Mark
865 posts


@NgocThach74 that is what Trump is doing to MAGA... MAGA jumps right back in thanking Trump for warming up the water!! LOL
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@4thOfJuly365 That’s how the game was played before the snowflakes changed the rules. Catchers had to take lots of hits, I know because I was one.
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@IndianaGPA Do the police only hire those who are afraid of everyone??? What's so scary about that? They could have just sprayed him with a can and put him on the ground.
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@barstoolsports White female coach screaming & finger-poking a Black teenage girl in the face on national TV = 'tough love'
Flip the races and see how fast everyone calls it abuse. Double standards much? 🤔
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If You're Not Getting Coached Up Like This, It's Because Your Coach Knows You Don't Have It In You s.barstool.link/c/article-3565…

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@Don_Dee_Real @BBGreatMoments No, in fact if he tries to move and then gets in the way, it is interference. Catcher needs to work around the batter in the box and batter should remain stationary.
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@BBGreatMoments Who is at fault?
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Isn't the batter suppose to get out of the way?
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@ChuunibyouGuild @LundukeJournal Just keep in mind that anything other than accepting woke Linux is considered fascist/maga Linux. It's not that there is really any such thing as MAGA Linux. It's any Linux that does not embrace their dogma. It is hard to be apolitical today.
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@LundukeJournal I don't want "MAGA Linux" any more than I want "Flag People Linux". What I want is "My Shit Fucking works and doesn't ask me for my Birthday Linux"
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Here we see two high profile Open Source people (Red Hat & GNOME) discussing the problem with what they call “MAGA/Linux”.
Discussions like this have been increasing among Open Source organizations and projects lately. They are very upset that “MAGA/Linux” is “gaining traction”.
What, exactly, is “MAGA/Linux”?
The definition seems vague, but you’ll see words like “XLibre”, “Lunduke”, & “OpenMandriva” regularly associated.

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@not_rekt_11 wait wait ... everyone has been saying all the black family needs is the support of a black father ... now ... the same ppl are upset there is a black father supporting his family
what? ... did i miss something?
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@dantemendes A friend and I both had Amigas. I had the 500, he had a 2000. You could serial connect them and play Falcon head to head. It was a blast. I still remember my friend emptying his aim 9s on the merge
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Falcon was one of the Amiga's earlier killer apps for me.
And it let you go close enough of the enemy jet so you can visually identify it (it's clearly a MiG-21 at two thirds into exQUIZitely's clip).

exQUIZitely 🕹️@exQUIZitely
So, Captain, how many weapons do you need? Yes! 💥 M61A1 Vulcan Cannon 💥 AIM-9J Sidewinder 💥 AIM-9L Sidewinder 💥 AGM-65B Maverick 💥 Mk 84 💥 Durandal 💥 ALQ-131 💥 Flares 💥 Chaff Falcon (original DOS version from 1987, Amiga and Atari ST ports from 1989) was brilliant! So good that even F-16 fighter pilots endorsed it for its realism. Did you play it back in the day?
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There are moments in life when words just aren’t enough. Losing Coach Holtz is one of those moments.
Coach was so much more than a football coach to me. He was family. I still remember the day he came to my house to recruit me. He didn’t just sit down and talk to me about football or what I could do on the field. He talked to me as a young man. And he spoke to my mom the way a man should speak to a mother who was trusting someone with her son. He looked her in the eye and promised that I would be taken care of at Notre Dame. That moment meant everything to us, and it’s something I’ve carried with me my entire life.
Coach Holtz believed in people. He believed in building men, not just players. He welcomed my entire family into the Notre Dame family and always made sure we felt that love and support. That’s who he was. He cared deeply about the people around him, and he made every one of us feel like we mattered.
The lessons he taught me went far beyond football. His faith, his discipline, his belief in doing things the right way shaped who I became as a man, a father, and a leader.
My heart is broken today, but I’m also filled with gratitude for the time I had with him and for the impact he had on my life. Coach will always be with us—in the lessons he taught, in the lives he changed, and in the love he gave so freely.
Thank you for everything, Coach. I love you.
You will forever be in our hearts.
Go Irish ☘️

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