Jeffrey Sims

3.5K posts

Jeffrey Sims

Jeffrey Sims

@XxJeffreyxX

Kentucky, USA Katılım Mart 2009
1.9K Takip Edilen919 Takipçiler
Jeffrey Sims
Jeffrey Sims@XxJeffreyxX·
@EricLDaugh Sorry MAGA and Trump have already used all their Primary money in KY's 4TH so you have to keep "Senate Majority Leader John Thune" as a top leader.
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Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 JUST IN: Leader John Thune is facing MASSIVE MAGA FURY and even some calls to be primaried after failing to deliver ICE-CBP funding by President Trump's deadline *AND* letting the SAVE America Act stall Republicans apparently oppose Trump's anti-weaponization fund. UNBELIEVABLE. "Democrats and many Republicans plan to kill the fund with Senate amendments." "Senate Majority Leader John Thune said the White House should have consulted Congress about the anti-weaponization effort, but presidential allies defended the fund." "President Trump says, quote, 'I gave up a lot of money allowing the anti-weaponization fund to go forward.'" "Former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said it would be, quote, 'utterly stupid, morally wrong to award money to pardoned January 6th rioters.'" Some conservatives are angry that Senate GOP leaders pulled the plug."
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Jeffrey Sims
Jeffrey Sims@XxJeffreyxX·
@itsdelgrande @priyaee Wow you have the same problem I do. Guess they want us to cove up because we might cause them to sin......... Wait I think I might have heard that before????
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Christian Del Grande
Christian Del Grande@itsdelgrande·
@priyaee Probably for the best bc when I wear my grey sweatpants women keep sexualizing me
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Priya Patel
Priya Patel@priyaee·
No grown adult should be wearing sweats in public under any circumstances.
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Domenic
Domenic@Domenic_Toronto·
@priyaee No man over 40 should be wearing skinny jeans.
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Jeffrey Sims
Jeffrey Sims@XxJeffreyxX·
@priyaee Not even to Walmart? Your standards are just to high. Besides they were not sweats they are yoga pants I'll have you know.
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Jeffrey Sims retweetledi
Kindness and knowledge
Last Friday night, my children watched a man with a gun at his hip sit on the floor of a roadside motel and gently talk my husband through a panic attack. That was never part of the plan. We had been driving for eight hours. My husband, Tom, is a disabled veteran. Crowds unsettle him. Noise makes it worse. Long trips take a toll, but he does them for us. We had our three children with us, eleven, seven, and our one-year-old, along with Daisy, his service dog. Daisy is not there for comfort alone. She wakes him from nightmares, leans into him when his breathing turns shallow, and keeps him steady when old memories return without warning. We had booked a room in advance at a chain motel off the highway. I will not name it. This is not about blame. The moment we stepped into the lobby, the clerk’s eyes went straight to Daisy’s vest. “We don’t allow dogs,” she said. “She’s a service animal,” I replied. “We noted it in the reservation. My husband is a veteran. We have the documents.” I handed everything over. She barely looked before sliding it back. “Our policy is no animals. I’m sorry.” Beside me, I felt Tom begin to slip. His jaw tightened. His breathing sped up. Daisy pressed against his leg before I could even react. “We can’t leave,” I said. “It’s late. He can’t drive anymore. This is medical.” The clerk lowered her voice. “If I make an exception, I could lose my job.” My hands started to shake. The baby was crying. My son tugged at my sleeve and whispered, “Are we going to sleep in the car?” I stepped aside and called the non-emergency police line. “I’m not trying to cause trouble,” I told the dispatcher. “My husband is a disabled veteran with a service dog. We have a reservation, and they’re refusing us. He’s not doing well. We just need help.” About fifteen minutes later, an officer walked in. His name tag read Daniels. He did not raise his voice or touch his radio. He went straight to Tom, knelt down, and met him at eye level. Then he smiled at Daisy. “What’s her name?” he asked. “Daisy,” Tom said, his voice unsteady. “She’s a good girl,” the officer said. “Can you tell me what she does for you?” Right there on the lobby floor, Tom began to speak. Slowly at first, then with more strength. He talked about the nightmares, the weight of them, and how Daisy keeps him from getting lost in them. The officer listened without interrupting, as if nothing else in the room mattered. Only after that did he stand and walk to the desk. “Federal law allows trained service animals in places like this,” he said calmly. “Turning them away is not just unfair. It is not allowed.” He did not shame her. He simply explained. She called her manager. There were quiet apologies, confusion, and then, after a few minutes, a room suddenly became available. We were handed a key. But what stays with me is what happened next. He did not leave. He stayed while we gathered our things, speaking to Tom until his breathing slowed and his hands steadied. He asked about his service and thanked him in a simple, quiet way. When I finally broke down, he turned to me and said, “You did the right thing calling. You handled it.” When our baby reached out to him, he took her without hesitation and held her until she stopped crying. My oldest leaned close and whispered, “I didn’t know officers could be like that.” He joked with my younger child about the stickers on his bag, then bent to scratch Daisy behind the ears. “Some heroes,” he said, “have fur and leave a bit of a mess.” In a moment that could have gone very differently, he chose patience. He did not just settle a dispute. He gave my husband space to recover his dignity. He showed my children what steady, humane authority looks like. So wherever you are tonight, Officer Daniels, thank you. Thank you for seeing a person instead of a problem. Thank you for staying when you could have walked away. Stories about what goes wrong travel fast. I am sharing this one for a different reason.
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Jeffrey Sims
Jeffrey Sims@XxJeffreyxX·
@stockbella @realDonaldTrump I think you are wrong about this. I am just judging by the common maturity level of most of the posters suggestion the things you are posting about.
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Bella
Bella@stockbella·
@XxJeffreyxX @realDonaldTrump 12-year-olds aren't running around calling America a 'fascist hellhole' or burning flags while demanding everything for free.
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Ricky Zaccaglino
Ricky Zaccaglino@RickyTheGuido·
Voters 65 and over were the only age demographic in Kentucky to favor Ed Gallrein over Thomas Massie.
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Ross
Ross@ross_neuberth·
@oldmedia These were great times and if you lived it you should probably get your prostate checked out.
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Old Media
Old Media@oldmedia·
Remember when you didn’t have to enter your personal info online to win a soda?
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Arthur MacWaters
Arthur MacWaters@ArthurMacwaters·
I called my engineer friend at SpaceX the other day. 1am Pacific. 3am in Starbase. He was still in the office and not going home any time soon. And he was happy. Energized. Because he's directly influencing the course of a multi-planetary future for humanity. On a fundamental level, this is why Elon companies win. Young, high-competence people are given exceptional individual agency and semi-impossible problems. And they know that their contribution is essential. Any company that does this is much more likely to succeed. Elon does this without fail. Inspires me a lot.
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David Senra@davidsenra

Marc Andreessen (@pmarca) on what it’s like to work at SpaceX: “It’s like being dropped into a zone of shocking competence.” “Everybody is ultra competent, and the reason everybody’s ultra competent is because if they’re not, Elon sniffs it out and fires them. He knows, ‘cause he’s talking to the people actually doing the work.” “The best engineers in the world want to work for him, ‘cause he’s the one CEO like this who’s able to work with them as a peer on whatever the technology is.” “What would be better as an engineer than being able to design a rocket engine with Elon Musk as your engineering partner?”

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Lourenço Czernin
Lourenço Czernin@lourencoczernin·
@defnotdeathwish @ArthurMacwaters How much value has Tesla returned to the investors in the form of profits? How about spacex? You’re basically betting that he will take people to mars, at any cost? What if he achieves this in 30 years, it’s definitely a win But does it make spacex a good investment?
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Lourenço Czernin
Lourenço Czernin@lourencoczernin·
@John97836679 @ArthurMacwaters Yes, he has showed the ability to turn vision into reality He’s a master marketeer How about results aka cash in the investors pockets? Still to be seen
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Open Source Intel
Open Source Intel@Osint613·
Rubio: Venezuela's interim president will travel to India next week.
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Jeffrey Sims retweetledi
Bo Loudon
Bo Loudon@BoLoudon·
🚨SPOT ON: Rep. @TimBurchett just DESTROYED the fake news talking point that President Trump is profiting off the Presidency: "One thing about Trump, it’s costing him money being in here." Follow: @BoLoudon
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