Bunch of Numbers

5.9K posts

Bunch of Numbers

Bunch of Numbers

@bnchofnumbers

Katılım Mart 2023
705 Takip Edilen178 Takipçiler
Bunch of Numbers
Bunch of Numbers@bnchofnumbers·
@TeamMcMorrow @MalloryMcMorrow FFS - Have you never had to use one of these services for an elderly person. It bankrupts them of their life savings. Democrat policies always make things worse for everyone. Only a fool would vote for carpetbagging Mallory who doesn’t pay her bills.
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Team McMorrow
Team McMorrow@TeamMcMorrow·
.@MalloryMcMorrow: For years, home care workers have been underpaid, understaffed, and overlooked all while helping seniors and people with disabilities live safely and independently in their homes. Their work deserves dignity, protection, and a living wage.
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James Woods
James Woods@RealJamesWoods·
I’ll use this account to clarify my position on accounts with a string of numbers in the account name. Several people have posted that they had to join X again after being banned on Twitter for supporting President Trump. Reading their posts and these explanations, I believe them.
The Ghosts of Squirrel & Raccoon@GhostThe78757

@RealJamesWoods I have numbers after mine assigned me by X when I created this new account after .@elonmusk purchased twitter because I can't use my real name since they gave me a lifetime suspension for reposting .@realDonaldTrump after J6.

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Fit_Fusion
Fit_Fusion@FitFusion__·
Only people with iQ spot the pattern instantly
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Matt Van Swol
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol·
Dear GOP, I know I'm new to this movement. I'm not anyone important, I'm just a regular voter who started paying attention. ...and I'm trying to figure out WHAT IN THE HELL is going on with you Because honestly... I'm really confused. From where I am, it looks like you're sitting on the EASIEST WINS IN MODERN POLITICAL HISTORY and for some reason... you just won't take them. Why aren't you forcing daily votes on clean, single-issue bills that everyone already agrees on? Mandatory voter ID. Defunding fraud. Defunding the Taliban. Stuff that polls through the roof and the stuff normal people agree on. Why aren't you at LEAST trying to win? I don't understand. Why are you betraying the same people who gave you a mandate... a few months ago??? Why are you still funding fraud?! Why are you still funding NGOs that HATE conservatives?! Why are some of you trying to push MASS AMNESTY FOR ILLEGAL ALIENS?! I keep trying to assume there's some smart reason I just can't think of... some masterful long game ...but it doesn't look like a long game to me It looks A HELL OF A LOT like corruption. It looks like you'd rather lose comfortably than win for the America people, uncomfortably. It looks like you're more scared of making Democrats a little sad, than you are of disappointing the people who put you in power. I cannot for the life of me figure out how that math works in your favor... unless there's corruption at play. You tell people like me to show up. You have said things like... Speak up! Vote! Donate! Volunteer! Bring our friends along! AND WE HAVE!!! BUT WE NEED YOU TO DO SOMETHING, ANYTHING AT ALL, FOR US. Use the power that was JUST given to you and FORCE THE VOTES. Make the other side go on the record OVER AND OVER. Enforce the talking filibuster. PASS THE SAVE ACT!!! DEFUND THE TALIBAN. STOP PUSHING MASS AMNESTY FOR ILLEGALS. You won... would you PLEASE start acting like it?! Because if you're not even going to try, I genuinely don't know what we're doing here. Sincerely, A brand new conservative who isn't going anywhere, but really, REALLY needs you to start fighting.
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Pure Michigan
Pure Michigan@PureMichigan·
What Michigan restaurant is worth the drive every single time?
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Supersonic Redhead🛫
Supersonic Redhead🛫@Supersonic_Red·
There’s a generation a lot of people forget exists. We were born at the tail end of the Boomers, but we are not culturally the same as people born in the 40s and early 50s. We are Generation Jones. And honestly, it explains a lot. We grew up in a world that still felt fundamentally analog, but we were young enough to be dragged headfirst into the digital revolution. We are the bridge generation between rotary phones and smartphones, between slide rules and AI, between Walter Cronkite and algorithm driven media. We remember when there were only a few television channels and the entire country watched the same thing at the same time. We also adapted to the internet, email, forums, social media, streaming and now artificial intelligence. We lived before and after the technological singularity hit everyday life. That is not a small thing. People born in the 40s came of age in a post World War II America that was still industrial, deeply hierarchical and institutionally stable. Their formative years were shaped by the Cold War, Vietnam, the civil rights era and a society where information moved slowly. Generation Jones came later. We inherited the aftermath of all of that. We were the kids who watched Watergate destroy blind trust in government. We watched manufacturing begin to collapse. We saw divorce rates explode. We were the first truly latchkey generation in massive numbers. We learned independence early because many of us had to. We grew up with one foot in old America and one foot in whatever this new thing was becoming. We played outside until the streetlights came on but we also learned DOS commands. We learned cursive and keyboarding. We had card catalogs and Google searches. We went from vinyl records to cassette tapes to CDs to MP3s to streaming in one lifetime. We remember maps. We remember memorizing phone numbers. We remember life before GPS and before every human interaction became filtered through a screen. And because of that, I think Generation Jones developed a very unique perspective. We are adaptable because we had no choice but to adapt. We learned technology as adults instead of being born into it. We remember a slower world but were forced to survive in a rapidly accelerating one. That creates a very different mindset than either older Boomers or younger Gen X and Millennials. A lot of us also reject the caricature people now associate with “Boomers.” We were not buying houses for the cost of a sandwich in 1965. The interest rate on my first house was over 14% and that was after buying down a point. Many of us got hit by recessions, outsourcing, pension collapses and economic instability just like younger generations did. We watched promises evaporate in real time. We understand older generations because we were raised by them. We understand younger generations because we had to evolve alongside them. That’s why the Jones generation often feels culturally homeless. We are rarely discussed, rarely defined and usually lumped into categories that don’t actually fit us. But we exist. We are the human transition point between the industrial age and the digital age. And frankly, there will probably never be another generation quite like us again.
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Bishop
Bishop@BishopJaxi·
A Protestant can condemn every council, reject every father, disagree with every historic Christian, start his own church in a strip mall, and still call it “biblical Christianity.” That should terrify people more than it does. The Catholic Church does not ask each generation to reinvent Christianity. The Church guards what was handed down.
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Marlow Stern
Marlow Stern@MarlowNYC·
merely pointing out the truth gets you blocked by spencer pratt
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Team McMorrow
Team McMorrow@TeamMcMorrow·
Cheers to a better tomorrow.
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Jeremy Moss
Jeremy Moss@JeremyAllenMoss·
Fresh off the heels of the Indivisible Fighting 9 Endorsement, I joined Indivisible Huron Valley in west Oakland County to share about my campaign for Congress and how we’ll protect our democracy from Donald Trump’s dangerous extremism!
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Bunch of Numbers
Bunch of Numbers@bnchofnumbers·
@TeamMcMorrow @MalloryMcMorrow The answer is to elect a republican majority and governor. Democratic policies have failed all native Michiganders and are failing our young people the hardest.
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Elon Musk just defended America better than every politician in Washington combined. Musk: “After World War 2, the US could have basically taken over the world and any country. Like we got nukes, nobody else got nukes. We don’t even have to lose soldiers. Which country do you want?” One nation on earth held a weapon nobody else had. Total dominance. Zero competition. No risk of retaliation. Every empire in history that held that kind of advantage used it. Rome. The Mongols. The British. The Ottomans. They conquered until they collapsed. America had a bigger advantage than all of them combined. And it rebuilt the countries it just defeated. Musk: “The United States actually helped rebuild countries. So it helped rebuild Europe, it helped rebuild Japan. This is very unusual behavior, almost unprecedented.” Almost unprecedented? It had never happened before. Not once in 5,000 years of recorded history. The Marshall Plan wasn’t foreign aid. It was the most radical act of restraint any superpower ever committed. America turned its enemies into allies. Turned rubble into economies. Turned surrender into partnership. Germany went from ashes to the economic engine of Europe in a generation. Japan went from unconditional surrender to the third largest economy on earth. Three years after the war, America was flying food into Berlin. A city in the heart of the nation that just tried to destroy it. That’s not policy. That’s a civilization deciding what it is at the exact moment it has the power to be anything. You’re being told a story right now. That America is the villain of history. You hear it everywhere. Media. Universities. Social platforms. Musk: “There’s always like, well America’s done bad things. Well of course America’s done bad things, but one needs to look at the whole track record.” Every nation on earth has dark chapters. Every single one. The difference is what a country does when nobody can stop it. And when nobody could stop America, it fed its enemies and rebuilt their cities. Musk: “The history of China suggests that China is not acquisitive. Meaning they’re not going to go out and invade a whole bunch of countries.” Probably right. China has historically built walls, not fleets. But the real question isn’t about borders anymore. We’re approaching a moment that mirrors 1945 in ways nobody has fully processed yet. AI is going to give a handful of people a power advantage that makes nuclear monopoly look quaint. If someone is going to hold that kind of power, who do you want it to be? The country that conquered when it could? Or the one that rebuilt when it didn’t have to? Every alliance. Every trade route. Every economy. Billions lifted out of poverty. All of it traces back to one act of restraint that had never been done before. And carries no guarantee of being repeated. The most powerful thing America ever did wasn’t building the bomb. It was what it didn’t do after.
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Grace Gym🏋️‍♀️
Grace Gym🏋️‍♀️@GraceGym_·
I’m redoing my kitchen with dark blue cabinets. Which floor matches best? 1, 2, 3, or 4?
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Abdul El-Sayed HQ
Abdul El-Sayed HQ@AbdulElSayedHQ·
Friendly reminder there is only one candidate in this race that has called to abolish ICE ☺️
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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
America knew him as the man who couldn't outsmart a pig. The Marines knew him as the man who drove into hell 47 times to bring them home. For six seasons, Eddie Albert made millions laugh as Oliver Wendell Douglas on Green Acres — the eternally optimistic city lawyer hopelessly lost on a farm. He argued with tractors. He lost battles to chickens. Each week, he faced absurd defeat with unshakable dignity. The show climbed to number six in the ratings. He became a household name. But two decades before Hooterville, Eddie Albert stood in the bloodstained waters of the Pacific, pulling dying men from the surf while machine-gun fire tore through the air around him. November 20, 1943. Tarawa. Betio Island. The assault became a massacre within minutes. Coral reefs trapped landing craft hundreds of yards offshore. Marines abandoned their boats and waded through chest-deep water in full combat gear — completely exposed. Japanese machine guns opened fire instantly. Men fell by the dozens. The wounded floated helplessly, too injured to move, waiting to drown or be executed by snipers. Eddie Albert was a Navy lieutenant assigned to the USS Sheridan. His orders didn't include rescue operations. He didn't wait for orders. He commandeered a Higgins boat and drove straight into the gunfire. Japanese forces fired from fortified pillboxes, destroyed vehicles, and the pier. Bullets punched through his hull. Water erupted in deadly geysers around him. Albert kept going. Trip after trip, he loaded wounded Marines onto his craft while enemy snipers tried to kill him. When his boat filled, he turned around and went back for more. 47 Marines. That's how many he personally pulled from death. He coordinated the rescue of 30 more. The U.S. Navy awarded him the Bronze Star with Combat "V" — a medal reserved exclusively for valor under direct enemy fire. Afterward, when people asked about Tarawa, he never spoke about himself. He only mentioned the men who didn't make it home. After the war, Albert returned to acting. He earned an Oscar nomination in 1953 for Roman Holiday with Audrey Hepburn. He built a respected career in serious dramatic films throughout the 1950s and 60s. Then in 1965, he made a decision that baffled Hollywood: he accepted the lead in a television sitcom about a lawyer who abandons New York City to become a farmer. Green Acres became a cultural phenomenon. For six years, America watched Oliver Wendell Douglas lose every argument with rural logic, his wife, and a pig named Arnold. The show was absurd, surreal, and wildly popular. It ran 170 episodes before CBS cancelled it in 1971. Most actors would have been typecast forever. Not Albert. In 1972, he earned his second Oscar nomination for The Heartbreak Kid. He worked for three more decades. He became a passionate environmental activist, dedicating his later years to conservation causes. Eddie Albert died in 2005 at age 99. Here's what haunts me. Millions watched him as a gentle, perpetually defeated optimist who couldn't keep chickens out of his living room. They laughed at a man who seemed permanently overwhelmed by life's absurdities. They never knew that same man had driven a fragile boat into a hurricane of machine-gun fire — not once, but 47 times — refusing to leave until every wounded Marine within reach was safe. Oliver Wendell Douglas never surrendered, no matter how impossible the odds. He stayed kind. He kept trying. He refused to quit even when everything screamed at him to stop. Eddie Albert didn't need to study that character. He'd already become him on the bloodiest beach of the Pacific War, when the only thing that mattered was bringing one more man home alive. That wasn't acting. That was his soul.
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One Bad Dude
One Bad Dude@OneBadDude_·
Around 73,000,000 abortions are performed each year, liberals are fine with it. There were 416 homicides in Chicago last year, not a peep from the left. 750,000+ Americans are homeless, the democrats ignore it. These same people take up causes like fighting for illegal immigrants, protesting for the lives of Palestinian people, and taking to the streets to cause destruction when we lose career criminals like George Floyd. To say they’re simply mislead would be a gross understatement.
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Mallory McMorrow
Mallory McMorrow@MalloryMcMorrow·
No matter what happens in August, Democrats must come together (with the Republicans and Independents ready to join us!) to send Mike Rogers packing and ensure the US Senate will be a check on Trump.
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