Winter

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Winter

Winter

@T_Winz_

Fish a little🐟Crypto a little💰💻 Family over everything

Katılım Aralık 2020
631 Takip Edilen310 Takipçiler
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Winter
Winter@T_Winz_·
Watching charts or the Cruise Ships?
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Jake Shields
Jake Shields@jakeshieldsajj·
Lex Wexner's attorney caught on a hot mic telling him how “we will fucking kill you” if he answers a question Many people assumed Wexner was the top of the food chain but this shows he's not These are dangerous people and I expect they said the same to Trump, Kash and Pam
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greg
greg@greg16676935420·
Officer: Sir, do you know how fast you were going? Me: The DOW is over $50,000!
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Thomas Massie
Thomas Massie@RepThomasMassie·
.@RepRoKhanna and I just spent two hours at DOJ viewing the “mostly-unredacted” Epstein files. Four of the 18 redacted names on this document are men born before 1970. DOJ needs to explain why they are redacted unless they were just randoms in a line-up. justice.gov/epstein/files/…
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Megatron
Megatron@Megatron_ron·
JUST IN: 🇺🇸Republican Rep. Thomas Massie and Democrat Rep. Ro Khanna after reviewing unredacted Epstein files: Massie: That was an interesting experience. What I saw that bothered me were the names of at least six men that have been redacted that are likely incriminated by their inclusion in these files. It took some digging to find them. Khanna: We discussed that. I mean, there are six men, some of them with their photographs that have been redacted. And there's no explanation why those people were redacted.
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Farrah
Farrah@australianwoma1·
A Letter to the Left To those who still believe, from someone who once did too. I need to tell you something, and I need you to hear me out before you decide what I am. I was one of you. Not in some distant, theoretical way. I was deeply one of you. I marched. I shared the posts. I believed, with total conviction, that the progressive vision of the world was not only morally correct but self-evidently so. Anyone who disagreed was ignorant or malicious. I had Trump Derangement Syndrome, but then, I complained about all politicians. I couldn’t see it was a case of choosing ‘the best of’. I had no middle ground. And that’s what finally shook me awake: the realisation that I had stopped allowing for middle ground. My thinking had become entirely black and white. I had radicalised—slowly, invisibly—without even noticing it was happening to me. The moment of clarity didn’t arrive dramatically. It crept in through the small, uncomfortable questions I started asking myself. Why was I so certain? Why did I feel such fury toward anyone who hesitated, even slightly, on positions I held? When had I stopped thinking and started simply reacting? When I tried to share these doubts with friends and family—people I loved, people on my side—I wasn’t met with conversation. I was met with a wall. A similar wall to what I had previously put up for anyone daring to question me and my positions. “No discussion.” “You’ve gone right-wing.” Lies were constructed about my motives. It didn’t matter that I was asking questions in good faith. The act of questioning was itself the crime. That is not normal. A political movement that forbids its own members from thinking critically is not a movement for justice. It’s something else entirely. And it worried me then. It worries me more now. Do you remember the 1980s and 1990s? I do. We had done real, meaningful work on race relations. Most people in the West genuinely did not care about the colour of your skin. Were things perfect? Of course not. But we were heading somewhere good. We were building something. And then we pulled it apart. We decided that every small, clumsy human interaction was a “microaggression.” We reframed the past as one hundred percent negative, as though nothing decent had ever been achieved. We became so obsessed with naming every tiny slight that we forgot what real progress looked like. We unstitched the good work and called it enlightenment. Once I began looking with honest eyes, the contradictions were everywhere. We decided blackface was a mortal sin. But woman face? That was brave and fabulous. We insisted entire societies must be restructured to accommodate the preferences of fractions of a percent of the population, and if you questioned the pace or method, you were a bigot, evil or fascist. We pursued reckonings for the crimes of Western civilisation—slavery, church child abuse, colonisation—and those reckonings were important. But we stopped there. Only the West was held to account. The trans-Atlantic slave trade was a horror, yes. But it was the British who ended it. Meanwhile, the Islamic slave trade ran for centuries, and pockets of it persist to this day. Where is that reckoning? Who is demanding it? We created a world in which nobody is allowed to simply settle and build a life. Indigenous people must perpetually identify as victims. Everyone of European descent must perpetually identify as perpetrators—for events centuries old. Yet nobody seems interested in acknowledging that white Westerners were not history’s only colonisers, or that colonisation, in softer forms, is happening right now. Mass immigration into Western countries is a form of soft colonisation. That sentence will make some of you furious. But consider: why is it only European and other Western nations being pressured to “diversify”? No one bags Nigeria or China or Latin American nations for a lack of diversity and not promoting the idea of multiculturalism. Only white-majority countries are told their cultures must be diluted or they are racist. Wanting to preserve the native peoples and cultures of European nations is not xenophobia. It is a right that in the 21st century we wish to grant to every non-white culture on earth. But apparently it’s a sin to want it or expect it for ourselves. And when it comes specifically to Islamic immigration into Western democracies, there are countless videos—not propaganda, but Muslims speaking plainly—describing a vision in which the world becomes Islamic, in which Sharia law replaces secular governance, in which their growing numbers translate to growing power. These are not conspiracy theories. These are now publicly stated intentions. History tells us what happens when these numbers reach a tipping point: the freedoms we take for granted begin to erode. Some know this because they are ex-Muslims. Some know because they are Westerners who converted to Islam and found it wanting. Frightening, even. Expressing that concern is not Islamophobia. It is pattern recognition. Being concerned about how trans medicine affects young people is not transphobic. Asking how trans ideology impacts women’s rights and the gay and lesbian community is not bigotry. These are legitimate questions that deserve honest answers, not silencing. So much of what I had taken for granted on the left collapsed under the lightest touch of common sense. I had to accept something I’d been resisting for years: the world will never be perfect. It won’t. And if you spend your one and only life railing against the world because it refuses to become your utopia, you will lose. Worse, you will drag the rest of us down with you. Constantly tearing society apart because it cannot meet an impossible standard doesn’t make you righteous. It makes you destructive. What I did instead was start asking a different question: ‘What’s the optimal way to improve this?’ Not achieve perfection (#impossible). Not burn it all down and rebuild a utopia from the ashes (also impossible). Just better. What specifically needs improving, and how do we do it? That shift—from ideological fury to practical problem-solving—changed everything for me. So those are the things that drove me away from the left. Not toward the right, but away from what the left has become: reactive, unquestioning, hostile to dissent, and increasingly detached from reality. I wasn’t changed by the right, I was changed by the left. My left. If the West is going to survive—and I think it’s that serious at this point—the left has to start thinking again. Questioning again. Demanding evidence instead of demanding obedience. So I’m asking you—begging you, really—to think. Consider that an alternate view might not be hatred. Consider that you may have been wrong about some things. I was. That’s not a confession of weakness. Admitting a mistake and choosing a different path is braver than marching further down a road you already suspect is leading somewhere dark. You are not a bad person for questioning. You are not a traitor for thinking. The people who tell you otherwise are not protecting you. They are controlling you. That’s all I ask. Just think. Please.
Farrah tweet media
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Thomas Massie
Thomas Massie@RepThomasMassie·
“How will we know if this bill has been successful? We will know when rich men are being perp walked in handcuffs to the jail. Until then, this is still a coverup.”
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BrooklynDad_Defiant!☮️
BrooklynDad_Defiant!☮️@mmpadellan·
President Clinton didn't arrest Rush Limbaugh while he was in office. President Bush didn't arrest Dan Rather while he was in office. President Obama didn't arrest Sean Hannity while he was in office. President Biden didn't arrest Peter Doocy while he was in office. You cackling maga hyenas need to realize how un-American it is for trump to have Don Lemon arrested. It's literally a move right out of Putin’s playbook, and if you cheer it, you're a pathetic bootlicker.
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Patrick Bet-David
Patrick Bet-David@patrickbetdavid·
Arresting Don Lemon is the right move. Never in the history of journalism has a well known journalist joined protestors to enter a church during worship and confront a pastor. If nothing happens here, it sets a dangerous precedent. It invites copycats, YouTubers, activists, citizen journalists, to storm churches, mosques, and other places of worship chasing clicks and virality. That’s playing with fire. Even Hunter S. Thompson, the pioneer of gonzo journalism, never crossed into active worship. I disagree with Don Lemon on many issues, there is a need for his views whether you agree with him or not. But entering a place of worship crosses a line.
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Formula 1
Formula 1@F1·
MV3 and the RB22 🤝🦁 #F1
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Defiant L’s
Defiant L’s@DefiantLs·
Newsom: "We're one of 16 states to provide care to people regardless of their immigration status." So now they’re just admitting this after saying it “wasn’t happening” and calling people conspiracy theorists
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Kim Dotcom
Kim Dotcom@KimDotcom·
@AGPamBondi Jeffrey Epstein was and is above the law.
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mads ★★★★
mads ★★★★@carthirtythree·
it’s been months, everyone has moved on, but i’m still here
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Erin Elizabeth Health Nut News🥜
Meet Dr Mike. He’s been spreading dangerous false harmful fraudulent information for years to his millions of followers, including pushing the deadly useless Covid shot. He gets his ass handed to him here by MAHA. 🔥🔥🔥🔥
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