Swandagus

3.8K posts

Swandagus

Swandagus

@Swandagus

Katılım Eylül 2022
64 Takip Edilen36 Takipçiler
Swandagus
Swandagus@Swandagus·
@KMess__ @MindOfBron that's a foul 0/100 times unless youare OKC, they get all the love. Spurs had to overcome 100 bad calls and still won. Jury still out of SGA is any good or just a good actor...
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.@KMess__·
@MindOfBron Only thing getting out of hand is this okc hate for engagement. This is a foul 10/10 times
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@MindOfBron·
Fox was called for a foul here... this is getting out of hand.
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Christopher Powers
Christopher Powers@CPowers14·
Doc Redman for eagle to win in a playoff on the KFT. Feature-length film
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Dominique Clare
Dominique Clare@DomClare·
Bro trains this garbage so much that his body can sense victims and automatically start foul baiting as he shoots. It’s impressive for what it’s worth.
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FOX College Hoops
FOX College Hoops@CBBonFOX·
These programs have the most wins in men’s college basketball history 📈
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FreeDumb
FreeDumb@FreeeDummm·
@CBBonFOX Where is UConn? Thought they were a blue blood?
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unearnedchallenge
unearnedchallenge@Bridgetek2022·
@CBBonFOX According to sports reference, the teams with the most wins in history are the the following:
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Swandagus
Swandagus@Swandagus·
@CBBonFOX It's crazy that Kansas is #1 and STILL going to be the "fake" #1 after this season as well. Sad story for Kentucky!
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J Eric Webb
J Eric Webb@jamesericwebb·
@elonmusk Bezos employs ~1.5mm people, his value to society is remarkable, much greater than any taxes he pays or charity he gives.
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Dr. Arthur Brooks
Dr. Arthur Brooks@arthurbrooks·
Some of the worst damage in your life came from people who love you, in the form of a poisonous sentence wrapped in good intentions: “You're perfect just the way you are.” The reason it landed as damage rather than kindness is that you didn't believe it. And how could you? Nobody actually believes they’re perfect. So, when we’re told something that contradicts what we know to be true about ourselves, our brains try to resolve that conflict. There are only two ways to resolve this one — and both are bad. The first resolution goes like this: I feel terrible, and I've been told I'm as good as I can possibly be, so this must be what life amounts to — grim, static, with nothing to fix and therefore nothing to improve. That's despair: the conviction that this is what life is, and that nothing you can do will change it. The second goes the other way. I've been told I'm perfect and my life still isn't working, so the problem must be out there — in other people, in the system, in the generation that came before me. That's bitterness: the conviction that everything wrong in your life is somebody else's fault, and that there's nothing for you to do but wait for the world to change. Neither of these is what the well-meaning person had in mind when they told you you're perfect. But these are the two places it ends up. You can see both play out at scale right now. Depression has roughly tripled among adolescents and young adults; anxiety has roughly doubled. The angry activism of the last decade — the belief that previous generations robbed me, that the system is rigged, that I'm fine and everything around me is broken — is the second resolution lived out in public. The world is in fact unjust in many ways; I'm not arguing otherwise. But the resolution that leaves you with no agency over your own life is not the one that lets you live it. There is a plausible connection between telling kids, in a state of high synaptic plasticity, again and again, that they are perfect just the way they are, and what we are now measuring in those same kids ten years later. We lied to them when they were young. And the lie metastasized. The truth is you are not perfect, and that is incredibly good news. If you accept the reality of your imperfection, you have somewhere to go. The kindest thing anyone can say to a child (or to themselves) is not that they are perfect: it’s that they are not — and that in the gap between who they are and who they could be lies the meaning of their lives.
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Swandagus
Swandagus@Swandagus·
@TheFP The reality of detransitioning, by it's mere existence, should BAN children from making permanent life altering surgeries. It's sick.
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The Free Press
The Free Press@TheFP·
"Doctors told me I was transgender at 13. I’m 23 now, permanently altered, and fighting to make sure it never happens to another child."
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Orpheus Bund
Orpheus Bund@GadflyVince·
@TheCinesthetic “One of the greatest television series ever made?” Not even close. Marred by lack of a more nuanced human understanding of Soviet society. Compared to “The Wire” it’s sophomoric.
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cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic·
CHERNOBYL aired 7 years ago today on HBO. It still stands as one of the greatest television series ever made.
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Swandagus
Swandagus@Swandagus·
@PaulCharchian So good. This is what socialism, when run in reality, looks like. This is what high schoolers are asking for.
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Tweeth Mitchell
Tweeth Mitchell@tweeth_mitchell·
This is the most important part. There are people I won't play with anymore — and sadly, people who won't play with me anymore — because of pouty shit on course. True freedom on the golf course comes from accepting that how you act matters more than how you score, and a great golf trip happens when it's everyone's responsibility to make sure that everyone else is having a good time.
Tweeth Mitchell tweet media
Fried Egg Golf@fried_egg_golf

"Just find a place and commit. Don’t wait. The days are long, but the years are short." @KVanValkenburg on the keys to a great buddies golf trip ⬇️ thefriedegg.com/articles/keys-…

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Swandagus
Swandagus@Swandagus·
@nuttall_luke I just read a review you wrote. I found myself enjoying your writing even more than the content itself. Well done.
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John Dennis
John Dennis@RealJohnDennis·
@ByronYork 🎯 The PGA Tour miraculously found another $200 million in purse money when big players defected to LIV.
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Byron York
Byron York@ByronYork·
On the death of LIV: Perhaps now top PGA Tour players can express their appreciation to LIV for the dramatically higher post-LIV purses on the PGA Tour. Winner's purse at the Arnold Palmer Invitational went from $1.67m in 2021 to $4m in 2025. The Genesis, $1.67m to $4m. The Players, $2.7m to $4.5m. Why did that happen? Competition. LIV failed, but it put a lot of money in the bank accounts of successful PGA Tour players.
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Don't Mutilate Kids
Don't Mutilate Kids@DontCutKids·
@ByronYork Dead-wrong. LIV paid massive sums to players just for *joining* LIV, while the inflated PGAT purses had to be *earned* by winning or playing well, and, doing so every week.
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