Nikki Moonitz

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Nikki Moonitz

Nikki Moonitz

@NMoonitz

The "Abuse of Language" always precedes the "Abuse of Power." Josef Pieper

California, USA Katılım Mart 2021
29.6K Takip Edilen39.6K Takipçiler
Outlaw Matt
Outlaw Matt@mbiv777·
My best jokes go right over peoples’ heads. 🤷‍♂️
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Mandy
Mandy@MarindaVannoy1·
me
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WisdomX
WisdomX@wisdomXplorer·
Be honest: Can you do 50 pushups in one go?
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Vintage Rock 🎸
Vintage Rock 🎸@VintageRockN_85·
Take It Easy or I Can’t Tell you Why?
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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
A flight turned tense after a disagreement between two passengers over an extra seat. According to the account shared online, a plus-size traveler had intentionally purchased two seats for the flight. She explained that she wanted enough space to sit comfortably and avoid making other passengers uncomfortable during the journey. But during boarding, the situation quickly changed. A mother traveling with a toddler approached the woman and asked if the child could use the empty seat next to her. The traveler declined, explaining that she had paid for the seat specifically for extra space. The conversation escalated. The mother reportedly complained to a flight attendant, arguing that the seat could be used by her child instead. The passenger then showed both of her boarding passes, proving she had purchased and reserved the extra seat. In the end, the airline allowed the woman to keep the seat she paid for. The toddler was expected to sit on the parent’s lap, which is a common arrangement permitted for very young children on flights. Despite the resolution, the woman later said she felt uncomfortable for the rest of the flight, claiming she received disapproving looks and passive-aggressive comments from other passengers. When the story spread online, it sparked debate. Some people argued that since she paid for the seat, she had every right to keep it. Others believed she should have given it up for the child. The moment turned into another viral discussion about airline etiquette, personal space, and whether paying for something automatically settles the debate.
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⭕ Brock Pierson
⭕ Brock Pierson@brockpierson·
I am blowing all super small accounts Reply if you're under 5k and I will boost you 🚀
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Thrilla the Gorilla
Thrilla the Gorilla@ThrillaRilla369·
What goes well with chili? 🥣 and you can't say crackers
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Nikki Moonitz
Nikki Moonitz@NMoonitz·
@FomerCityBoy @BrandonStraka It’s common sense. Tell kids from birth that a certain group is out to get them and a number of those kids will absorb the message and act accordingly. Not to mention, there’s an implicit message that white people are acceptable targets.
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Cardigan B.
Cardigan B.@FomerCityBoy·
I understand your concerns, and no one wants to see any child—white, Black, or otherwise—brutalized or victimized. Those incidents are horrific and deserve real attention and justice. That said, there's no peer-reviewed evidence linking anti-white-supremacy discourse (or discussions of systemic racism) to any measurable increase in violence against white children. Hate crimes with anti-white bias make up only around 16% of reported racial-bias incidents in recent FBI figures (with the majority still anti-Black). The pain of individual victims is real, but tying it causally to that specific narrative doesn't hold up under scrutiny from available crime research and trends. We can condemn every assault without inflating unproven causal claims.
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Brandon Straka #WalkAway
Brandon Straka #WalkAway@BrandonStraka·
It’s getting out of control. Now it’s 10+ new videos a day, and with over 1,500 White Americans reportedly facing Black violent crime daily, it’s being brushed aside by leaders and media. Something has to change.
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Modern History
Modern History@modernhistory·
Name This 1950's Classic
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