Beersaint

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Beersaint

Beersaint

@USMC_Razorback

Semper Fidelis to God, Country, Corps. UofWyoming/UofArkansas, Conservative, Military & History buff. SciFi fan, calling me a bot indicates you're a simpleton

Fayetteville AR Katılım Ocak 2012
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Beersaint
Beersaint@USMC_Razorback·
#vetvisit Marine K9's aren't dogs, they're aggressive guardian angels with sharp teeth & good noses instead of wings
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Right Angle News Network
Right Angle News Network@Rightanglenews·
U.S. Forest Service law enforcement is now asking for the public’s help identifying a group of Indian nationals seen defacing Cathedral Rock in Sedona, Arizona, a sacred Native American site, with furious Americans demanding their immediate deportation.
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The Babylon Bee
The Babylon Bee@TheBabylonBee·
'I Am Your Father,' Reveals Trump To Horrified Mark Hamill
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Vintage Vixens & Vestiges
Think marijuana is harmless? Think again! (‘80s)
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hw97karbine
hw97karbine@hw97karbine·
M24 Chaffee light tank fitted with an AN/UIQ-1 Public Address Set for Psychological Warfare during the Korean War near Wondong-myeon on November 12th 1951
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hw97karbine
hw97karbine@hw97karbine·
The undercarriage of the second aircraft visible drops during the attack, while sometimes used as a sign of surrender it was more likely a result of battle damage than a deliberate act This Soviet Tupolev SB is another example of such an occurrence
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hw97karbine
hw97karbine@hw97karbine·
Luftwaffe gun camera footage from the Messerschmitt Bf 109 F fighters of Jagdgeschwader 53 "Pik As" in close combat with RAF Hawker Hurricane fighters flying from Malta circa early 1942
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Beersaint
Beersaint@USMC_Razorback·
@jkrtr0_0 @DDj88853941 @alexunderpress1 @Dr_TheHistories Ate a lot of seaweed?!? WTF ?!? That is not accurate. I spent a year with an Inuit while stationed in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He was on the USMC wrestling team. Seaweed was not a big dietary supplement. Vit C from uncooked/undercooked meat mostly.
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Dr. M.F. Khan
Dr. M.F. Khan@Dr_TheHistories·
Captain Cook loaded 7,860 pounds of sauerkraut onto the HMS Endeavour in 1768. His crew refused to eat it, so he served it exclusively to the officers and made sure they ate it visibly in front of the crew every single day until the sailors decided they wanted some too. Not one man died of scurvy on the entire three-year voyage. Cook circumnavigated the world on his first voyage without losing a single man to scurvy and the Royal Society of London awarded him the Copley Medal on his return, one of the most prestigious scientific honours in Britain, specifically for his methods of preserving the health of his crew. The achievement was genuinely extraordinary. Scurvy had been killing sailors on long voyages for centuries, with some estimates suggesting it killed more sailors than enemy action, storms and all other causes of death combined. Cook solved it with fermented cabbage and a very specific understanding of human psychology. A typical daily menu aboard the Endeavour consisted of breakfast with boiled wheat and sugar, a midday dinner of salted beef stew and vegetables, and an evening meal of soup with ship's biscuits so hard they had to be broken up with a marlin spike. The ship carried approximately 5,500 litres of beer, 7,300 litres of spirits, 16 tonnes of bread, 2 tonnes of salted beef and over 3 tonnes of sauerkraut. The sailors ate approximately 5,000 calories a day to sustain the physical demands of running an 18th century sailing ship. Cook also carried portable broth made from cattle offal, forty bushels of malt, vinegar, mustard and concentrated citrus juice as additional anti-scurvy measures. He was running what was effectively the first controlled nutritional experiment in naval history across three years and 40,000 miles of ocean. The sauerkraut psychology is the detail that stay with me in this story. Cook noticed that Dutch sailors suffered far less from scurvy than their British counterparts and observed that they carried barrels of sauerkraut. He ordered his ships to do the same but his British sailors refused the unfamiliar foreign food entirely. His solution was to serve it only to the officers while making sure they ate it visibly in front of the crew. Within weeks the sailors were demanding their share, and Cook understood that sailors suspicious of an unfamiliar food would eat it the moment they believed someone of higher status was being given something they were not. © Eats History #drthehistories
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Margie Kaz
Margie Kaz@MargieKaz·
@Cavebear2023 @Pat_Stedman @PrescientIO I feel sorry for all of you. You are so filled with hate that you'd rather see our country fail under President Trump than do well. It never used to be this way. Patriotism is lost on the left. Very sad.
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Pat Stedman | Dating & Relationship Coach for Men
On January 6th I followed the crowd into the Capitol and shouted. Police stood by the whole time, hanging out with us and sometimes directing us places. At one point near the House Chambers I was walking downstairs when a trio of some special section, secret service looking men started pointing guns in my direction. Confused and annoyed, I walked the other way and when I saw a normal police officer asked him why they were doing that. He informed me a protestor (Ashli Babbit) had been killed, and advised me to leave the building. I walked towards the exit and after a short rest on the bench I left. I harmed nobody and damaged no property that day and complied with all police orders. What I received for that was a pre-dawn raid at my parents house, where my 1 month post-partum wife and I were staying, on Biden's first day in office. His DOJ had signed the order to arrest me 3 hours after his inauguration. In the subsequent weeks I received death threats online and harassing phone calls, something that would be ongoing for the next few years. I was banned from Meta and Paypal. My wife and I were both debanked by PNC and banned from Airbnb. My wife was detained at the airport for hours with our newborn daughter. I was charged with 4 misdemeanors and the 1512 unconstitutional felony. The government offered to drop the misdemeanors if I pled to the felony. The felony was a lie, so I refused and went to trial. At trial the prosecution for 2 days straight was allowed to show footage to the jury of things that occurred around the Capitol I wasn't present for "for context." When we asked to put forward footage that contradicted the prosecution's "context" we were not allowed. They could show what they wanted, we could not. Police officers were then put on the stand for the next 2 days who cried about their experiences. I had no idea who they were. They admitted they never saw me or interacted with me. Nevertheless like every other J6er, I lost, and was sentenced to 4 years and $22k in fines and restitution. Yet even after the Supreme Court overturned the felony, the judge would not let me out until my misdemeanor sentences of a year were maxed out. Because she can't count she actually kept me in longer - to the extent she intervened at the last minute to make the prison release me on a Sunday, something that is against BOP rules. My family sat outside the prison gates the Friday before practically the whole day waiting in vain because of this pettiness. But the government wasn't satisfied with their pound of flesh: after my release they took me back in for resentencing, to attempt to have me resentenced after the fact to my misdemeanors consecutively, so I'd be taken from my family again and have another 1.5 years behind bars. This time I won, as they had no legal precedent and it skirted on violating double jeopardy since I had served my full prison time. Even still, it cast a cloud over the holidays and cost me another 20k my family couldn't afford. People ask whether prison was bad, and yeah of course prison sucked. It was a hard and violent place. I was present for a stabbing, and was lucky to avoid two fights and a race war. But dealing with Biden's DOJ and the DC Judiciary was the real trauma - they would grind down your spirit by weaponizing the legal system and use the endless procedure to bankrupt you. I had nightmares for months after release that I had somehow been hit with new charges. By the time I was pardoned by President Trump, I had spent literally every single day of Biden's presidency either in prison or under some form of supervision. I had incurred over $300k in legal fees and over $1 million in lost business. It was a reign of terror, and yet it was a mere foreshadowing of what they had planned for anyone else who opposed them under Kamala. The country should never forget it.
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Beersaint
Beersaint@USMC_Razorback·
@kojimaicmatters "Dr Loomis is a Trump supporter sorry" I agree. He's based & killing evil.
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Orcbrand's Kojimaic Matters
Orcbrand's Kojimaic Matters@kojimaicmatters·
Dr. Loomis is a Trump supporter sorry.
Beersaint@USMC_Razorback

@kojimaicmatters New Halloween movie coming out... "Halloween is great because Dr. Loomis is supposed to be a skilled highly professional psychiatrist and then his diagnosis of Michael Myers is that he's "MAGA" and the only way to treat his condition is to kill him fucking dead."

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🌺 Jess 🌺
🌺 Jess 🌺@J6ssicaWatkins·
I just found out officially from attorney Carolyn Stewart... I AM NO LONGER A FELON! MY ENTIRE J6 CASE HAS BEEN OFFICIALLY DISMISSED!!!
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Beersaint
Beersaint@USMC_Razorback·
@kojimaicmatters New Halloween movie coming out... "Halloween is great because Dr. Loomis is supposed to be a skilled highly professional psychiatrist and then his diagnosis of Michael Myers is that he's "MAGA" and the only way to treat his condition is to kill him fucking dead."
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Orcbrand's Kojimaic Matters
Orcbrand's Kojimaic Matters@kojimaicmatters·
Halloween is great because Dr. Loomis is supposed to be a skilled highly professional psychiatrist and then his diagnosis of Michael Myers is that he's got "Pure Evil" and the only way to treat his condition is to kill him fucking dead.
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California Post
California Post@californiapost·
Outrage over claims Jimmy Kimmel relative bullied Brentwood bakery for selling Spencer Pratt cookies trib.al/9DdTjSW
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Barnaby Breaks History 🇺🇸
In 1888, General Longstreet returned to Gettysburg. A one-legged Yank hobbled up on crutches, grasped his hand, and said, "General, I fought against you at Round Top. I lost a wing there, but I am proud to meet you here." Longstreet beamed and grasped the veterans hand. "Yes, those were hot times then, but I’m all right now." Over 30,000 Union and Confederate veterans gathered to promote national unity and reconciliation. Those who bled there knew the war was over and we were all countrymen again. We could learn something from them.
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Echoes of War@EchoesofWarYT

Almost no one knows the full story of Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee. In 1847, during the Mexican War, a young Lieutenant Grant served as an obscure regimental quartermaster. Robert E. Lee, already famous, served on General Winfield Scott's elite staff. They crossed paths once. Lee did not remember it. Eighteen years later, they met again. April 9, 1865. Appomattox Court House, Virginia. Lee arrived first, in an immaculate gray dress uniform, red sash, embroidered gauntlets, and a presentation sword with a jeweled hilt. He looked like an emperor walking to his coronation. Grant rode up an hour later, alone, splattered head to boot in Virginia mud, wearing a private's field blouse with no sword, no sash, and no insignia except the dirty shoulder straps of a lieutenant general. The first thing he did was apologize to Lee for his appearance. The surrender happened in the parlor of a farmer named Wilmer McLean. McLean had fled his old home near Manassas because the first major battle of the war had literally been fought across his front yard in 1861. Four years later the war followed him 120 miles and ended in his front parlor. He later said he could have wallpapered his house with the war. Before any terms were discussed, Grant tried small talk. He asked Lee if he remembered him from Mexico. Lee politely said he did not. Grant said he had remembered Lee perfectly for almost twenty years. Then came the terms, and they stunned everyone present. Officers could keep their sidearms and personal horses. Enlisted men who owned their mounts could take them home for the spring plowing. No prison. No trials. Every Confederate soldier would be paroled and allowed to walk home, on his honor, unmolested by U.S. authority for as long as he kept his parole. Lincoln had asked for leniency. Grant gave him more than he asked for. When Lee mentioned, almost in passing, that his men had not eaten in days, Grant ordered 25,000 rations sent across the lines from his own supply trains that same afternoon. The Union army fed the army it had just defeated. As Lee rode back to his lines on his old gray horse Traveller, Union batteries began firing celebratory salutes and Grant's men started to cheer. Grant rode out himself and shut it down on the spot. "The war is over," he said. "The rebels are our countrymen again, and the best sign of rejoicing after the victory will be to abstain from all such demonstrations." He later wrote that he felt "sad and depressed" the rest of that day, not triumphant. He could not bring himself to rejoice over the downfall of a foe who had fought so long, so well, and had suffered so much for his cause. Then came the chapter history almost forgot. Two months after Appomattox, a federal grand jury in Norfolk indicted Robert E. Lee for treason. The penalty on the books was death by hanging. Lee wrote a single letter to Grant, citing the parole he had been given. Grant was furious. He went directly to President Andrew Johnson and told him plainly that if the indictment moved forward, he would resign his commission as commanding general of the entire United States Army. He had pledged his personal word to Lee at Appomattox, and no civilian politician was going to break that word while Grant still wore the uniform. Johnson backed down. The indictment was quietly killed. The man who beat Lee in war saved him from the gallows in peace. Twenty years later, Grant was dying of throat cancer in a cottage on Mount McGregor, racing in agony to finish his memoirs before bankruptcy and death caught up with his family. He won by four days. The book sold 300,000 copies and made his widow rich. At Grant's funeral procession in New York in August 1885, his pallbearers walked side by side: Union generals William Tecumseh Sherman and Philip Sheridan, and Confederate generals Joseph E. Johnston and Simon Bolivar Buckner. The same men who had spent four years trying to kill each other carried the coffin together through a million and a half mourners lining the streets. Six years later, when Sherman himself died, the old Confederate Johnston traveled to New York again to serve as a pallbearer for his former enemy. It was a freezing February day with cold rain. Johnston, 84 years old, stood through the entire outdoor ceremony with his hat held over his heart. A friend pleaded with him to put his hat back on. Johnston refused. "If I were in his place," he said, "and he were standing in mine, he would not put on his hat." Johnston caught pneumonia that day. He died a few weeks later. That is the real ending of the American Civil War. Not at Appomattox. In the rain, at a funeral, with an old Confederate refusing to cover his head out of respect for the Union general he had spent his youth trying to destroy.

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