SA_Reeder

161 posts

SA_Reeder

SA_Reeder

@SA_Reeder_

I have two snowblowers. And snow tires.

Katılım Aralık 2023
411 Takip Edilen62 Takipçiler
SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@LDS_Dems @SonnyBunch You claim an LDS lens, but this is unvarnished contempt for others. I’m struck by how casually you mock people and strip away basic respect in your tweets.
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Dem Saints
Dem Saints@LDS_Dems·
@SonnyBunch No. I don't think even Trump is dumb enough to think a Doctor runs around in red robes. But I do think he thinks his supporters are dumb enough to buy the excuse
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Sonny Bunch
Sonny Bunch@SonnyBunch·
I actually believe the president when he says he thinks this was supposed to be a doctor because, as I said, he's a completely irreligious person. I don't even think he's an atheist, as that would have required some thought. He just never actually *thinks* about religion.
Sonny Bunch@SonnyBunch

Sure but the thing about Donald Trump is that he’s a completely irreligious person and, as a result, doesn’t actually care about the image of himself as Jesus with demons over his shoulder.

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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@LDS_Dems @KarluskaP Obama never said "I'm Christ" but he didn't need to. "A light will shine down...you'll have an epiphany," "Joushua generation," "I have become a symbol" and never seriously tamping it down. Prented all you want. The difference between them is tone and style, not substance.
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Dem Saints
Dem Saints@LDS_Dems·
@KarluskaP How many of those did Obama make and distribute? There is a big difference between rando fans and the man himself.
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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@TokyoOnTheRocks @ADavis4me @VixenRogue Yes. That's exactly what I hear in the C-suite. "Well that guy was bad but for this star employee it was, you know, consensual." And BTW, Billy C. was literally the most powerful man on earth and she was an intern. Good job defending scum.
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TokyoOnTheRocks
TokyoOnTheRocks@TokyoOnTheRocks·
@ADavis4me @VixenRogue That was a different time and consensual. And yet, he was impeached for it. By the same GOP that has no problem with President “grab em by the pussy” being found liable for sexual assault. Different situations. That said, if Bill broke the law… lock him the fuck up.
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Kayla Elizabeth
Kayla Elizabeth@VixenRogue·
Cheating on your spouse should be enough to destroy your political career. Don't care if I'm the last person alive outside of Mormons who feels this way.
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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@Cutvin @JamesSurowiecki @quirkyllama I’ve worked at multiple Federal agencies. Parts of the bureaucracy are openly hostile to Trump. And no, a lot of them are not “doing their jobs”. Underperformance and inertia are real. You can disagree, but calling that a “lie” is unserious.
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🐐QuirkyLlama
🐐QuirkyLlama@quirkyllama·
I don't want to defend RFK or MAGA conspiracists, but I'm genuinely surprised Matt doesn't get that there is a real complaint here. The core hypothesis of Trump II is "Trump doesn't control the govt" Call it the deep state, call it bureaucracy, or just call it the Judiciary. The battle over Abrego Garcia- a man who no one disputes is here illegally- yet the entire might of the Trump administration can't deport him! The whole thesis of Trump II is "Yes, the laws say X, but the bureaucracy + judiciary don't care what the laws says". Or the recent Federal Court ruling effectively preventing Berkeley from cleaning up tent cities. Does the GOP have a Federal Trifecta? Yes. Does a Blue City in a Blue State want to clean up homelessness? Yes. Did a Federal judge prevent them from doing so? Also Yes. If you want to understand what's going on in Trump 2 these points are central. Republicans do not effectively control gov't even when they have a trifecta. Between bureaucrats bureaucrats and the Liberal Judiciary, it's ~impossible to change policy even when the law is clearly on GOP side.
Matthew Yglesias@mattyglesias

A signature aspect of MAGA is they refuse to take responsibility for anything — Trump has been president for a majority of the past decade but “the government” is still some entity his administration isn’t really involved with somehow.

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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@JamesSurowiecki @quirkyllama That's true. It's also true that the bureaucracy is dominated by leftists that fight Trump constantly. If the left faced the same challenge, I suspect you'd be screaming about unaccountable threats to democracy.
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James Surowiecki
James Surowiecki@JamesSurowiecki·
@quirkyllama Yes, the US government is not purely the tool of the president, who is required to follow the law and the Constitution and enforce laws even when he doesn't like them.
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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@LDS_Dems Exactly. Why not something that actually reads American like the Washington Monument or the Hoover Dam, or even something carved into the landscape like Mount Rushmore. Less Paris and Rome, more frontier and republic.
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Dem Saints
Dem Saints@LDS_Dems·
I don't actually mind the construction of a monument,. especially for the 250th Anniversary. But an arch is just so....European. We declared independence from that stuff and I would rather build something that speaks more to America's heritage, not France's.
CBS News@CBSNews

American taxpayers will help fund the construction of President Trump's planned triumphal arch in Arlington, Virginia, according to the spending plan for the National Endowment for the Humanities released by the administration this week. cbsn.ws/4smSOhq

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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@RadioFreeTom Calling it “status envy” and imputing motive is a neat way to avoid engaging any of the actual claims. If the claims about grade inflation, disengagement, and self-censorship are wrong, say why. Although I suspect this somehow hits too close to home?
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Tom Nichols
Tom Nichols@RadioFreeTom·
This reeks of status envy and well-deserved insecurity.
University of Austin (UATX)@uaustinorg

To: Admitted Students on Ivy Decision Day From: UATX Congratulations. Getting in was hard and you should be proud. Now here’s some unsolicited advice so you don’t waste the next four years. Go to class. We know this sounds obvious. But as the New York Times reported recently, Harvard students routinely skip class, rarely speak up when they're there, and focus on their devices instead of the discussion. Faculty say few students do enough preparation to contribute meaningfully. The average college student spends about 20 hours a week on class and studying combined. At UATX, we aim for 50. That’s the difference between a part-time commitment and a full-time job. You (or your parents) are about to spend upwards of $90K a year. If you don't show up, you're paying roughly $250 per skipped lecture for the privilege of sleeping in. Read the books yourself. Your generation is the first to arrive at college post-literate — raised on short-form video, dependent on algorithms, and increasingly incapable of sitting with a difficult text long enough to let it change your mind. Ninety percent of college students use AI academically. This makes you more reliant on the authority of others. Most professors will also stand between you and the text. They’ll tell you what Marx “really meant,” what Aristotle “failed to see,” as though an academic in 2026 has outsmarted minds that shaped civilizations. The good professors do the opposite: they put you in front of the book and they work with you to find what a great mind has to teach us directly. Find those professors, and read everything yourself. Say what you actually think. Seventy-three percent of conservative students report withholding their political views in class out of fear their grades will suffer. Our advice isn't political; it's intellectual. If you spend four years learning to say what's expected instead of what's true, you’ll graduate roughly where you started — just older, more credentialed, and more practiced at self-censorship. One study finds that nearly half of students show no measurable gains in “critical thinking” after two years in college. Keep this in mind as you make decisions about which professors to take and how to do your assignments. Taking a small hit on your paper to gain integrity and wisdom is usually worth it. Ask for real grades. Sixty percent of Harvard undergraduate grades are now A’s. Twenty-five years ago, it was 20%. It got so bad that the legendary Harvard professor, Harvey Mansfield, started giving students two grades: the official one for their transcript, and a private one reflecting what they actually earned. He called the official grades “ironic.” So here's a suggestion: Take your A, but also ask your professors for a “Mansfield grade” so that you know where you stand. And don’t avoid difficult courses to keep your transcript clean for law school. Get work experience before you graduate. Forty-two percent of recent college graduates are working jobs that don't require a degree. Many employers are projecting the next few years to be the worst college grad job market in years. A degree alone — even from an Ivy — is not a job guarantee. Seek out apprenticeships, internships, and real work starting freshman year. The students at UATX are connected with entrepreneurs and business leaders from day one. Many will graduate with four years of work experience alongside their degree. You can build something similar at your school, but you'll have to do it yourself. Understand how debt shapes your life. If you're paying full freight or even half, do the math with your eyes open. Your decision to take on debt will quietly reshape the trajectory of your adult life through countless small surrenders: the job you take because it’s safe instead of starting the company. The city you choose to live in. The relationship you delay and the kids you don’t have. For women, a $1,000 increase in student loan debt lowers the odds of marriage by 2% per month in the first four years after graduation. None of that shows up in the college brochure. If you're going to take on debt, treat it like the constraint it is from day one: save aggressively and make sure every dollar is buying something that will actually compound in your favor. Find the people who take school seriously. The best thing about a great school isn't the lectures or the library. It's the handful of professors and students who are genuinely there to learn — who read ahead, argue in good faith, and push you to be sharper. Find them. UATX is a small community of those who seek a serious education. At a larger university, you have to build this community yourself. * The most dangerous thing about an elite university is that it is very easy to do nothing for four years and still come out looking successful. The transcript will say you excelled. The diploma with the fancy crest will open certain doors. Your parents will be proud. And yet you will have coasted — through inflated grades, unread books, and borrowed opinions. Getting in is an accomplishment. Making the next four years worth it will be harder, and the right decisions will change everything. We wish you luck.

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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@JanssenPier @esrtweet Like I said, given where you are starting, were never going to agree. But that's ok. We pull out of NATO and Europe deals with the results for itself. With your starting position that 16% is all the US gives, it shouldn't make any real difference.
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Eric S. Raymond
Eric S. Raymond@esrtweet·
Hello, Europeans. The first thing you need to understand about the rant I'm about to utter is that I'm not MAGA, not a Trumpite, but a libertarian who has in the past nevertheless been strongly supportive of US military presence overseas. Because I want the wars that defend this country to be fought in somebody else's country, as far away from me as possible with a nice big ocean in the way. Also relevant: I have a history of having lived in Europe and traveled there extensively. I was at one time bilingual in English and Spanish, and have been passably fluent in Italian and French as well. I could probably still find my way around London and Rome and central Paris reasonably well. So if you're tempted to tell yourselves that I'm some kind of parochial American hick, abandon that hope. All that was set-up. So that, when I tell you that almost the entirety of the US electorate, not just Trump supporters, is increasingly fed up with your shit, take me seriously. We've been cleaning up your messes and keeping the sea lanes open since 1917. And that was for you, not us - we, being very close to resource self-sufficient, don't need that investment so much. We've spent enormous amounts of blood and treasure on keeping you safe. We risked nuclear hellfire on our own cities for nearly 50 years to keep Soviet tanks from rolling through the Fulda Gap. Even since the Cold War ended, we've subsidized your socialist-playpen welfare states and disastrous immigration policies by taking the need to maintain militaries more effective than a sack of wet farts off the table. Now we've come looking for help keeping a bunch of rabid Islamic fanatics from getting nuclear weapons that are a clear and present danger to all of you even more than they are to us, and what do we hear? "Waah! It's another Republican president we don't like, just like the last half dozen of them! So we're going to sulk in a corner, except when we're biting at your ankles with crap like airspace restrictions." No. No, we're not going to take this anymore. It's not just conservatives who have had enough, it's moderates and people who used to be strong supporters of liberal internationalism. Our citizen's willingness to pay higher taxes to protect you was upward-bounded by your gratitude. Now that we know your gratitude has effectively gone to zero, so does our willingness. Don't expect this to change if the Democrats take power here. They are much less liberal-internationalist than Republicans now. While they might make mouth noises that soothe you, their overriding concern is the gaping, insatiable maw of their income transfer programs. They'll sacrifice subsidizing Europe's playpen socialism to feed their domestic version in a heartbeat. And there is no longer any significant Democratic constituency to argue against that. In truth, three decades after the Cold War ended there is no American constituency at all for the massive subsidies you get. It frankly surprises me they lasted this long, that we were this patient with your cowardice and your bitchy whining. This moment has been a long time coming. It's not Donald Trump sinking the transatlantic alliance, it is absolutely you.
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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@LDS_Dems I am honestly curious if that includes die hard MAGA? And what about Trump himself?
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Dem Saints
Dem Saints@LDS_Dems·
Great talk by President Oaks. Hopefully my adversaries were listening! JK. I love y'all and I gotta say it more often. We are all in this together.
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Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
@Microinteracti1 Ask retired Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling how many wars he has won and why his troops despised him when he was a division commander in Iraq. It's the failed generals like Hertling that SecWar is replacing, and they HATE it.
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Gandalv
Gandalv@Microinteracti1·
Retired Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling is not mincing words. The former Commanding General of US Army Europe says these generals were purged because they stood up against Pete Hegseth’s push to turn the US military into a Christian nationalist crusade. Retired Army Maj. Gen. Randy Manner says dozens of chaplains who don’t share Hegseth’s views are being marginalized and excluded from staff meetings.  The chaplain corps exists to serve all service members regardless of faith. That apparently made Green’s position untenable. The Pope has now weighed in. Hegseth’s prayer for battlefield violence prompted a response from Rome: God does not listen to those who wage war in his name. Hertling has seen enough. So have the troops. Gandalv / @Microinteracti1
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Dem Saints
Dem Saints@LDS_Dems·
@RealTStevenson He is threatening civilian infrastructure. This isn't a country of 90M terrorists. Millions of innocent people, including the ones we are hoping will rise up and overthrow the regime, are already suffering and thousands have been killed. This only gets worse.
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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@LDS_Dems Do you really think our military committed war crimes when it blew up dams, power stations, bridges, railroads, factories, religious buildings, etc. in WWII? Or are you just full of that much anger?
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Dem Saints
Dem Saints@LDS_Dems·
The President of the United States woke up threatening war crimes and praising Allah and it is just another Easter.
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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@Denver4VA @SunshineS58469 The First Congress that wrote the First Amendment funded chaplains, called for national prayer, and reaffirmed the Northwest Ordinance: religion and morality are necessary to good government.
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SA_Reeder
SA_Reeder@SA_Reeder_·
@LDS_Dems I assume that you're sad Trump rescued a pilot?
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Dem Saints
Dem Saints@LDS_Dems·
Every day, Daddy WarCrimes ask his supporters to debase themselves a little further and every day they comply.
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