Liam Wrenley

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Liam Wrenley

Liam Wrenley

@WrenleyLiam

• Let's take our country back • I don't stop when I'm tired, I stop when I'm done #AlILivesMatter #StandfortheFlag #AmericaFirst

Bellefontaine, OH Katılım Mart 2026
51 Takip Edilen11 Takipçiler
Liam Wrenley retweetledi
Knight World
Knight World@KnightWorld·
Thanks to @grok Imagine’s new feature, you can use your own photo and a reference image you like to put on the armor. Prompt: Put this armor on Elon Musk, complete the missing parts of the armor appropriately, and create a beautiful video.
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Ian Miles Cheong
Ian Miles Cheong@ianmiles·
Another day, another horror story from the open borders nightmare. This Afghan "migrant" grabs a teenage girl off the street and rapes her just ONE WEEK after assaulting a woman in her 20s. And guess what? He's still in the UK because spineless politicians prioritize invaders over their daughters. He’s never getting sent back because the courts won’t allow it anyway.
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Tesla Owners Silicon Valley
Tesla Owners Silicon Valley@teslaownersSV·
Space travel as common as ocean flights. Starship is making it possible. 🚀
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Wall Street Mav
Wall Street Mav@WallStreetMav·
Sen John Thune seems absolutely determined to hand control of the House and Senate to Democrats in 2026. I really do not understand how these people think.
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Nick Sortor
Nick Sortor@nicksortor·
🚨 JUST IN: Elon Musk says “failing to pass SAVE is an act of high treason against the people of America” Damn right it is. You’re basically giving the GREEN LIGHT to widespread voter fraud, and intentionally destroying what’s left of election integrity. GET TO WORK, THUNE!
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The Rabbit Hole
The Rabbit Hole@TheRabbitHole·
“Mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent.” — Adam Smith
The Rabbit Hole tweet media
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Liam Wrenley retweetledi
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Yes
Athenaeum Book Club@athenaeumbc

A powerful scene in the Odyssey happens when Odysseus finally returns to Ithaca after twenty years of war and wandering. You would expect the story to end with celebration, with the hero coming home, the family reunited, and order restored. Homer does something far stranger. Odysseus arrives disguised as a beggar, because Athena warns him that the palace has been taken over by more than a hundred suitors who have been living there for years, eating his food, drinking his wine, and pressuring his wife Penelope to marry one of them. They believe Odysseus is dead and in their minds the kingdom is already theirs. So the king of Ithaca walks through his own halls dressed in rags while the men stealing his house sit comfortably at his tables. They mock him, throw scraps at him, and one of them even strikes him, and Odysseus takes it. That is the remarkable part, because the same man who blinded the Cyclops and survived twenty years of disasters now stands quietly while strangers insult him in his own home. Homer tells us his heart burns inside his chest and that he wants to attack them immediately, yet he restrains himself and waits. Instead of striking, Odysseus studies the room carefully. He counts the men, watches their habits, and quietly observes which servants remain loyal and which have betrayed him. The hero of the Odyssey does something most people cannot do, which is delay revenge until the moment is right. Eventually Penelope announces a contest and brings out Odysseus’ great bow, declaring that she will marry the man who can string it and shoot an arrow through twelve axe heads lined up in a row. One by one the suitors try and fail, because none of them can even bend the bow. Then the beggar asks for a turn. The suitors laugh at first, but the bow is eventually handed to him. Odysseus takes it in his hands and strings it effortlessly. Homer says the sound of the bowstring tightening rings through the hall like the note of a swallow. Then he places an arrow on the string and sends it cleanly through all twelve axe heads. In that moment the beggar disappears. Odysseus turns the bow toward the suitors and reveals who he is. What follows is one of the most brutal scenes in Greek literature. The doors are sealed and the suitors realize too late that they are trapped inside the hall. Odysseus, his son Telemachus, and two loyal servants begin killing them one by one. There is no escape, no mercy, and no negotiation. The men who spent years consuming another man’s house die inside it. It is a violent ending, but Homer wants you to understand something important. The real danger to Odysseus was never just the monsters and storms on the long journey home. It was the possibility that someone else might take his place while he was gone. When Odysseus finally returns, he reminds everyone in Ithaca of a simple truth: a man’s home is not truly his unless he is willing to fight for it.

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Liam Wrenley retweetledi
Liam Wrenley retweetledi
Eric Schmitt
Eric Schmitt@Eric_Schmitt·
Only American citizens should be able to vote in our elections. Period. This shouldn't be controversial. If Democrats want to block something that the overwhelming majority of Americans agree with—be my guest. Pass the SAVE America Act NOW!
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Failing to pass SAVE is an act of high treason against the people of America
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