Ryan Brosky

972 posts

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Ryan Brosky

Ryan Brosky

@RyanBrosky

@GutfeldFox Associate Producer | The B-Team co-host on @PlanetTyrusPod | Proud American Conservative | Ocassional Satirical Tweets | Opinions Are My Own🇺🇸

Katılım Haziran 2022
171 Takip Edilen2.8K Takipçiler
Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
I don’t think a single person is going to miss hearing the name Thomas Massie
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
If the Knicks lose tonight against the Cavaliers, @GovKathyHochul will say it’s Trump’s fault.
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
Rashee Rice has won a Super Bowl & is now going to jail for 30 days? He’s lived the full NFL player American dream.
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
This was clearly a joke everyone 😂
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
The LIRR strike is over. Customers can expect a 57% ticket price increase next year.
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
Can we PLEASE vote out @GovKathyHochul? The LIRR strike is another example of Hochul not being able to prevent a crisis. Zeldin should have won. Republicans were close. Blakeman needs to finish the job and it’s up to New Yorkers to vote one of the worst governors out of office.
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
Great news! Kathy Hochul has a plan to make up the millions of dollars lost from the LIRR strike. Make the taxpayer pay! Everyone wins!
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
New Yorkers SHOULD elect Bruce Blakeman, but they won’t. For decades, this state has repeatedly complained about the status quo yet continue to re-elect the same awful leadership in Albany. Kathy Hochul will easily win in November. Republicans need better candidates.
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
Should LIRR riders go on strike by not paying for the hefty price to ride and late service?
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
Hochul wants to blame Trump for hurting New Yorkers, yet even with a LIRR strike that impacts over 300,000 residents, she keeps enforcing the money-making congestion fee scam. She only cares about New Yorkers if it makes her look bad politically. Blame Trump, take our money.
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
Kathy Hochul’s disasters since her last election: LIRR Strike Mass Exodus Billions Spent on Migrant Crisis Sky-High Taxes Businesses Fleeing Congestion Pricing Fiasco Bail Reform Chaos Medicaid Nightmare Energy Costs Soaring Wall Street Suffering Worst governor in America.
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Ryan Brosky retweetledi
New York Post
New York Post@nypost·
LIRR strike begins after MTA fails to reach wage hike deal with union, disrupting 300K commuters trib.al/GlStkX5
New York Post tweet media
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
The LIRR sucks. $400 a month for a monthly train ticket. Conductors are nasty. Service is terrible. Trains are always delayed for “track work” or “equipment issues” or “signal trouble”. Prices keep going up. They run 8 car trains during rush hour. Just a terrible organization. Hope they strike and never ever come back.
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Ryan Brosky retweetledi
Gutfeld!
Gutfeld!@Gutfeldfox·
Gutfeld! will not air tonight due to continuing coverage of President Trump's state visit to China. For the latest, stay tuned to @FoxNews
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Ryan Brosky
Ryan Brosky@RyanBrosky·
Stay strong Kat! We are all in your corner.
Kat Timpf@KatTimpf

My seemingly healthy, strong father Daniel “Dad Timpf” Timpf died very unexpectedly on the evening of May 7 at just 69 years old.   It does not seem like enough to simply call him my father, because he was so much more than that. He was my rock, my hero and my best friend. He was loyal, funny, kind, selfless, hard-working, and so devoted to his children that it was impossible to be near him and not find yourself inspired. He was a writer, a painter, a sailor, and somehow knowledgeable on every subject from world history to literature to accounting. He was the most dependable person anyone has ever met. I always felt like, as long as I had his phone number, there was not a problem I could not solve. I needed him here with me; I am not okay, and I am far from the only person who feels this.   The birth of my son in February 2025, his first grandchild, was supposed to be a happy new beginning for our family. A family that had been already once devastated by an untimely loss: the loss of my mother Anne Marie to a rare disease in 2014 just a matter of weeks after her diagnosis.   The joy of my son’s birth was, of course, complicated by my also very unexpected breast cancer diagnosis just a matter of hours before going into labor with him. During this time, my dad did what he did best, which was to save the day. As soon as he heard about my diagnosis, he simply got into the car and started driving to New York -- making it through the tunnel just as my  son was born…on the day that happened to be his own birthday, as well.   In the tumultuous time of a simultaneous new cancer diagnosis and new baby, my dad was the sole reason for our stability, rushing in to help care for our son, and returning to do so again for my double mastectomy, reconstructive surgery, and any time that we ever needed him. It was an awful, awful year… but I found so much joy and hope throughout it by watching the beauty of a very special relationship form between my son and my father. This horrible thing that was happening was creating such a very special bond between the two of them -- almost making the terrible thing worth it -- and I was so excited to see how that bond would grow.   The bond was of top priority for my father, who visited from Michigan often. I saw him last on the Monday before he died, and my son was so proud to help his grandfather push his suitcase down to the car as he left. The goodbyes were quick. Why wouldn’t they be? We would all see each other again at the beginning of June, when we would all head to Texas for my shows and to see my grandpa. We wanted to make sure that my son could spend as much time as he could with his great-grandfather. He is, after all, 93.   I was certainly not over the trauma of my cancer or having to amputate the breasts I so badly wanted to feed my son with, but the one thing I could always count on to get me through my worst moments was seeing my son’s and my father’s faces light up when they saw each other, be it during the visits or our routine morning and bedtime FaceTime calls.   That is, at least, until I had to hear over the phone from a doctor I had never met in an emergency room in the same town up north that I’d previously announced to my father that I was pregnant that my dad was dead; I would never see him again, and neither would my son. It would turn out that last year was not the hard one, after all. Rather, it was the one I would now do anything to relive. I would amputate my breasts every year just to be able to speak with him one more time, even for five minutes.   I am currently living an unimaginable horror. For many people, this is a tragic story. For me, it’s my life. I do not know how I will recover from it. I only know that I have to for the sake of what is left of my family.

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