Frank Eaton, FCOC 🦛

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Frank Eaton, FCOC 🦛

Frank Eaton, FCOC 🦛

@bullydoc

Admaker. Space Camp ‘87 alumnus. Citizen paleontologist.

On Location Katılım Haziran 2009
2.6K Takip Edilen2.7K Takipçiler
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Margaret Kimberley
Margaret Kimberley@freedomrideblog·
Barney Frank gaslighting us on his death bed saying that democrats have gone “too far left.” They don’t even raise the minimum wage when they’re in office. Too far left? What is he even talking about? Trans athletes? If they raised the minimum wage no one would talk about trans athletes. Democratic Party is dying too and because of nonsense like this.
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jim kringle passed away
jim kringle passed away@abs_sweetmarie·
Nah…they’re acting like nothing even happened
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Presidential Wisdom
Presidential Wisdom@PrezWisdom·
#POTUS 🇺🇸
Mr PitBull Stories@MrPitbull07

On a freezing December morning in 1957, President Dwight D. Eisenhower was reviewing budget proposals when his secretary nervously informed him that a 73-year-old woman named Mrs. Eleanor Mitchell from Abilene, Kansas—his childhood Sunday school teacher—was in the White House lobby asking to see him without an appointment, and instead of having staff politely redirect her, Eisenhower literally ran down the hallway, swept this elderly woman into a huge bear hug, and cleared his entire afternoon to have tea with her in the residence. What makes this moment so breathtakingly beautiful is that Mrs. Mitchell had taught a scrappy young Dwight Eisenhower Bible verses every Sunday from 1907 to 1911 in a tiny church basement, making him memorize Proverbs and Psalms when he'd rather be playing baseball, and she'd written him letters throughout his military career—through both world conflicts, through his rise to Supreme Commander, through his election—always addressing him simply as 'Dwight' and reminding him that 'character matters more than rank.' Eisenhower told his staff that Mrs. Mitchell once made him apologize to the entire Sunday school class for being prideful after he'd bragged about winning a spelling bee, teaching him a humility lesson that shaped his entire leadership philosophy, and he'd never forgotten how she'd pulled him aside afterward and said, 'Dwight, you're going to do important things someday, but never let success make you forget where you came from or who helped you along the way.' During their White House tea, Eisenhower introduced Mrs. Mitchell to every cabinet member who passed by, saying with genuine reverence, 'This woman taught me everything that matters—respect this lady,' and she gently scolded him for not attending church regularly enough, which made the most powerful man in the world laugh and promise to do better. When Mrs. Mitchell left that evening, Eisenhower walked her personally to her taxi, kissed her cheek, and pressed an envelope into her hand containing a check for her church and a note: 'For the place that built my foundation—thank you for seeing potential in a troublemaker farm boy. Your student always, Dwight.' What absolutely destroys you is understanding that Eisenhower commanded armies and led nations, but he never forgot the Sunday school teacher who taught him that true strength was moral courage, proving that the greatest leaders never outgrow gratitude and that honoring the people who shaped you when nobody knew your name is the most presidential thing you can do.

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DepressedBergman
DepressedBergman@DannyDrinksWine·
Orson Welles on why "Citizen Kane" (1941) was banned in Russia & what he considers to be an obligation of every artist: "Interviewer: In 'Citizen Kane' (1941) and 'Lady from Shanghai' (1947), were you intending to criticize American civilization? Welles: I certainly was. I think every artist has an obligation to criticize his own civilization, his contemporaries. It’s clearly and obviously the task of an artist of any ambition. Every French person ought to criticize the present French civilization. It’s a responsibility. Interviewer: But was it your intention to criticize a capitalistic viewpoint? Welles: The capitalistic viewpoint as opposed to the materialistic view point? If I admitted that I was criticizing capitalism, it would look as if I were adopting a Marxist attitude, and that’s not so. It’s no accident that 'Citizen Kane' (1941) is banned in Russia. They don’t like it at all, any more than the capitalists like it. I am an anti-materialist. I don’t like money or power, or the harm they do to people. It’s a very simple old idea. And I am specially opposed to plutocracy; it’s American plutocracy that I am attacking, from different angles in several films: 'The Magnificent Ambersons' (1942), 'Lady from Shanghai' (1947), and 'Citizen Kane' (1941). Interviewer: And in 'Touch of Evil' (1958)? Welles: There too, but from now on I’m more interested in the abuse of power by the police and the State, because today the State is more powerful than money. So I’m looking for a way of saying that." (Orson Welles' interview with Bazin, Bitsch, Domarchi, 1958) P.S: On this day, 85 years ago, "Citizen Kane" (1941) premiered in New York City, USA.
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Frank Eaton, FCOC 🦛
Erika Kirk isn’t funny enough to be stupid. You can get away with so much more if you’re funny.
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Darren Naish
Darren Naish@TetZoo·
This generic green thyreophoran is known in the trade as B9 and famously has a look of terror on its face. The sticker depicting it is by @splendidhand
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Spencer A. Klavan
Spencer A. Klavan@SpencerKlavan·
Every time Trump survives an assassination attempt he enters a kind of zen fugue state where he transcends his usual belligerence and radiates unearthly serenity. "I wasn't worried," he said after this last one. "I understand life. We live in a crazy world." In this photo he looks like the speaker of Yeats's "Lake Isle of Innisfree," gazing dreamily into the respite that awaits him when at last his labor on this earth is done. "Nine bean-rows will I have there, a hive for the honey-bee, And live alone in the bee-loud glade." This usually lasts about a week before he goes back to thundering obscenities at his enemies and wishing hellfire upon them at the merest provocation.
The White House@WhiteHouse

🐝🐝🐝

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Frank Eaton, FCOC 🦛
First bit of @BrianBengs footage out of my recent trip to South Dakota where the Independent Revolution is just gearing up!
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David Lynch's Worlds
David Lynch's Worlds@ObnoxandAnony·
@Thomas52454651 Judy was in the glass box. When it burst out, she went to Sarah because the frogmoth was its beacon. The frogmoth allowed Sarah to have visions and see BOB. Metaphorically, it works too as a representation of Sarah's agony, pain and regret taking over her life.
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Ace 🦛
Ace 🦛@AceCrouton·
$RKLB
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Brian Bengs
Brian Bengs@BrianBengs·
Brian is officially on the ballot for this November election! Thousands of South Dakotans came out to sign his ballot initiative and give folks a new option for this great state to send to Washington. — Team Bengs
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Johnny Rico
Johnny Rico@JohnnyRicoMI·
@bullydoc @moorehn It’s hard but it’s the least hard it’s ever been for kids in the history of humanity. Child mortality is at all time lows despite horrific things like Uvalde.
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Heidi N. Moore
Heidi N. Moore@moorehn·
I've never seen the Uvalde pictures before but someone just posted them and my heart is now totally broken
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