Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Rachel Davis for US Senate
103 posts

Rachel Davis for US Senate
@RachelFoxSenate
Independent U.S. Senate Candidate (MN) | Restoring constitutional limits: Power of the Purse, Election Integrity, Personal Freedom | No party bosses
Waverly Minnesota Katılım Mart 2026
395 Takip Edilen153 Takipçiler
Rachel Davis for US Senate retweetledi

The New Richmond School District quietly allowed biological boys to use the girls' bathrooms.
In response to angry and concerned parents ' emails, the school principal wrote that if a daughter is uncomfortable sharing a bathroom with a biological male who has recently begun to “identify” as female, then the daughter may use a single-stall bathroom instead. Maps to a single stall were hung on classroom doors.
Ella was the first to step up and speak at the special board meeting called to address this controversy—with over 300 attendees watching in-person.
Most adults don't have the guts to speak up in these situations.
Ella is so brave.
English
Rachel Davis for US Senate retweetledi

Rachel Davis for US Senate retweetledi

.@WILawLiberty is standing alongside brave girls like Ella who will not have their rights erased by absurd school policies that violate privacy and safety. Watch now:
English
Rachel Davis for US Senate retweetledi

America's Messiest Divorce: The Revolutionary War
What they taught you in school about American military history was a highlight reel with the embarrassing parts edited out. Republic Stoic drags American conflict into honest examination, starting with the Revolutionary War, personally titled Fine, We'll Do It Ourselves. The Revolutionary War was the world's most successful messy divorce. From taxes on colonial essentials to George Washington's underrated genius of simply not quitting, through Valley Forge's brutal reality and the Continental Congress functioning like an ungoverned group chat, this war lasted 8 years against impossible odds. The miracle wasn't that America won. The miracle was something far more extraordinary. #AmericanMilitaryHistory, #RevolutionaryWar
English

Grad Student Time-Travels to 1788 to Save the Electoral College
Election integrity is under siege as deep fakes, hackers, and cable news fraud hysteria collide on the most chaotic election night in a swing state. Elena Ramirez, an exhausted history grad student and reluctant campaign volunteer, receives a mysterious package from her late grandfather containing a beat-up copy of the Federalist Papers covered in sarcastic red ink notes. Through wild time travel visions, Elena drops into 1788, witnessing Alexander Hamilton defend the electoral college against fiery anti-federalist Republicus, exposing the timeless battle between republic and direct democracy, foreign corruption and cabal, and whether 270 electors can still hold a fractured nation together. #ElectionIntegrity, #ElectoralCollege
youtu.be/rpP2qPMWio4 YouTube

YouTube
English
Rachel Davis for US Senate retweetledi
Rachel Davis for US Senate retweetledi

@Melgibsonacts I agree. Some people have been suggesting Trump takes Newsom's place after his presidency to fix California. Thoughts on that? It does sound like a fun idea.
English

@joeroganhq I love you both. Thanks for always thinking outside the box.
English

Choked by Cowards: America’s Fierce Wake-Up Call
As another deadline looms over the Strait of Hormuz, this geopolitical soap opera threatens real Americans. Ultimatums shift like goalposts, oil hostage situations drive gas prices higher, farmers pay more for fertilizer, and families tighten their belts. Turning the world's busiest shipping lane into a floating traffic jam isn't global leadership — it's absurdity. We've never cowered before tyrants choking our prosperity. Our military is unmatched, our innovators unstoppable, our people unbreakable. This is about rejecting weakness, demanding strength with purpose, and choosing unity over division. America doesn't whine. America rises. #StraitOfHormuz, #AmericaRises
youtube.com/shorts/ikmHLJc… YouTube

YouTube
English

How Do State Governments Dominate the Federal Government Federalist No 17 Explained
Federalist No. 17, written by Alexander Hamilton in 1787, tackled one of the biggest fears surrounding the new Constitution — that the federal government would swallow the states whole. Hamilton pushed back hard, arguing that human nature and everyday loyalty naturally favor state governments over a distant federal authority. We break down Hamilton's core argument in our constitutional republic: power is intentionally split through checks and balances, and the states hold serious home field advantage over regular people's lives. From local roads to property laws, the states dominate where it counts most. #Federalist17, #AlexanderHamilton
youtu.be/rlR6BrkUN4k

YouTube
English
Rachel Davis for US Senate retweetledi
Rachel Davis for US Senate retweetledi







