fbi boss man #9 j. edgar boozer, esq.

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fbi boss man #9 j. edgar boozer, esq.

fbi boss man #9 j. edgar boozer, esq.

@biglayts

protect the grift at all costs. rest now brother, we have the watch, and i’ll see you in valhalla.

Katılım Kasım 2009
362 Takip Edilen174 Takipçiler
J. Dale Shoemaker
J. Dale Shoemaker@JDale_Shoemaker·
- For years, Erie Co. Dem boss Jeremy Zellner used an attorney to sue & kick unwanted political candidates off the ballot. - Zellner & this attorney have since had a falling out. - Zellner is now running for state Senate. - Attorney is now suing Zellner. mailchi.mp/investigativep…
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Chrissy Casilio
Chrissy Casilio@ChrissyCasilio·
Imagine if I ran a nonprofit dedicated to fighting drug addiction. I receive hundreds of millions in government funding for that mission… I take that money and pay drug dealers to push drugs on the streets. That would make me be like the Southern Poverty Law Center...
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Ben Coley
Ben Coley@BenColeyGolf·
@OddsCheckrTrack you lot love sample sizes until you don't love sample sizes. I've had multiple 200/1-plus winners down the years, nobody has paid a penny for any of it, I never 'boom', and I share the lows on a weekly basis. There's a lot of bad stuff in tipping and you chose me. Nice one pal.
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Tip Tracker
Tip Tracker@OddsCheckrTrack·
"Top Golf Tipster" @BenColeyGolf has now reached -131.79pts for 2026, and it's not even the end of April. 1 winner all year, what an embarrassment 🤣🤣
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𝙷𝚒𝚌𝚔𝚖𝚊𝚗
I genuinely would like to know just how many young Americans WOULD want to move to a "ghost town with no infrastructure, opportunity, jobs, culture, or society." I suspect the number is exceedingly low, and that even among those who "would" do it, they'd have many stipulations that would conflict with those of the others, more or less ensuring that no collective project of any kind could happen. Truly, the great prizewinners of rural America in 2100 A.D. will be those who can somehow manage to assemble or join an assembly of a dozen or more families who all move to one of the cheapest, most bombed-out rural towns imaginable -- and really do STAY there and have lots of kids. Thus far, few American whites appear to be capable of doing this. Only Amish, Mennonites, and third-world immigrants presently seem to be able to "take over" decaying rural towns in the USA. And I don't understand why this is. I mean I am sitting in a town where there are a half-dozen homes on the market at any given time for under $100k. Often, they sell for less than $40k -- move-in ready, as was the case with my own house. We have land for under $2k/ac, sometimes even less. Hardwood timber, soil, infinite water, a downtown with storefronts, a Church, a bar, a gas station. You can live here with a family for far less than $1k/mo, and anyone can make $1k/mo doing practically anything. It's all here if you want it. If I could convince even as few as a half-dozen Catholic families to relocate here (right here, in this particular village), we'd establish an enclave that would last for generations, we'd save the Parish Church here, we'd start businesses, attract visitors, and generally transform this town from a dying husk into a node of vibrance in the deep north. But nobody's lining up for this. Yes it's hard. Yes I have wanted to give up at times. But were a critical mass to show up, momentum could begin, the thing could lift off the ground, something could really happen here. It just takes one or two other families to get it moving. And in spite of my own misgivings and difficulties here, I don't really want to throw in the towel. The opportunities are just too good to give up on. DM's are always open. Come and visit if you want.
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John Carter@martianwyrdlord

Almost no one wants to move to a ghost town with no infrastructure, no opportunity, no jobs, no culture, no society. But if people started thinking in terms of tribes rather than individuals, these abandoned villages could be settled by groups of a few hundred young families, who could all move in more or less at once and bring the social infrastructure with them.

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