Scott Mauck

14.3K posts

Scott Mauck

Scott Mauck

@ScottMauck2

An 'Okie' from near Muskogee who loves to golf and bowl...& cruisin' on my Triumph for God.

Valrico, FL Katılım Mayıs 2020
56 Takip Edilen309 Takipçiler
Scott Mauck retweetledi
James E. Thorne
James E. Thorne@DrJStrategy·
Food for thought. Trump, Hormuz and the End of the Free Ride For half a century, Western strategists have known that the Strait of Hormuz is the acute point where energy, sea power and political will intersect. That knowledge is not in dispute. What is new in this war with Iran is that the United States, under Donald Trump, has chosen not to rush to “solve” the problem. In Hegelian terms, he is refusing an easy synthesis in order to force the underlying contradiction to the surface. The old thesis was simple: the US guarantees open sea lanes in the Gulf, and everyone else structures their economies and politics around that free insurance. Europe and the UK embraced ambitious green policies, ran down hard‑power capabilities and lectured Washington on multilateral virtue, secure in the assumption that American carriers would always appear off Hormuz. The political class behaved as if the American security guarantee were a law of nature, not a contingent choice. Their conduct today is closer to Chamberlain than Churchill: temporising, issuing statements, hoping the storm will pass without a fundamental reordering of their responsibilities. Trump’s antithesis is to withhold the automatic guarantee at the moment of maximum stress. Militarily, the US can break Iran’s residual ability to contest the Strait; that is not the binding constraint. The point is to delay that act. By allowing a closure or semi‑closure to bite, Trump ensures that the immediate pain is concentrated in exactly the jurisdictions that have most conspicuously free‑ridden on US power: the EU and the UK. Their industries, consumers and energy‑transition assumptions are exposed. In that context, his reported blunt message to European and British leaders, you need the oil out of the Strait more than we do; why don’t you go and take it? Is not a throwaway line. It is the verbalisation of the antithesis. It openly reverses the traditional presumption that America will carry the burden while its allies emote from the sidelines. In this dialectic, the prize is not simply the reopening of a chokepoint. The prize is a reordered system in which the United States effectively arbitrages and controls the global flow of oil. A world in which US‑aligned production in the Americas plus a discretionary capability to secure,or not secure, Hormuz places Washington at the centre of the hydrocarbon chessboard. For that strategic end, a rapid restoration of the old status quo would be counterproductive. A quick, surgical “fix” of Hormuz would short‑circuit the dialectic. If Trump rapidly crushed Iran’s remaining coastal capabilities, swept the mines and escorted tankers back through the Strait, Europe and the UK would heave a sigh of relief and return to business as usual: underfunded militaries, maximalist green posturing and performative disdain for US power, all underwritten by that same power. The contradiction between their dependence and their posture would remain latent. By declining to supply the synthesis on demand, and by explicitly telling London and Brussels to “go and take it” themselves, Trump forces a reckoning. European and British leaders must confront the fact that their energy systems, their industrial bases and their geopolitical sermons all rest on an American hard‑power foundation they neither finance nor politically respect. The longer the contradiction is allowed to unfold, the stronger the eventual synthesis can be: a new order in which access to secure flows, Hormuz, Venezuela and beyond, is explicitly conditional on real contributions, not assumed as a right. In that sense, the delay in “taking” the Strait, and the challenge issued to US allies to do it themselves, is not indecision. It is the negative moment Hegel insisted was necessary for history to move. Only by withholding the old guarantee, and by saying so out loud to those who depended on it, can Trump hope to end the free ride.
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JB Slear
JB Slear@JB_Slear·
In September of 2005, on the first day of school, Martha Cothren, a History teacher at RobinsonHigh School in Little Rock, did something not to be forgotten. On the first day of school, with the permission of the school superintendent, the principal and the building supervisor, she removed all of the desks in her classroom. When the first period kids entered the room they discovered that there were no desks. 'Ms. Cothren, where are our desks?' She replied, 'You can't have a desk until you tell me how you earn the right to sit at a desk.' They thought, 'Well, maybe it's our grades.' 'No,' she said. 'Maybe it's our behavior.' She told them, 'No, it's not even your behavior.' And so, they came and went, the first period, second period, third period. Still no desks in the classroom. Kids called their parents to tell them what was happening and by early afternoon television news crews had started gathering at the school to report about this crazy teacher who had taken all the desks out of her room. The final period of the day came and as the puzzled students found seats on the floor of the desk-less classroom. Martha Cothren said, 'Throughout the day no one has been able to tell me just what he or she has done to earn the right to sit at the desks that are ordinarily found in this classroom. Now I am going to tell you.' At this point, Martha Cothren went over to the door of her classroom and opened it. Twenty-seven (27) U.S. Veterans, all in uniform, walked into that classroom, each one carrying a school desk. The Vets began placing the school desks in rows, and then they would walk over and stand alongside the wall. By the time the last soldier had set the final desk in place those kids started to understand, perhaps for the first time in their lives, just how the right to sit at those desks had been earned. Martha said, 'You didn't earn the right to sit at these desks. These heroes did it for you. They placed the desks here for you. They went halfway around the world, giving up their education and interrupting their careers and families so you could have the freedom you have. Now, it's up to you to sit in them. It is your responsibility to learn, to be good students, to be good citizens. They paid the price so that you could have the freedom to get an education. Don't ever forget it.' By the way, this is a true story. And this teacher was awarded the Veterans of Foreign Wars Teacher of the Year for the State of Arkansas in 2006. She is the daughter of a WWII POW. Do you think this email is worth passing along so others won't forget either, that the freedoms we have in this great country were earned by our U.S. Veterans?... I did. Let us always remember the men and women of our military and the rights they have won for us.
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Scott Mauck
Scott Mauck@ScottMauck2·
@chriswithans Funny how people forget who the real winners were with ACA; corporations. It gave them the excuse to put the majority of employees on part time relieving them of he need to provide healthcare. Funny how it was the dem/libs who were helping corporate America...when they hate them.
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Chris
Chris@chriswithans·
Obamacare was designed to disconnect the consumer from the cost of their purchase (insurance). Either you get corporate insurance, which was mandated for many employers by law, or you get marketplace insurance that is heavily subsidized. Democrats loved this. The true cost of Obamacare was hidden to most people. It was a shadow anchor pulling everyone down, but people didn’t really see it. Didn’t realize their wages weren’t increasing *because* their employers kept paying more for premiums every year under Obama. But then they stupidly (for them) broke the veil of costs last year, when they were desperately trying to keep their Biden-era ACA subsidies from expiring (even though they voted for it). Now everyone is more aware of the true cost of Obamacare. They’re trying to blame Trump for it, but it’s not going to work.
Senator Reverend Raphael Warnock@SenatorWarnock

This is the sad reality. Under Donald Trump, health insurance now costs more than the mortgage for many Americans.

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Michelle Maxwell ™
Michelle Maxwell ™@MichelleMaxwell·
This will bring a tear to your eye.... - Shared from Casey Lynn. A tattoo artist. ❤"Yesterday a woman walked in at 4 PM. No appointment. Asked if I could squeeze her in. “What do you want?” I asked. She showed me a photo on her phone. Numbers. Just numbers. “392. On my wrist. Simple. Black. Can you do it now?” I looked at her. She’d been crying. Eyes red. Hands shaking. “Yeah, I can do it. But can I ask what 392 means?” She sat down in my chair. Took a breath. “It’s the number of days my daughter stayed clean before she overdosed. I found her yesterday. I want to remember she tried. That 392 days mattered.” I didn’t know what to say. Just nodded. Started setting up. She kept talking. Needed to talk. “Everyone’s going to say she relapsed. That she failed. That addicts always relapse. But they won’t say she was sober for 392 days. That she went to meetings. Got a job. Started painting again. That she was my daughter again for 392 days. They’ll remember one day. The last day. But I’m going to remember 392.” Her voice broke. “This tattoo is proof those days existed. That she fought. That she almost made it.” I finished the tattoo. Simple numbers. 392. On her wrist. Where she could see it every day. She paid. Tipped way too much. Started to leave. Then turned back. “Can I ask you something weird?” “Anything,” I said. “Can you keep that stencil? The 392? And if anyone ever comes in here struggling with addiction. Or losing someone to addiction. Can you offer to do this tattoo for free? Any number. However many days their person stayed clean. 10 days. 100 days. 1 day. I don’t care. Just so they know those days counted.” She left before I could answer. I kept the 392 stencil. Put it in a frame behind my counter. Wrote under it: “Days of sobriety tattoos — always free. Any number. Because every day counts.” I didn’t think anyone would take me up on it. Three days later, a man came in. Saw the sign. Started crying. “Can you do 1,279?” “Absolutely. Who’s it for?” “My brother. He was sober 1,279 days. Died in a car accident last week. Sober driver hit by a drunk driver. The irony is killing me. He fought so hard. And some stranger took him out.” I did the tattoo for free. He hugged me for five minutes. Word spread. I’ve done 23 sobriety number tattoos in three weeks. Free. Every single one. 47 days. 6 days. 1,823 days. 2 days. One woman got “14 hours” tattooed. “My son stayed clean for 14 hours before he relapsed and died. Everyone says 14 hours doesn’t count. But it does. He tried. For 14 hours he tried.” I tattooed 14 hours on her shoulder. She sobbed the entire time. When I finished, she looked at it and whispered, “Now everyone will know he tried.” Yesterday someone came in and asked for “0 days.” I was confused. “Zero?” He nodded. “My daughter never got clean. She tried to quit so many times. Went to rehab four times. But never made it past a few hours before using again. She died at 23. Everyone says she didn’t try. But she did. She tried so hard. Zero days sober but a million attempts. Can you tattoo 0 with a little infinity symbol?” Because her attempts were infinite even if her days weren’t. I cried while doing that tattoo. Zero with an infinity symbol. For a girl who never stopped trying even though she never succeeded. A teenager came in two days ago. Seventeen years old. With his dad. “Can you do 91 days? For me. I’m 91 days sober. I want to remember.” I looked at his dad. Dad nodded. “He asked for this. I’m proud of him.” I did the tattoo. 91 on his forearm. When I finished, the kid stared at it. “Now when I want to use, I’ll see this. I’ll remember I made it to 91. I can make it to 92.” His dad paid. Tipped $200. “You’re saving lives with ink,” he said. “Keep doing this.” The kid comes back every 30 days. I add a small tally mark next to his 91. He’s up to 151 days now. Five tally marks. He’s going to make it. The original woman came back yesterday. The 392 tattoo.
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Harvey's Pistol & Pawn
Harvey's Pistol & Pawn@harveyspistols·
Rascal got to talking, as he is want to do, around the fire the other night and he stumbled himself upon a story I had not heard him tell before. Evidently Rascal was there with Major Eric Bonde in the Congo when that iconic picture was taken in 1961. No one really knows just how old this raccoon is; one of the mysteries of the universe, it would seem. Speaking of mysteries, Rascal then tells me he carried a CZ75 that day. I told him that is not possible. The CZ75 was not even released until 1975. He just chuckled at me like I was some inexperienced pup 🤷🏽‍♂️... Regardless of the hows and the whys Rascal was inspired by the memory to make this week's giveaway a CZ75 BD 9mm! You all know the drill! FOLLOW us, QUOTE POST or REPOST, and REPLY to ENTER! We appreciate you all and all that you do! We give our advertising dollars to you instead of companies that either don't understand you or hate you or both! Let's spread this one far and wide rangers! Lets get past 125K this week! LETS GOOOOO!
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Scott Mauck
Scott Mauck@ScottMauck2·
@4nt1p4tt3rn Imagine that: Americans contributing to their own demise...for the all-mighty dollar. 🤔🤨🙄😬🥴😵😵‍💫🤯
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Scott Mauck retweetledi
Harvey's Pistol & Pawn
Harvey's Pistol & Pawn@harveyspistols·
My dear friends. It is Christmas time (don't ask about the foliage) so Rascal has decided to take a small respite from harassing pinkos and loyalists to enjoy a short smoke from behind cover. Oh! He needs your help heading back into battle so here's a @PatriotOrdnance Minuteman 10.5" Pistol in 5.56 he picked up off the field! Please follow, if not already, repost or quote post, and reply to enter! I may add a bonus later so keep a sharp eye! Aim Small Miss Small! As you know this is our only real way of marketing on this platform so all you do is much appreciated! Let's Go Rascal's Rangers!
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Scott Mauck
Scott Mauck@ScottMauck2·
@harveyspistols Seems to be the behavior of an online 'troll'. Appears to be trying to bait you, and others, for engagement. 🤔
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Harvey's Pistol & Pawn
Harvey's Pistol & Pawn@harveyspistols·
What is going on with this person? They have some pretty big followers, some of whom I count as friends. They think I’m lying about my post and photograph because I used my iPhone photo apps erase function to delete a mailbox address number and the license plate from the truck. I was just trying to be conscientious while making the post. What’s the deal?
The Amazing Critter Man 🇺🇸🐍🔫@_CritterMan

@PeterLamirada The OP admitted the artifacts I described are present. You agree that he's a liar, then.

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Scott Mauck
Scott Mauck@ScottMauck2·
Do you think Kelly might be the 'litmus test'?? They went after Duggan & she got convicted. Now if they go after Kelly & he gets convicted the only thing left will be whether they serve time. I'm thinking that will be the final hurdle. If they get over that, we win. 🤔🤨🙄😬
jeffrey morford@jmrioboiler

@drawandstrike Brian, I hope your right but I think your living a dream- there is no evidence to show he will invoke any measures . He can’t even get his DOJ to do anything for him and RINOs (ie-Indiana etc) are opening working against him.

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Scott Mauck
Scott Mauck@ScottMauck2·
Problem is he didn't stay to finish the job. 🤔🤨🙄😬
Michelle Maxwell ™@MichelleMaxwell

🇺🇸There are moments in public life when the difference between talk and true sacrifice becomes unmistakably clear. Dan Bongino showed the country exactly what that difference looks like. He already had everything most people dream about. Financial security. Massive influence. The biggest show in America and a media operation reaching millions every day. He could have stayed right there. Comfortable. Protected. Close to his family. Free to speak without restraint and never worry about the cost. Then President Trump called. And Dan did something that stunned both friends and enemies alike. He walked away from all of it. Not for applause. Not for a soft landing. Not for a guaranteed outcome. But to take on one of the most entrenched institutions in the country. The FBI. An agency that had drifted far from its mission. An agency that had become a shield for the Deep State. A political weapon turned inward against the very people it was sworn to protect. Most people said the system was too rotten to fix. Too protected. Too powerful. Too deeply embedded. Dan went anyway. He went knowing exactly what he was walking into. Knowing the resistance would be vicious. Knowing the pressure would be relentless. Knowing powerful people would never forgive him for exposing what they wanted hidden. And he got to work. Bad actors were removed. Corruption was exposed. The curtain was pulled back on how deeply the Deep State had burrowed into federal law enforcement. And some of the most important work happened quietly, without headlines or credit. A real crackdown on child abusers who hide behind bureaucracy and silence. A renewed focus on dismantling drug trafficking networks that destroy families and poison communities. Real criminals pursued instead of political enemies. Real justice instead of selective enforcement. That kind of work does not come with glory. It comes with threats. It comes with isolation. It comes with long nights and the constant weight of knowing powerful people want you gone. And eventually, it comes at a cost that no title can justify. Time away from your family. Every good father and every good husband knows there is a line you cannot cross forever. Dan reached that line. Choosing family is not surrender. It is principle. It is the same integrity that led him to serve in the first place. The FBI may still need to be rebuilt from the ground up. The fight against corruption and the Deep State is far from over. But history will record this truth. When it mattered, Dan Bongino did not stay comfortable. He did not hide behind a microphone and criticize from a safe distance. He stepped into the arena. He took the blows. He did the work. And he left knowing he gave everything he had. That is what real service to America looks like. Thank you for standing up when it was hardest. Thank you for protecting the innocent. Thank you for going after the worst criminals instead of the easiest targets. Thank you for reminding this country that courage still exists. Thank you for your service, Dan Bongino. May God Bless you and you family 🙏🇺🇸🙏

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Scott Mauck
Scott Mauck@ScottMauck2·
@BuffaloRon How about "Bi-Mer wool socks"...or "Bis-Mer"??? 🤷‍♂️
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BuffaloRon
BuffaloRon@BuffaloRon·
So, our first 0% synthetic socks will be here tomorrow I believe... will launch them this weekend. Any ideas what we should call them? I have no ideas, and am so mentally drained, I can't even manage a coherent thought. Doing the bison/merino wool ones first... see how those go before we do the pure bison ones.
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Scott Mauck
Scott Mauck@ScottMauck2·
Somebody mentioned an FBI investigations team is involved; not for the physical shooting but to look at financials & such. They were suggesting it wasn't a 'lone gunman' situation, but possibly a more coordinated effort...curious. 🤔
Mark "Buttons" Sibley@mnsibley

GM! What a cluster

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Scott Mauck
Scott Mauck@ScottMauck2·
@PoliticalStacy This probably 'ties in' with the various 'legal systems' reclassifying 'ethnic offenders of color' as 'white' in their arrest records. 🤔🤨🙄😬 Gotta manipulate those statistics to say what they want, not the truth. 🥴😵😵‍💫🤯
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Stacy is Right
Stacy is Right@PoliticalStacy·
You’ve probably heard this claim repeated often: “Most extremist-related murders in the U.S. are committed by right-wing extremists.” That claim comes primarily from the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), and it’s widely treated as a neutral, reality-based fact. Here’s the problem: the issue is not fake data. The issue is how the data is defined, what is excluded, and how the conclusion is presented. 1) What the ADL actually measures. The ADL does not track all violence, or even all ideologically motivated violence. It tracks violence tied to a narrow, pre-selected set of ideologies that it chooses to monitor (primarily certain right-wing and antisemitic ideologies). Other forms of ideological violence — including attacks on churches or Christian schools that are motivated by hostility toward Christianity — are often excluded or reclassified as “grievance,” “mental health,” or “non-ideological.” 2) This exclusion isn’t random. When entire categories of relevant violence are removed by definition, the dataset is structurally shaped to produce a particular outcome. In other words, right-wing violence doesn’t just “emerge” as dominant — it dominates by construction, because other ideologically relevant violence is definitionally filtered out. 3) The ADL does not publish a full incident-level dataset. We get aggregate conclusions, but not a transparent list of every incident included or excluded. That makes independent verification or reclassification impossible. 4) How the conclusions are presented. Statements like “most extremist-related murders are committed by right-wing extremists” are technically true only within the ADL’s narrow framework, but they are routinely presented — and understood — as describing extremist violence as a whole. The ADL knows this. Journalists, policymakers, and the public consistently interpret these claims as comprehensive and reality-descriptive. Qualifiers buried in methodology sections don’t correct that misunderstanding. An analogy: If I sell you a car and describe it as “accident-free,” while knowing it has collision damage — but I’ve defined those collisions as “intentional, so they don’t count” — I haven’t lied word-for-word, but I’ve materially misled you, because any reasonable person understands “accident-free” to mean no collisions, not collisions excluded by definition. That’s what’s happening here. The data is real. The exclusions are intentional. The misunderstanding is desired. When real data is selectively included, entire categories are omitted, and the result is presented as reality-descriptive, the outcome is a distorted understanding of the issue. This isn’t about denying right-wing violence. It’s about honest measurement and honest presentation. Selective definitions + omitted context + headline conclusions = misleading analysis, not neutral truth. The ADL is lying.
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Harvey's Pistol & Pawn
Harvey's Pistol & Pawn@harveyspistols·
Here you are my friends. Don't pay Rascal any mind. He's wiped after swiping this one for you off some beach in the Pacific. No, I have no clue what he was doing there but at least he got y'all a sweet shotgun to show for it. This week you will spend your days longing and hoping to win this @Beretta_USA A300 Ultima Patrol 12ga shotgun in FROGSKIN camo! You must be a follower, reply, and repost or quote post this post to enter. As you all know this is the only route, currently, we have to spread the word of our sales, promos, wit, & wisdom here on X. So please help us spread the word. We appreciate you all greatly! Also, the most memorable reply to this post or any other throughout the week, be if gif comment or both, will be awarded a @Ruger_Firearms Wrangler in bronze. Good Luck to all!
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