Troy Johnson

156 posts

Troy Johnson

Troy Johnson

@TroyAJohnson2

Katılım Ekim 2019
814 Takip Edilen57 Takipçiler
Troy Johnson
Troy Johnson@TroyAJohnson2·
@FSUplays @SeminoleAlford Except when Alford sued the ACC providing a viable path out of the league. And working the ACC to pay a viewership bonus. And recruiting Link. And hiring Luke. And retaining Lonnie. And finally building the FOF. And modernizing the stadium to improve the Gameday experience
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FSU Plays Daily
FSU Plays Daily@FSUplays·
Every single thing we do is done poorly. @SeminoleAlford you’re doing a terrible job and the fact that you never face the public is pathetic. You’re a coward of a human.
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TV News Now
TV News Now@TVNewsNow·
🚨 DISGRACEFUL! The View’s Sunny Hostin: “There are times when I walk into a community and I see American flags all over the community and I suddenly feel unsafe because there is a section of this country that has co-opted the American flag and they equate being an American or an American flag with white supremacy. That should never be the symbol of white supremacy.”
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Troy Johnson
Troy Johnson@TroyAJohnson2·
@MartinPhd10044 @Rainmaker1973 That’s rich from a country that has imported the third world into the motherland. Thanks to the U.S. you aren’t forced to speak German
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Martin Fox Ph.D
Martin Fox Ph.D@MartinPhd10044·
@Rainmaker1973 Oh vey🙄 - just what the UK (and Europe) needs... open access to all the American gun nuts, druggies and freak shows flooding the motherland and superior continent! It won't happen though - too expensive and dangerous. As if it's taking an hour by train across the Atlantic 🤣🤡
Martin Fox Ph.D tweet media
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
A $20 trillion concept proposes a 3,400-mile underwater tunnel connecting London and New York, potentially reducing a 7-hour flight to a 1-hour train ride.
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Peter Schweizer
Peter Schweizer@peterschweizer·
There have been 4 major revolutions in the past 250 years: American, French, Russian, and Chinese. Only one led to individual rights and prosperity. The others led to mass death and tyranny. The US revolution was unique because it said two things: 1. Our rights come from God not from the govt. 2. Humans are power -hungry so we need to limit govt power. So the next time someone attacks the nation of one revolution that succeeded and recycles the the idea of those that miserably failed, you can ask them: are you ignorant, or malicious?
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Troy Johnson
Troy Johnson@TroyAJohnson2·
@bipp24 @marcthiessen Incorrect. You are confusing lifestyle choices with healthcare. American healthcare is superior to European
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bipp
bipp@bipp24·
@marcthiessen But Europeans have better health care and better food/nutrition. The quality of life in Europe is far superior than America. To pay for it, Europe doesn't invest in defense and instead they rely on the stupid Americans with aircondioning to pay for it.
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Marc Thiessen
Marc Thiessen@marcthiessen·
Sorry, citizens in Alabama actually live better than in Germany, Europe’s wealthiest country. Germany’s GDP per capita of roughly $56,000 in 2024 would rank 48th among U.S. states — below West Virginia. 80% of European homes lack air conditioning. In the UK 5% of homes have AC, while in Germany it’s 3%. 90% of North American homes have AC We live so much better than they do. They are in awe and rightly so!
Suneel Dhand MD@DrSuneelDhand

I love America, but I hate to burst your bubble: if you are on Twitter, and you are getting posts about how Europeans visiting for the World Cup are completely in awe of American food and grocery stores— I have to be honest with you and tell you you are being fed complete nonsense by the algorithm. I’ve traveled to almost every European country, and there isn’t a single one which doesn’t have better grocery stores and higher-quality restaurant food than the USA. Just being honest, as a doctor should

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MJ
MJ@singulieroblige·
Fine. Hard does not mean do nothing. Maybe it looks more like not letting wealthy people borrow against their assets and pay no tax at all. We can figure this out Brian. Every civilization in history has figured out how to level out wealth inequality. Please don’t pretend this is a brand new never before seen problem.
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Brian Sullivan
Brian Sullivan@SullyCNBC·
Lots of calls for a wealth tax lately. It sounds good: tax the super-rich more so we can have more money for government services. But a couple of quick things you won't hear in the sound bites. Europe tried a wealth tax and mostly abandoned it. One big reason is that countries found that the cost of enforcing it were often higher than the tax revenue it brought in. Little to no money actually made it to those who needed it. To tax 'wealth' you need an army of new, highly trained (and highly paid) IRS agents to comb through super complex situations. Taxing income is relatively easy. Just take a specific % of a specific number and deduct a few things. Taxing wealth is hard, messy and incredibly complex (again, don't believe me .. ask the European nations who tried and abandoned it). And then what do you do when wealth falls? Let's say a family is worth $20 billion. They are taxed. Their family stock (and remember that 'wealth' is going to almost always be in stock, never in income) falls by 50%. Does the IRS have to write a billion-dollar refund check back to the family for taxing them on wealth that no longer exists? The family will sue for the money back. Which means another army of IRS agents will spend years tied up in analysis and litigation. Everyday taxpayers can and will fight audits over relatively small sums of money. What do you think the rich and their team of accountants are going to do? But we are a democracy and its voters demand it or Congress votes for it, let's give it a try. Maybe we can do taxes better than Europe. We certainly are a lot richer these days as they've driven themselves into a ditch. One upside of a new wealth tax would certainly be on DC real estate. We'd have to hire a massive number of new, well-paid auditors who will need a place to live. Anyway, you don't have to believe me. I work for CNBC know a lot of rich people so this will largely be discounted anyway. Do some quick research or use Chat or Gemini or whatever and let it give you an unvarnished answer. But like all things you hear ... things are usually more complex than simple sound bites -- or X posts -- can relate. Always happy to have polite, kind and fair debates on any topic. Look forward to further discussion. Go USA soccer and Go Knicks!
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Garrett Exner
Garrett Exner@Exner_Garrett·
Ray’s Rock - Omaha Beach On the morning of June 6, 1944, 23 year old Staff Sergeant Arnold “Ray” Lambert came ashore with the first wave of the 1st Infantry Division on the eastern side of Omaha Beach. At this small patch of concrete he saved nearly 20 lives: The division came under intense fire from several German bunkers surrounding the entrance to the Colville Draw (one of two exits off Omaha Beach). Ray, a medic, immediately went to work. He was shot in the arm. Moments later he was hit by shrapnel in the leg, but Ray kept pulling men to safety. He pulled nearly 20 wounded soldiers to cover behind this 8ft wide obstacle, treating each soldier before going out in search of others. After several hours under fire, while pulling a wounded soldier from the ocean, he was struck by a landing craft. It dropped its ramp on top of him, breaking his back. He fell face down in the water, drowning. The craft backed up and nearby soldiers pulled an unconscious Ray to safety, eventually evacuating him off the beach. Remarkably, Ray had already earned two Silver Stars and three Purple Hearts in Sicily and North Africa, prior to landing in France. But here in Normandy his war would end. He awoke in a hospital back in England a day later. In the next bed over was his brother, who had also been wounded at Omaha. When asked about his work on D-Day, Ray simply said, “I did what I was called to do.” Ray Lambert passed in 2021 at 100 years old. He exemplified the best of American grit and why remembering this day is so important.
Garrett Exner tweet mediaGarrett Exner tweet media
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Troy Johnson
Troy Johnson@TroyAJohnson2·
Another example of blue state/city incompetence…
Yogi@Houseofyogi

Chicago lost the Bears this week. A team that's been in the city since 1921. They didn't lose them to a bigger market or a better deal. The Bears decided they'd rather be a tenant in Indiana than deal with Illinois for one more year. Think about how badly you have to run a place for that to be the smart move. They lost them for two reasons. The people running Illinois would rather villainize a builder than keep one. And they're bad at their jobs. In 2021 the Bears spent $197M on the old Arlington Park racetrack. Before they could break ground, Cook County valued the empty lot at $192M (Bears said $60M). They were salivating at the chance to extort a building that didn't even exist yet. That fight dragged on for years. The Bears were ready to put $2B into the stadium. All they wanted was a promise the county wouldn't reassess them into oblivion, plus $855M for infrastructure everyone uses. Roads, transit, utilities. A $3B project, two thirds of it private money pouring into Illinois. Springfield had since 2021 to get this done. They dragged it to the final night of session, passed it through the Senate at 3:39AM, and the House went home without voting. So now it's all gone. The funniest part? This started because Cook County tried to grab the tax early. They knew a built stadium would pay $53M a year. Now they get under $4M on a vacant lot. No jobs, no buildout, no new anything. Congrats on fighting for scraps and losing the whole prize. Pritzker: they're "an $8.5B valued business" that doesn't need propping up. But be smart for a second. Almost every NFL city throws in public money for a stadium. Not charity. The return is real. Tourism, hotels, restaurants, jobs, game days, property tax on a huge development. The math works. Indiana did the math. While Illinois sat on it for years, Indiana passed a bill in months, put up $1B, and took the team. And the Bears took a worse deal to get there. In Illinois they were going to own their stadium. In Indiana they rent it from the state. A team that wanted to build its own home gave up ownership just to escape Chicago. Nobody won but Indiana. The Bears lost their stadium. Illinois lost the team, the $2B, and $53M a year in taxes. Pritzker after they left: "I wasn't willing to give up billions of dollars of taxpayer money to give it to a billionaire-owned family or team." There it is. "Billionaire-owned." That's how Democrats talk about any business right before they run it out of town. Call them a billionaire, act like you're saving working families, take a victory lap while the tax base drives across the state line. Meanwhile they're running the whole state into the ground. And you already know how this ends. You're living in it. Pensions are $143B in the hole, worst in the country and not close. You pay $6,285 a year in property taxes, double the $2,969 national average, for a city that's $1.15B in the red. The mayor called its finances "the point of no return." When you run things this badly, you sell what's left. They leased the parking meters for 75 years to Morgan Stanley and a sovereign wealth fund in Abu Dhabi. Took $1.15B and burned through it in two years. The investors already made it all back, with 58 years left to collect. Sold the Skyway. Sold the downtown garages. Every asset that made money, gone for one check. But a fixed property tax rate for a team that's been here 106 years? That's "propping up billionaires." Companies are leaving. Boeing for Virginia. Caterpillar for Texas. Citadel for Miami. In 2023 alone Illinois lost 56,000 people and $6B in income to other states. The ones who left earned a third more than the ones who moved in. Indiana didn't outbid anyone. AAA credit, 16 years straight. A $676M surplus. Fourth-lowest debt per person in the country. They just weren't a disaster. Illinois could have collected $53M a year. It chose zero. Ignore all the bad management but make sure to stick it to those evil, pesky billionaires.

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Troy Johnson
Troy Johnson@TroyAJohnson2·
@BrilynHollyhand Republicans won the 2024 House vote by 2.5 points and should have a 25 seat majority, but due to democrat gerrymandering have only a 5 seat margin. Republicans are just now responding in kind
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Brilyn Hollyhand
Brilyn Hollyhand@BrilynHollyhand·
Republican states successfully advancing towards redistricting before 2026 midterms: -Ohio -Texas -Florida -Alabama -Missouri -Louisiana -Tennessee -South Carolina -North Carolina Democrat states that have tried, but got blocked: -Virginia -Maryland -New York
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Breitbart News
Breitbart News@BreitbartNews·
More "code switching" from Justin Pearson Immediately after playing a clip of his fake MLK affect, the Tennessee Democrat speaks in the quiet, controlled dialect seen in videos from his Maine college days... then, minutes later, when asked about appealing to rural Republicans, he noticeably puts on more of a southern drawl.
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Troy Johnson
Troy Johnson@TroyAJohnson2·
@acnewsitics @sirdibbydukes Not true. The U.S. economy grew at 4.5% in the fourth quarter of 1992 and it was not in recession in Jan 2021. And the 2020 downtown was from a global downturn due to Covid
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Alex Cole
Alex Cole@acnewsitics·
Fact: Every Democratic president for the last 35 years had to rescue the economy from a Republican recession.
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Jordan
Jordan@Jordan1819hu·
@GhostInTheMac18 @queenie4rmnola You people recycle the same copy-paste NPC script every time because you can’t address the present. Nobody denies racist Southern Democrats existed 150 years ago, dumbass. The point is modern white nationalists and Confederate freaks overwhelmingly align with the modern right now
Jordan tweet mediaJordan tweet mediaJordan tweet media
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Dr. Allison Wiltz
Dr. Allison Wiltz@queenie4rmnola·
The path from the Confederacy to the Klan to MAGA is a straight line
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Kewgardens
Kewgardens@kewgardens1·
@joec522 @TPCarney Stop gaslighting! The current gerrymandering race to the bottom did not begin with Texas but was instigated by Democrats with their insane Illinois gerrymander in 2021, their mid-decade NY gerrymander in 2024 & their VRA seat grabs in Alabama & Louisiana earlier this decade.
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Tim Carney
Tim Carney@TPCarney·
The current Virginia map, which will stay in place for 2026, is a very good map. * The districts respect municipal lines * The districts are fairly compact * The districts are coherent: You can describe most of them. As icing, the resulting party split is proportional.
Tim Carney tweet media
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Troy Johnson
Troy Johnson@TroyAJohnson2·
@mike_hamm @alx Incorrect. An “independent” commission drew a 43D-9R map (82%) for California in 2022. And Dems drew a 14D-3R map for Illinois in 2022. Republicans just started to respond in kind
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Mike Hamm
Mike Hamm@mike_hamm·
@alx Using the results of a single election rather than actual demographic data is misleading. Texas started the current redistricting war at Trump's behest. The pretense that the GOP is just following the Dem's example is obviously false.
Mike Hamm tweet media
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ALX 🇺🇸
ALX 🇺🇸@alx·
Massachusetts is more red than Tennessee is blue. Massachusetts has not had a Republican member of Congress in 30 years. If Massachusetts has 0 red districts, Tennessee should have 0 blue districts. Democrats are just mad that Republicans are finally doing the same thing they have been doing for years.
ALX 🇺🇸 tweet media
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ThePersistence
ThePersistence@ScottPresler·
Republican State Senator Travis Holdman — who lost by over 20 points — isn’t taking it very well. “Revenge & retribution is not a Christian value.” All you had to do was listen to your constituents.
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Tom Elliott
Tom Elliott@tomselliott·
NYT's @NickKristof to fellow progressives: "A black kid in Mississippi is 2.5 times as likely to be proficient in math & reading by 4th grade as a black kid in Calif. Do we need to look a little bit less at what the Trump Admin is doing ... & look a little more in the mirror?"
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Troy Johnson
Troy Johnson@TroyAJohnson2·
@SeanErnst @SeanTrende And we saw the “independent” commission draw a 43D-9R map in California after the 2020 census for a 60/40 state
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Sean Ernst
Sean Ernst@SeanErnst·
@SeanTrende You can end partisan gerrymandering with a commission. Multiple blue states did this and had to pass laws to end them in order to effectively gerrymander. It ridiculous state reps vote on their own districts. I think arguments against independent commissions are nirvana fallacies
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Sean T at RCP
Sean T at RCP@SeanTrende·
First, you can't really ban gerrymandering, you can only cabin it. And that only works if you have precise, quantifiable measures with crisp cutoffs. No weighing, no multi-factor tests, etc. Just something like "no splitting counties or municipalities more than necessary." 1/
Andrew Fleischman@ASFleischman

Both parties gerrymander whenever possible. This is bad. Neither party will ever unilaterally disarm. That is predictable. So why not just call a truce and pass a law to restrict it everywhere?

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Troy Johnson
Troy Johnson@TroyAJohnson2·
@leonardkl If we are truly a meritocracy, DeSantis will be our next President. He has been the most consequential Governor of either party the last nearly eight years
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Kimberly Leonard
Kimberly Leonard@leonardkl·
👀 DeSantis' "reputation in the West Wing is still so poor that Vance once overheard a conversation about the governor between Trump aides and remarked, ‘Wow, you guys really hate Ron DeSantis,’ a person who witnessed the exchange said.” cnn.com/2026/05/01/pol…
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Brandon T. Adams
Brandon T. Adams@BrandonTheAdams·
But he wouldn't have been elected the first time. Nor would we have elected Bush the first time. The world would likely be completely different (for the better) after 9/11 happened under a Gore presidency (if it wasn't prevented from happening to begin with). Probably no Patriot Act (at least not quite as broad and authoritarian). Definitely no Iraq war with all of its downstream consequences. We'd probably be further along in battling climate change. That's not to say there wouldn't have been a swing back in the other direction. Maybe we would have still had a Trump presidency only earlier. But now we have Trump in the worst point in time between those two realities. We are in the dumbest and worst timeline.
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