Mister Justin Becker
13.6K posts

Mister Justin Becker
@RevJustinBecker
5-9 170lbs. Cherokee and German heritage. I love cooking, boxing, martial arts and CAMO. Student of Austrian Economics.
Ladson, SC Katılım Temmuz 2017
295 Takip Edilen259 Takipçiler

@wallstreeet27 @campbell_p59039 @NicholasBrendon While I agree with your assessment of these vaccines, I was simply trying to suggest that we focus on his accomplishments outside of all that. I do agree attention needs to be raised concerning this issue. But for now, I'd rather talk about his work over the years.
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He had numerous spinal surgeries 11!!!
He had to have been on & of pain meds almost all his life. Covid vax surely was a good reason for the heart attack he had 3 years ago, that’s the common denominator more and more people early 50s 40s and even 30s are having heart attacks. No vaccine is “safe & effective”
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@campbell_p59039 @NicholasBrendon He had a congenital heart defect. He also struggled with addiction to alcohol and prescription drugs over the years. Sadly, that combination can be fatal, often years after kicking the habits. I think we can all focus on the good things he contributed.
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@NicholasBrendon Passed away…In his SLEEP…At 54?
And y’all want us to drink the “Natural causes” koolaid?
No chance.
We’ve had far FAR to many of these cardiac episodes to simply keep turning a blind eye to what’s happening.
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@kw5hine @YujiOkumoto @thetamlyntomita @AliciaHannah @ElizBerkley @CobraKaiSeries No, Kumiko is with "Towel Man" 😂
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Who would you have chosen for Chozen? #LoveIsBlind #TooHotToHandle
Blessed to have worked with all three beautiful women. #CobraKai #KarateKid #Netflix
@thetamlyntomita @AliciaHannah @ElizBerkley



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@MrT You just had to outdo Balboa with the flag pattern, huh? Lol. Clubber Lang for POTUS. Make Fools Be Pitied Again!
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@hulu May your platform die of financial starvation a million times over
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@ExploreCosmos_ "floating" cities in Venus upper atmosphere would be more doable than this.
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Advances in technology are reviving a question that used to belong almost entirely to science fiction: could Mars ever be transformed into a planet that supports Earth-like life?
The idea of “making Mars green” refers to terraforming, deliberately altering a world’s atmosphere, temperature, and climate so that liquid water can persist and biology can spread.
Mars remains the most discussed target because it already has polar water ice and a day length similar to Earth’s, even though it is currently extremely cold, dry, and wrapped in a very thin atmosphere. According to researchers, the point is not that we are ready to terraform Mars now, but that the concept has moved from “physically impossible” to “scientifically and ethically testable,” and therefore deserves structured research rather than being dismissed outright.
The proposal described is explicitly staged. The first step would be warming Mars by several tens of degrees, potentially within a few decades, by introducing engineered aerosols or greenhouse gases that trap more heat.
If global temperatures rose by around 30°C, enough surface and subsurface ice could begin to melt for liquid water to persist, at least in some regions.
Mars likely contains sufficient ice to form a substantial body of water, conceptually “an ocean”, if the thermal barrier were overcome.
In this framing, warming is the enabling move that shifts Mars from a permanently frozen desert into a planet where water chemistry and biology could actually operate on meaningful scales.
The next stage would be biological seeding, beginning not with plants but with microorganisms designed for extreme survival. Synthetic biology is presented as central: the idea is to develop extremophile-like microbes that combine traits such as radiation tolerance, resilience to desiccation, and the ability to function under low pressure and harsh conditions.
Once established, microbial growth could spread in algae-like layers over time and begin slowly reshaping the surface environment. Through photosynthesis and broader biogeochemical activity, these organisms could contribute to atmospheric change, acting as a long-term lever rather than an immediate solution.
The final phase is the slow construction of a thicker, oxygen-rich atmosphere that could support complex life. This would not happen on human timescales: it would likely take centuries to millennia.
One suggested bridge strategy is large domed habitats, hundreds of meters in scale, where oxygen could be produced locally via photosynthesis or water electrolysis, allowing human life to persist while the planet’s broader environment changes incrementally.
In this view, controlled ecosystems under domes are not a temporary side project but the practical intermediate step between a dead planet and an open-air biosphere.
Crucially, the argument is not presented as a confident engineering blueprint but as an invitation to do the foundational science.
Major unknowns would dominate any realistic plan: what lies under the ice sheets, how dust storms might evolve in a warmer and wetter atmosphere, and whether the materials required for industrial-scale oxygen generation are actually accessible on Mars or would need to be imported at prohibitive cost.
Alongside those technical barriers are ethical constraints: terraforming would permanently change Mars, potentially destroying its pristine geological record and eliminating opportunities to study an untouched planetary archive.
If indigenous microbial life exists, even in isolated niches, large-scale intervention could erase it before we ever detect or understand it.
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@NFLonFOX Rams over Broncos in Superbowl 26-21 is my pick
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@walmarthelp It's not Walmarts fault. There are plenty of cart returns, people just refuse to use them
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@RevJustinBecker Please send us a DM with more details, so we can look into this for you. twitter.com/messages/compo…
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@CartNarcs He was SO CLOSE!!!!! WHOOP WHOOP SKIDDLEY WOOOOPPOP!!!! Full lane blockage less than 6 FEET FROM THE CORRAL... Please, Agent Sebastian! We need you in Marion, Indiana! Most notably, Walmart and Meijer!

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@YourAnonNews Thanksgiving dinner, Christmas dinner and New Years Day dinner. Each was noticeably cheaper this year than last year. I budget and scrutinize every dollar I spend, so I notice things. I spent 2024 working in a grocery store. I still do a side gig in grocery. Food is lower.
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@aj99isabbgod @NotAvgLiberal Better than a rainbow flag
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This is what a piece of shit grifting murderer looks like.
A fucking idiot who was too stupid to pass the ASVAB,
He was rejected entry by every branch of the military.
Not a fighter,
Sure as fuck not a warrior….
A Piece Of Shit Grifting Murderer.
Any questions?
Kyle Rittenhouse 🇺🇸@rittenhouse2a
I'm back on social media, I'm back in the fight, and i'm here to stay. For a quick update, 6 months ago I made the best decision of my life and married my best friend. @BellRittenhouse, I couldn’t be happier. I love you beautiful. More big announcements coming soon...
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@JoelBriden @Pickuptruckdude @konstructivizm They don't get happy, they don't get sad, they JUST RUN PROGRAMS... 😂
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Voyager 1 is the loneliest pioneer humanity has ever launched, and it is still flying perfectly, forty-eight years later, on a course set in 1977 that has never needed a single correction.Imagine that: on September 5, 1977, a 825-kilogram golden spacecraft lifted off from Cape Canaveral. Engineers gave it one decisive push with gravity assists from Jupiter and Saturn, then essentially said, “Go. We’ll never touch you again.” And it listened. For thirty-seven straight years (until the first tiny trim in 2017, only to align the antenna), Voyager 1 hurtled through space without a single thruster firing to fix its path. Not one. That’s like throwing a paper airplane from New York and having it glide untouched through a window in Paris, four decades later.Right now, in December 2025, Voyager 1 is 163 times farther from the Sun than Earth is, more than 24.4 billion kilometers away, the farthest human-made object in history. It crossed the heliopause (the Sun’s protective bubble) in 2012 and is now sailing through true interstellar space, where the wind between the stars is colder than anything we can create on Earth. Yet its trajectory is still so impeccable that the flight team jokes the spacecraft could hit a cosmic bullseye drawn half a century ago.It has already given us the pale blue dot photo, the first portraits of Jupiter’s raging storms and Saturn’s rings in impossible detail, and the discovery that moons like Io and Titan are worlds stranger than fiction. Now, with its power fading to barely four watts (less than a refrigerator lightbulb), it still whispers data back across the void on a 23-watt signal that takes 22 hours and 55 minutes to reach us, one-way.Voyager 1 isn’t just a probe. It’s a message in a bottle flung toward the galaxy, carrying the sounds of Earth (whales, Chuck Berry, and a baby’s cry) on its golden record. And it’s still flying straight, as if to prove that human foresight, once aimed true, can outrun time itself.Out there in the dark, a tiny golden speck keeps its ancient promise: keep going, perfectly, forever.

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@SabrinaAnnLynn @WhiteHouse Go play Fortnite and relax.
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@WhiteHouse this video is evil and disgusting. Do not ever involve me or my music to benefit your inhumane agenda.
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