$LOAFTOKEN
233 posts

$LOAFTOKEN
@MEATLOAFINC
Meatloaf (LOAFTOKEN) ain’t just dinner—it’s destiny. Born out of five Texans who somehow turned 33.85% YOY growth into a lifestyle, we’ve gone from stocks to op
Central Texas Katılım Ekim 2025
74 Takip Edilen323 Takipçiler

Hitting that "six7" All hands on deck. Let's roll baby!
pump.fun/coin/8nymPKgsw…
#SolanaAirdrop #Raydium #PumpFunLaunch #PumpCoin #Solana #btc #CryptoCommunity

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👀$LOAFTOKEN Airdrop Cypher Alert!
Decode the Fibonacci twist: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13... but what's the missing digit after 21? (Hint: It's the "34th slice" for the next drop clue!) Solve for eligibility. $LOAFTOKEN rising! 🚀🥩 #Solana #MemeCoins #Airdrop #CryptoMeme #SolanaMeme

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@MKBHD This dude just blows my mind! Can you imagine if we had him our team? $LOAFTOKEN
pump.fun/coin/8nymPKgsw…

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1981 (Nov 21–22) Ronald Reagan Dispute over continuing resolution; resolved quickly with minor budget tweaks.
1982 (Sep 30–Oct 2) Ronald Reagan Brief lapse over reconciliation bill; ended with agreement on spending reductions.
1982 (Dec 17–18) Ronald Reagan1Short funding gap; minimal impact due to holiday timing.
1983 (Nov 10–14) Ronald Reagan Conflict on appropriations; resolved after bipartisan negotiations . 1984 (Sep 30–Oct 3) Ronald Reagan Delays in omnibus bill; ended with compromise on defense spending.
1984 (Oct 3–5) Ronald Reagan Continuation of prior dispute; quick resolution.
1986 (Oct 16–18) Ronald Reagan Funding impasse; resolved via emergency measure.
1987 (Dec 18–20) Ronald Reagan Budget reconciliation failure; ended with short-term funding.
1990 (Oct 5–9) George H.W. Bush Dispute over deficit reduction; resolved with budget summit agreement . 1995 (Nov 13–19) Bill Clinton GOP push for spending cuts; partial funding restored temporarily.
1995–1996 (Dec 16, 1995–Jan 6, 1996) Bill Clinton Major clash over Medicare and welfare reforms; longest until 2018, ended with Clinton concessions.
2013 (Oct 1–16) Barack Obama Republican opposition to Affordable Care Act; resolved after debt ceiling talks . 2018 (Jan 20–23)Donald Trump Brief lapse over immigration and DACA; quick bipartisan deal.
2018–2019 (Dec 22, 2018–Jan 25, 2019) Donald Trump Dispute over border wall funding; longest at the time, ended with temporary resolution.
2025 (Oct 1–ongoing) Donald Trump (as of Nov 7, 2025) Started over failure to pass continuing resolution amid budget disputes; The bureaucrats and entrenched government officials behind this shutdown need to wake up and finally tackle the rampant wasteful spending that's draining taxpayer dollars while everyday Americans foot the bill. Recent audits expose jaw-dropping examples, like the $454 million in improper Medicare payments for unneeded COVID tests due to zero safeguards, or the IRS blowing $21 million on propping up obsolete tech instead of modernizing as intended. Then there's the Department of Transportation wasting over $600,000 on unused phones and service plans, and the Bureau of Indian Affairs funneling $700,000 to demolished buildings—clear signs of a bureaucracy asleep at the wheel with no accountability. USAID's track record is even worse, with millions squandered on foreign pet projects like $32,000 for a transgender comic in Peru, $6 million for Egyptian tourism, and funds indirectly boosting Taliban poppy farms in Afghanistan. These aren't isolated slips; they're systemic failures totaling over $1 trillion in waste last year alone, from phantom federal offices to DEI drag shows abroad, all while domestic needs like border security and infrastructure rot. Congress must slash this nonsense, starting with foreign aid boondoggles and outdated programs like the $3.3 billion CDBG that's repeatedly failed audits and pass a budget that demands real cuts before reopening the government.
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The History of U.S. Government Shutdowns
Duration (days):
1981 Ronald Reagan: 2
1982 Ronald Reagan: 1
1982 Ronald Reagan: 3
1983 Ronald Reagan: 3
1984 Ronald Reagan: 2
1984 Ronald Reagan: 1
1986 Ronald Reagan: 1
1987 Ronald Reagan: 1
1990 George H.W. Bush: 3
1995 Bill Clinton: 5
1995 Bill Clinton: 21
2013 Barack Obama: 16
2018 Donald Trump: 3
2018 Donald Trump: 35
2025 Donald Trump: ?
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The reason government programs are so inefficient is that, unlike a commercial company, the feedback loop for improvement is broken, because they have a state-mandated monopoly and can’t go out of business if customers are unhappy.
No matter how bad the service is at your DMV (sorry to pick on DMVs), you still have to use your DMV, because it’s a monopoly.
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DMV lines longer than a Cybertruck waitlist? Blame the monopoly. No bankruptcy fear means no rush to improve. Tesla-esque: User feedback zaps bugs faster than a Supercharger. Fun fact: Gov programs waste 30% more than private firms (per CBO). Electrify the bureaucracy! ⚡😂 #TeslaFixesGov
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Let us, humans, that are living during a time of great technological innovations applaud @elonmusk @Tesla @spaceX for making dreams, reality. Glad to be alive during this shift in culture of humanity.
Dont forget to have some Meatloaf to celebrate $LOAFTOKEN @comedymothrship

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@Cobratate When 16,500 millionaires abandon the UK in one year and 9,800 land in Dubai, you're not watching a trend, you're watching a wealth transfer of historic proportions. Rhyme and Reason!
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$LOAFTOKEN will NOT get you filthy rich tomorrow. This is a passion project. A day late or a dollar short? Don't be or do either.
💸#money takes time
💛#passion is love & commitment
🚶♀️#journey of the community
🙏#TrustTheTrinity

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$LOAFTOKEN retweetledi

@justinbieber Mr. Bieber, I'm a bit older than you and was always delicately pressed in social get togethers about what my thoughts were on pop culture. Tbh, I was unfair about your journey. I thought you were gifted and lucky. But as the story unfolds, you are a good SOB. Proud for you Bud!
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@jeremyct How mfers lose the Ballond'Or thrice from partying with the wrong b******! Wasted talent. I bought his Barca Kit when he was Messi and Suarez because I had a feeling he would be the next thing.
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