Malachi32

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Malachi32

Malachi32

@Orpheus_TN

Beauty won't save the world but sometimes it can drive back the darkness just a bit. It's a big world, there are lots of ways to live in it, be kind. DM's open

Katılım Mart 2026
1.6K Takip Edilen131 Takipçiler
Malachi32
Malachi32@Orpheus_TN·
If we're "fighting communism on our own shores" it means that this US gov't, elected by the people of the US, wants to fight US voters who the gov't doesn't like. NO. thehill.com/policy/defense…
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Budsbackyardbarbell
Budsbackyardbarbell@budsbackyardbar·
@Bulldog78932701 At this point, the best himbo I can afford in my retirement will be a microwaved melon with a hole cut in it
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🏛Architectolder
🏛Architectolder@Architectolder·
A nice way to start your day. My cousin sent me this video of his trip to Niagara Falls. Have you ever been? Do you want to go?
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SaveOurChurchesUK
SaveOurChurchesUK@SaveukChurches·
It's heartbreaking to see a church end up like this. 💔 Every Sunday, these pews would have been filled. Hymns echoed through the building, children were baptised, couples exchanged vows, and families came together to celebrate life and mourn loved ones. But in 2008, St Michael's Church, Dulas, Herefordshire closed its doors. The congregation moved on, and the church was left behind. Today, books still sit on the shelves, the pews remain untouched, and everyday belongings are exactly where they were left, as though the next service was just around the corner. It never came. Now, the silence is broken only by the slow passage of time. With each passing year, a little more of this beautiful church is lost, along with the memories it once held. Here's hoping it isn't too late for this remarkable building to have a second chance.
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Jason Bassler
Jason Bassler@JasonBassler1·
"Peter Thiel's 'Founders Fund' bankrolled Flock." ✅ FACT CHECK: TRUE! Before Flock became a multi-billion-dollar surveillance company, Peter Thiel's VC firm helped fund its growth. The cameras didn't appear overnight. Neither did the money behind them.
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Alex Fasulo
Alex Fasulo@alex_fasulo·
The “green” in green energy that ranks “at the top” for @KathyHochul is money. Her favorite is money from foreign corporations. The best way to get that money? Claim there’s a “climate crisis” and create a money laundering arrangement with solar panels and wind turbines.
Daniel Turner@DanielTurnerPTF

My mother and 10,000 homes in Queens had their power cut because of failed green energy policies. @GovKathyHochul's response? She says climate change ranks "near the top" of her priorities. Hochul would rather put lives at risk during a heat wave than admit her radical climate policies are failing.

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ArchaeoHistories
ArchaeoHistories@histories_arch·
In 1880s, an entire town made it illegal to sell ice cream sodas on Sundays. So drugstore owners found a loophole, and accidentally invented one of the most popular desserts in the world. The town of Evanston, Illinois passed a “blue law” banning the sale of sodas on the Sabbath, since church leaders considered them too frivolous for a holy day. Soda fountain owners had a problem: customers still wanted something sweet after church. Their solution was simple. They served the ice cream with syrup poured on top, but left out the soda water entirely, technically staying within the letter of the law while completely ignoring its spirit. A nearly identical story is told 200 miles away in Two Rivers, Wisconsin, where a soda fountain owner named Ed Berners is said to have done the exact same thing that same decade, purely because it was Sunday and sodas weren’t for sale that day. He liked the result so much he kept selling it, first only on Sundays, then every day of the week. Either way, the name followed the same logic. The treat was called a “Sunday” at first, until local church leaders objected to a dessert being named after a holy day. So the spelling was quietly changed to “sundae” instead, close enough to keep the joke, safe enough to keep the peace. Thus, an ice cream Sundae drenched in hot fudge and toppings was born... © Eats History #archaeohistories
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Patrick
Patrick@nommo333·
When I discuss masculinity, I come from a unique point of view. I went back to basics. I forgot everything I thought I knew about masculinity and being a man. Some key things to consider: I am gay so I don't submit to women nor try to curry favor with them. Books and research from straight men were read through this filter and understanding. I don't play roles for pussy. I don't play roles for cock, either. I'm married to another man. We are both sober and in recovery and have both done a shitton of inner work, shadow work and have helped hundreds of men personally. If not more than we can remember. We love men and care about them deeply. We live a life of service to others. Because of that, we have strict boundaries. We found that much of what we believed about ourselves and men in general was wrong. The best books and practices for men are not widely promoted and remain outside of what therapists are taught in school in favor of more gynocentric processes that primarily help women. Men's needs are rarely considered by women in academia. Women who do care about men's needs tend to get ostracized. Much of the academic research data is flawed and cannot be trusted. What can be trusted is testimony from men who have been initiated into manhood. They all have the same exact story and how it happened. Listen to mature masculine men, and they all have similar tales about the transition from boy to man. Men will not get any shortcuts or breaks in this culture. They will not be taught how to be men as most of the rituals are no longer practiced. If they are lucky, tragedies, betrayals or catastrophic mistakes will teach them but that's unlikely. Becoming a man will not solve all problems, but remaining a boy means there will never be solutions. Becoming a man is not easy which is why so few actually go through with it. But once you know the truth about it, the choice becomes easy. You do not have to believe me or what I say. You are free to find this out for yourself. I had to find it for myself.
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Malachi32
Malachi32@Orpheus_TN·
Why celebrate Bastille Day? Abolishment of feudal dues; rights to liberty, property, security, resistance to oppression, freedom of speech, press, and religion; full civil rights and citizenship to Jews;"imaginary crimes" (sodomy, blasphemy, heresy) removed from the law.
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Malachi32
Malachi32@Orpheus_TN·
The great legacy of Giuseppe Arcimboldo 1527 – 1593
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Malachi32
Malachi32@Orpheus_TN·
@conno2856 My guess is that's the view from the high road
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o@conno2856·
Horatio McCulloch, British. Painting- Loch Lomond. 1861.
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Malachi32
Malachi32@Orpheus_TN·
Huge fan
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