Phillip Beane

14 posts

Phillip Beane banner
Phillip Beane

Phillip Beane

@PhillipBeazw

Katılım Ekim 2025
25 Takip Edilen1 Takipçiler
LadyValor
LadyValor@lady_valor_07·
$10,000,000 to never listen to a Jay Z song again. Are you taking the offer?
LadyValor tweet media
English
2.6K
54
1.1K
85.8K
Phillip Beane
Phillip Beane@PhillipBeazw·
@ComplexMusic He be doing to much! Sit down and make music. That’s what you’re great at. Everything else you need to sit back in the back like a bad ass kid with to much mouth. Kanye need his ass whipped.
English
2
0
6
905
Phillip Beane
Phillip Beane@PhillipBeazw·
@benjitaylor Wow that’s where I’m at in my thinking and goals. I’m nobody you know I was just impressed with your opportunities that you do have man and like you get to post that stuff to me first thing first on the agenda is to improve everything you know what I mean
English
0
0
0
17
Benji Taylor
Benji Taylor@benjitaylor·
First thing on the agenda: improve everything
English
1.3K
852
11.8K
110M
Phillip Beane
Phillip Beane@PhillipBeazw·
@fasc1nate Damn people you guys sound crazy. But like they said back in the day . When people talk bad about another person it’s the person talking that’s really the one doing bad, feeling bad, looking bad etc. and it sounds like it in these messages. You sound like a bunch of haters
English
0
0
0
2
Fascinating
Fascinating@fasc1nate·
Will Ferrell dresses up as Buddy the Elf at a hockey game between the Kings and Flyers. Effortlessly cool photos: bit.ly/4cFoZT1
Fascinating tweet media
English
66
16
292
42.2K
Anfal🦋
Anfal🦋@Anfal364518·
Which one is more beautiful.? Be honest.
Anfal🦋 tweet media
English
1.9K
98
612
71.1K
Phillip Beane
Phillip Beane@PhillipBeazw·
@NBCNews Thank you Mr prez! Oh and Hayes fam says thank you also, and can’t forget all of you for believing and still playing that good ole music and not just passing me bye( no pun really)haaah!!! But yall being back in business and it sure feels right.
English
0
0
1
259
NBC News
NBC News@NBCNews·
President Trump settles a lawsuit with the estate of renowned singer and songwriter Isaac Hayes that accused the president of using the hit record “Hold On, I’m Coming” in his campaign without permission, Hayes’ family says. nbcnews.com/politics/donal…
English
90
195
847
106.9K
Phillip Beane
Phillip Beane@PhillipBeazw·
@terry75572 @NBCNews Man you’re a smart one! Now tell your people this on here one more time and oh and the Hayes family says thank you all, back in business sure feels nice!!!
English
0
0
0
13
Linda Terry
Linda Terry@terry75572·
@NBCNews I guess they didn’t realize that him using that song repeatedly brought new fans into the fold that had never heard of Isaac Hayes or that song and would’ve made him any millions more just like with the village people. They’re too busy listening to the lies of the left
English
3
1
8
782
lux_54Ai
lux_54Ai@Lux_54Ai·
Is this true?? Yes or No
lux_54Ai tweet media
English
2.4K
389
4.4K
202.4K
Phillip Beane
Phillip Beane@PhillipBeazw·
@archeohistories Thank you sir. I wish I could shake your hand. He let a higher power use him for the greatness of our future using big capital for it and got people who have big capital also very angry because another kind of power uses , them
English
0
0
3
313
Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
A Swedish billionaire has bought 400,000 acres of the Amazon jungle just to protect it. He purchased a logging company that owned the land and shut it down to prevent further commercial destruction. The man in the photo is Johan Eliasch, a Swedish-British billionaire and environmentalist who made global headlines for taking an unusual stand against deforestation. In 2005, Eliasch purchased 400,000 acres (about 625 square miles) of Amazon rainforest in Brazil—not for profit, but to protect it. The land was previously under the control of a logging company, but instead of exploiting it, he shut the operations down entirely to halt commercial logging. Eliasch’s purchase was both bold and controversial. Supporters hailed it as a visionary act of private conservation, demonstrating how wealth could be used to shield fragile ecosystems. Critics, however, raised questions about foreign ownership of Brazilian land and whether such actions undermined local sovereignty. Still, Eliasch’s move drew worldwide attention to the desperate need to protect the Amazon, often called the “lungs of the Earth,” which produces 20% of the planet’s oxygen. Eliasch wasn’t just a businessman—he was also a former special representative on deforestation to the UK government and an advocate for climate action in international forums. His story illustrates the power (and complexity) of individuals stepping in where governments and corporations often fail. One man’s decision quite literally saved a piece of the Amazon rainforest. © Reddit #archaeohistories
Archaeo - Histories tweet media
English
549
2K
9K
222.5K
Brown World
Brown World@Brown_World7·
Can u guess correctly
English
10K
698
8.5K
878.8K
Phillip Beane
Phillip Beane@PhillipBeazw·
@archeohistories Hierarchy whatever, I bet they tagged teamed that wolfy, wooly, scratch n sniff, add sweat for seasoning fur burger with cheese up in the higher elevation . Just saying
English
2
0
1
170
Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
Mountain guides carry a rich lady who wanted to climb Vesuvius in 1910, Kingdom of Italy... In 1910, as Europe’s upper classes flocked to the slopes of Mount Vesuvius, one wealthy woman made the journey in a rather unconventional way — carried on the shoulders of two mountain guides. The photograph, colorized from the early 20th century, shows the social hierarchy of the time etched into a single frame. The woman, dressed elegantly in dark fabric and a feathered hat, sits poised as the men beneath her strain up the volcanic terrain. For the elite, such climbs were adventures to be experienced, not endured. For the guides, it was labor — a blend of servitude and strength performed in the shadow of a volcano that had buried civilizations. By 1910, Vesuvius was a tourist attraction, but also an active threat; it would erupt again just four years later. This image is both absurd and telling — a portrait of privilege ascending on the backs of endurance. The 1906 eruption of Vesuvius, just four years earlier, destroyed several nearby towns and even forced the temporary closure of the 1908 Olympic Games in Rome. © History in Colour #archaeohistories
Archaeo - Histories tweet media
English
46
36
193
20.1K