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Chris Musselman
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Chris Musselman
@TakeRightTurn
All the world's indeed a stage, We are merely players, Performers and portrayers, Each another's audience outside the gilded cage.
Lakeside Park, Port Dalhousie Katılım Şubat 2012
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Chris Musselman retweetledi


@bryanrbeal @RichLowry Data Cen-tards don't care about facts.
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If all of America’s data centers closed tomorrow, our economy would grind to a halt. There’d be millions of people unemployed, and our GDP would drop by 50%. All cell phones and internet services would stop working. Our national security would be obliterated. Millions of people wouldn’t be able to do their jobs at all. Sick patients would be given the wrong medications. The economic fallout would be far worse than even the great depression.
If all of America’s golf courses closed tomorrow, there would be virtually no impact on society at all. 90% of Americans probably wouldn’t even notice.

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@NFL_DovKleiman Dart did what he wanted to do... Carter said what he wanted to say. Big effing deal. 🥱 Get on with life... this will soon be forgotten. And enough with the 'wisdom' BS - these are grown men playing a game for a living.
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@waysandmeans71 @MatrixMysteries So... is the City of Los Angeles also 'all about the bullshit'?
Reminder: Ignorance is always a choice..
controllerdata.lacity.org/Payroll/City-E…
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@JayInslee China produced 6000 TWh of electricity from COAL alone in 2025... 50% more than the entire U.S. electricity production. Go to China, Jay, talk to the CCP officials -- I'm sure they'd love to talk with you. We're not interested.

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Climate change isn't some abstract bar on a graph. It’s not happening in some far off future. It's happening now, in communities across the US.
60%+ of the US is under drought. The climate crisis is fueling extreme weather. We must switch to clean energy. washingtonpost.com/climate-enviro…
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@caroljsroth @ajzeigler Familiar, but just not interested...
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Chris Musselman retweetledi

A lot of Americans remember Sears as a dying store in a half-empty mall.
That’s not what Sears was.
Sears was how American factories entered ordinary houses. Kenmore in the kitchen. Craftsman in the garage. DieHard under the hood. Coldspot humming in the corner. Lawn tractors in sheds. Socket sets in drawers that nobody was allowed to lose.
It was basements, workbenches, catalogs, part numbers, repairmen, delivery trucks, credit accounts, and old men who could hear a washer struggling before it finally quit.
A kid could flip through the Wish Book and learn what adulthood looked like. Tools. Appliances. Work boots. School clothes. A bicycle. Sometimes even a whole house ordered by mail and built piece by piece after the materials came in by rail.
That was the part Sears understood. America was full of people trying to build stable lives with practical things.
Then the practical world got replaced by a disposable one. The catalogs vanished. The stores hollowed out. Manufacturing moved overseas. Repair got expensive. Replacement got cheap. The people who knew how everything worked got older, retired, or died, and a lot of what they knew went with them.
People call it the death of a department store.
I don’t.
Sears was one of the last national systems that still assumed ordinary Americans should know how to maintain the world around them instead of just replacing it. That’s the strange poverty nobody talks about now.
Not having fewer things. Having more than ever and understanding almost none of them.




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@ImMeme0 Every other post from this account is ~100 views... which makes sense. How does the algorithm allow these dumb equally irrelevant posts to get millions? 🤔
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