador Mike Huckabee
Ambassador Mike Huckabee@GovMikeHuckabee·
Wow. Tucker Carlson just called-wants to come to Jerusalem to share Easter Sunday with me. Said he's been wrong about Israel, Jews, Iran, criticizing @realDonaldTrump & wants to publicly renounce stuff he's been saying and do it right in heart of Israel!
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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@debunkdafunk @BrownBrandon503 @johnkonrad So you’d rather Iran have ICBMs that can transport nukes all over Europe. That’s YOUR death wish. I already survived one Cold War and I’m not interested in another. Besides, Iran declared war on USA in 1979. This RETRIBUTION is long overdue.
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Wibb20
Wibb20@debunkdafunk·
@BrownBrandon503 @johnkonrad We don't have an energy crisis. The world is paying more for energy becaus if your country and it's reckless war mongering. But we have no crisis. Its amazing to see how quickly Trump has trashed the US on the world stage. And you think it's somehow a good thing? Wow.
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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
“It will hurt America’s economy too” Dear Europe: Most Americans love you. Most Americans don’t care how you govern yourselves. Most Americans (especially the center and left) don’t even care that our taxes pay for your security. I warned a year or two ago that Americans will shrug off insults for years and just roll our eyes…. until we don’t. That’s how the American psyche works. We don’t care until we do. Then we all get pissed off at once and do something irrational. I don’t know why. It just is. The entire left and big portions of the right aren’t pleased that we hit Iran. Many would agree with the points you’re making. But at the end of the day, we are Americans. We will give you a long leash, but when it runs out, we jerk the chain back hard. NOBODY wants the Strait of Hormuz to remain shut. Nobody, or at least very few, want Europeans to suffer a massive energy crisis. But frankly, we are fed up with the rhetoric. And if you don’t think we’ll cut off our nose to spite our face, you don’t know Americans at all. You can push and jeer and mock and scorn us for years, even decades. But when Americans snap, it will happen quickly and without warning. And we are very close to the breaking point.
Next Bubble@The_Next_Bubble

@johnkonrad I understand your point, but a sustained oil price spike is going to shock the US economy, maybe not as bad as other parts of the word, but it will happen. I am not arguing for ground invasion of Iran, or anything, but just walking away seems dicey,

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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@ChiefEngineerCE And yet we import these “engineers” to the USA displacing decently educated American engineers. I know this is true as I have been forced to train my own replacements.
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Chief_Engineer
Chief_Engineer@ChiefEngineerCE·
This suspension bridge in India collapsed three times. In a year. Yeah, and look this is a common event too, not a one-off occurrence. Just google it.. oh wait- keep reading. I was amazed, as an engineer, watching all that steel and concrete hit the river. What complete incompetence on display. They refuse to let foreigners in to help them... it's literally against the law there. Then I heard that they broke google search then left it broke on purpose - after discovering it was more profitable broken they found that it increases traffic and engagement time - profit. When the user doesn't get what they want, they keep trying and guess what... Double the ads they see. Not sure if you can google that? - but its absolutely accurate. Then we watch field after field of solar panels repeatedly taken out by storms and wind turbines that cant handle high winds. Its a feature - not a bug, failure is monetized. Any other examples come to mind?
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Mantra
Mantra@TheMantra999·
@Average_NY_Guy Jews are successful Because Jewish culture operates as an international mafia of influence across institutions While preserving their extremely ethnocentric and supremacist religion.
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AP
AP@Average_NY_Guy·
People love saying Jews are “disproportionately successful,” and then some go on and say it must be scams, fraud, something shady. But anyone who stops for a second and thinks about what that actually means realizes it makes no sense. You’re talking about millions of Jews, spread across different countries, speaking different languages, living in completely different systems, over hundreds and thousands of years. Most of them never met each other. And somehow they all landed on the same fraud strategy? There’s no mechanism in the world that could even make that work. There are plenty of real reasons for Jewish success. I’m not getting into all of them. Just one that you can actually see with your own eyes and is relevant now. We raise our kids to question everything. From when they’re little, “why” is not something you shut down. It’s something you encourage. A kid who keeps asking questions is not being annoying, he’s doing exactly what he’s supposed to be doing. We don’t raise kids to just nod along and repeat. We raise them to understand, to push back, to take something apart and see how it works. And if you want to see this in action, look at Passover. The entire Seder is built around questions. It’s not a meal where everyone is sitting quietly and listening. The whole night revolves around the child asking the Mah Nishtanah, the Four Questions. And it’s not just that we tell them to ask. The entire setup of the night is designed to get those questions out of them. We change everything. We dip foods in ways we never do during the year. We lean while we eat like free people. We break the matzah in a way that looks strange to a kid. The whole meal feels off compared to a regular night, all on purpose, so a child stops and says, “hey, what is going on here?” My little boys went to sleep ridiculously early tonight so they can be up and sharp for the Seder. They’ve been practicing the questions. Their rebbes prepared them. They’re not coming to sit quietly, they’re coming ready, excited, and almost impatient to ask and be part of it. So when you do this year after year, generation after generation, you end up building people who don’t just go with the flow. They ask. They notice. They challenge. They figure things out on their own. And that shows up very clearly in life and in business. When you’re used to questioning everything, you don’t just accept what’s in front of you. You ask one “why” and you start catching what doesn’t make sense. You spot bad deals early. You understand where the real opportunity is because you actually took the time to break it down. That’s a real explanation. Not scams. Not fraud. Just a culture where you are trained from the beginning to ask “why” and not stop until he understands the answer.
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Konstantin Kisin
Konstantin Kisin@KonstantinKisin·
Delighted to announce I have accepted a position as lead speechwriter and PR advisor to the greatest Prime Minister in British history, Sir Keir Starmer. Together, we will continue to rebuild our country's military and ensure Britain's energy security in a turbulent world.
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PDAD
PDAD@AnselmD·
@Devon_Eriksen_ I live near Chester in England and I’m 50+ We never carry any guns and have never needed to… perfectly safe without them So maybe ask yourself why you need to go to the supermarket in your country with a killing weapon?? It strikes us as very odd
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Devon Eriksen
Devon Eriksen@Devon_Eriksen_·
Okay, time to explain guns to our new friends. Every day, when I leave the house, I attach a holstered handgun to my belt, under my shirt or coat. I would no more leave the house without a gun than I would walk around outdoors without shoes. Is it because I "need" a gun? No. I live in rural Tennessee, which is state in the American south. It's very safe here. The dangerous parts of America are big cities where the local government is leftist, and they shelter illegal migrant from the third world, and won't send violent criminals to prison. Places like Chicago and New York City. Yet, any time I leave the house, I put on a gun, knowing that I will probably never have to use it, and if I do, it will probably be on an aggressive stray dog, not a human. So why do I do it? Why do many other people who live around me do it? Why do we do this so much that carrying a gun is considered totally normal? If someone spotted it, it would not even arouse a comment, much less any fear. In fact, it is legal to carry a gun openly here, without covering it up. Covering it up is just considered polite. So.... why? Well, try thinking of an English nobleman, during the reign of Elizabeth the First. When he dressed to go ride to court, he would hang a slender fencing sword, called a rapier or smallsword, from his belt. He didn't expect to be attacked. He didn't even expect to fight a duel. And if he was challenged to a duel, he wouldn't need his sword right then. He would meet his challenger later at an agreed-upon place and time. No, he wore his sword because it was an expression of who he was. He was a gentleman, a person of status, with the legal privilege of carrying a sword. By carrying a sword, he asserted his rights and prerogatives as a nobleman. In Japan, you had the same sort of thing happening. The samurai, members of the bushi class, wore the two swords not because they expected to be attacked at any moment, but because the two swords were an essential part of who he was. So, in these two cases, weapons were carried by noblemen as an assertion of status. They had the right to do so, and they did so in order to assert, exercise, and retain the right. Americans carry guns because every American citizen is a nobleman. When we fought the British for our independence, that war began on April 19th, 1775, when British troops, fearing American rebelliousness, marched out from Boston to confiscate guns from people living in the surrounding countryside. Our ancestors did not submit to this. We shot them instead, and they fled back to Boston with their tails between their legs, to cower under the cover of the guns from the warship HMS Sommerset. Thus began several years of war. And when we won that war, we made a country where no government, and no man, would ever be allowed to disarm the people. No agent of the government may say to us, "I may have a gun, and you may not." Because to say that is to say "I am a nobleman, and you are a peasant. I am a master, and you are a slave." We are not peasants here. We are all noblemen. That is the most basic principle of what it means to be an American. I can be impoverished, so I can to be so poor that I live in a van down by the river. But however reduced my circumstances, as an American, I still have the rights and freedoms of a nobleman, of a daimyo, because that is the basic founding idea of the nation we forged on that day. If you come to America to visit, if you walk among us, you will pass many people carrying guns. You will not notice this. You will not see them. You will witness no violence. Everything will be normal. But the guns will be there. Because that is who we are. We don't carry guns to be violent. We don't wish to be rude, or to intimidate people. We keep our guns covered up. But they are the deepest, most essential part of what it means to be American.
ぴろん🌸@pirooooon3

銃いるの? アメリカ怖😱

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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@DailySignal I don’t believe you have any way to know that he’s frustrated. It’s almost certainly deception, misdirection, etc.
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The Daily Signal
The Daily Signal@DailySignal·
Victor Davis Hanson: Trump Knows What to Do with Iran, But It Is Politically Impossible President Trump understands the situation in Iran. He could declare victory and halt airstrikes, as most initial objectives have been met, but the political calculus of whether to let the Iranian regime survive or move to topple it is far more complicated. “He’d say, ‘Well, just sit here [Kharg Island] and wait until they go broke. And they will go broke, and the people will take over.’ But politically, that’s almost impossible to pull off. That’s why he’s frustrated. Some days he says, ‘We’re going to negotiate an end any minute,’ or, ‘We’re almost done.’ Other days he says, ‘Give me more troops. Come over.’” @VDHanson said on the newest episode of "Victor Davis Hanson: In His Own Words." youtu.be/_QKB963PZvs
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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@GovernorShapiro It’s illegal for noncitizens to vote. Just make sure they don’t.
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Governor Josh Shapiro
Governor Josh Shapiro@GovernorShapiro·
President Trump can sign whatever the hell he wants to, but it won’t change the Constitution. The authority to set our election rules belongs to the states — and as Governor, I will protect your right to vote. That includes your right to vote by mail.
The Associated Press@AP

BREAKING: President Trump signs an order directing the creation of a national eligible voter list, a move expected to face swift legal challenges. apnews.com/article/donald…

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Wall Street Mav
Wall Street Mav@WallStreetMav·
🚨🚨🚨Breaking: The German government to build 15 new nuclear power plants and lift sanctions immediately on all Russian oil and natural gas. German Chancellor Merz has also agreed to pay to rebuild the Nord Stream pipeline to Russia. All wind and solar projects have been cancelled. "It's time for Germany to open our energy economy. The best way to do this is via free markets, lowering taxes and regulations". For Immediate Release. Berlin, April 1 2026.
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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@DerektheCleric @MattMorseTV Cold War is long over. USA is standing up to Europe now. Europe said F it; now the USA says F Europe. Sucks to be Europe.
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DC, Last Legion, Infinity Redux
Nice try at simping. But none of that was true during the Cold War. Germany and Britained produced thousands of tanks a year. The truth is that when the Cold War ended, Europe just said F it and relied on the USA because it was cheaper to do so and the USA didn't stand up to them.
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Matt Morse
Matt Morse@MattMorseTV·
For a very long time, NATO has been used by the United States as a means with which to keep the European nations weak, dependent, and “under control.” Simply put, for decades the United States has maintained Europe as what is effectively a vassal state. To this degree, NATO has been a good arrangement for the United States, and I am personally in favor of it. However, as they say: “beggars can’t be choosers” – and now, the “beggars,” the European NATO members, have not only been attempting to “choose” – but, in fact, they’ve been attempting to make demands. They’ve become so accustomed to the benefits of this arrangement that they’ve taken it for granted and forgotten what their own obligations and commitments are. Many of them have refused to pay their agreed-upon 2% of GDP into the NATO budget. Many of them have leveraged predatory trade deals and tariffs against the United States. Many of them have cozied up with the CCP. And now, many of them are refusing to allow the United States operational access to European airspace. NATO, in premise, is a mutually beneficial relationship – so long as all parties involved recognize their place in the hierarchy. Europe is a protectorate of the United States – they don’t get to renege on all of their commitments and then start making demands. Perhaps President Trump must remind them that they are, in fact, subordinate to the United States and the interests of America; not the other way around.
Matt Morse@MattMorseTV

I have a VERY controversial opinion to share.

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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@ThrillaRilla369 Get another dog. Train them outside in an area constantly visible to the neighbor.
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Thrilla the Gorilla
Thrilla the Gorilla@ThrillaRilla369·
If your Muslim neighbor says you must get rid of your dog to respect Islam, what would you do?
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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@MOSSADil As if occupation by hezballah isn’t a violation of Lebanon’s sovereignty yet they failed to eliminate that problem.
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Mossad Commentary
Mossad Commentary@MOSSADil·
🚨 LEBANON REJECTS ISRAELI “SECURITY ZONE” PLAN Lebanon is pushing back against reported Israeli plans to establish a buffer zone in southern Lebanon. The Lebanese defense minister warns: • Any imposed “security zone” would violate Lebanon’s sovereignty • Threats of displacement could escalate the conflict further
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Kirlz
Kirlz@Kirlz·
@NewReaganCaucus What? You like being used and treated like slave soldiers for decades?
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The Reagan Caucus
The Reagan Caucus@NewReaganCaucus·
We're worried Trump wants out of NATO and recent events have helped him make that argument to his base.
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