Christopher Walker

41.1K posts

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Christopher Walker

Christopher Walker

@chriswalker_12

Christian. Conservative (cry about it). Caustic reactionary. Code monkey. Lousy shot. Even worse angler. RWNJ/VRWC. Rafał Gan-Ganowicz appreciator.

Katılım Kasım 2011
2.5K Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
Brendan Gutenschwager
Brendan Gutenschwager@BGOnTheScene·
“No Kings” protesters assembled to form a message reading “TRUMP MUST GO NOW!” at Ocean Beach in San Francisco, California today
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Sam Stein
Sam Stein@samstein·
The New York Times takes an architectural look at the coming White House ballroom and finds there is a lot of ornamental stairs to no where and faux windows with bathroom stalls behind them
Sam Stein tweet media
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Equivocator
Equivocator@IFLH23·
@Jimborgen @kangminlee The americans seethe with racial envy toward White Europeans, whereas they can simp for the Japanese because there is no such envy.
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Mike Levin
Mike Levin@MikeLevin·
Every American who pulls a dollar from their wallet will soon see Donald Trump’s name on it. He’s the first sitting president in history to put his signature on U.S. currency. A desperate, insecure man branding everything in sight because he knows history won’t remember him kindly on its own. It’s pathetic. What history will remember is what he destroyed to feel significant and the people who let him. nytimes.com/2026/03/26/us/…
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Robert Wright
Robert Wright@robertwrighter·
There's a reason Iran hawks call Iranian leaders "the mullahs"—-to frame them as zealots who must be crushed rather than rational actors who can be dealt with. This is part of a larger problem, I argue in @NonzeroNews: nonzero.org/p/why-we-keep-…
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schnee jacques
schnee jacques@JacquesSchnee·
@ChristianHeiens Trump is already sending thousands of white americans to die for israel so nothing realy changes
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Christopher Walker
Christopher Walker@chriswalker_12·
@LloydLegalist I think I still have a scar and can pinpoint where it happened on google maps [mumblemumble] years later.
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Lloyd Legalist
Lloyd Legalist@LloydLegalist·
Anybody else remember the shin grater?
Lloyd Legalist tweet media
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Christopher Walker
Christopher Walker@chriswalker_12·
@josephlegner @PressSec @WhiteHouse This may be come as a shock, but presidents often hold large events called state dinners for foreign dignitaries. Being able to do so inside a permanent facility built explicitly for that purpose, instead of in a tent on the South Lawn, is kinda nice.
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Joe Legner
Joe Legner@josephlegner·
@PressSec @WhiteHouse How can you bring yourself to type that a ballroom is “needed” at the president’s residence? Look in the mirror, Ms. Leavitt.
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Karoline Leavitt
Karoline Leavitt@PressSec·
The New York Times had three random people who have “studied fine arts,” “long written about urban planning,” and never built anything to write an article criticizing the new White House ballroom. President Trump and his lead architect have built world-class buildings around the world, and they are ensuring the People’s House finally has a beautiful ballroom that’s been needed for decades — at no expense to the taxpayer.
Karoline Leavitt tweet media
Sam Stein@samstein

The New York Times takes an architectural look at the coming White House ballroom and finds there is a lot of ornamental stairs to no where and faux windows with bathroom stalls behind them

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TheChefTrevor
TheChefTrevor@TheChefTrevor·
@hasek_dominik This is impressive! Knowing Piggy is losing his shit right now in a room full of punching bag puppets makes it even sweeter!
TheChefTrevor tweet media
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Dominik Hasek
Dominik Hasek@hasek_dominik·
Congratulations to all Americans who dared to take to the streets today and publicly expressed their stance and disagreement with the actions and policies of their president. #WeSayNoKings 👍👍👍
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Christopher Walker
Christopher Walker@chriswalker_12·
@hasek_dominik There is nothing even remotely daring about protesting against bugaboos that exist only in your head.
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Christopher Walker
Christopher Walker@chriswalker_12·
@rc51_nono_sp2 Can't go wrong with Johnny Cash: Boy Named Sue Ghost Riders in the Sky I've Been Everywhere Amazing Grace
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のの
のの@rc51_nono_sp2·
アメリカの友人達、オススメのカントリーソングがあったら教えてや! Luke CombsとかLuke Bryan、Chris Stapletonをよく聴いとるで 今から寝るから暇な時で大丈夫やで
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LOLAllOut
LOLAllOut@LolOut160461·
@TheCinesthetic Massive respect to Andrew Garfield for saying this out loud. It is so rare to see big stars actually taking a stand against someone as powerful as her. He is a real one for putting his values over just some random movie nostalgia
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cinesthetic.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic·
Andrew Garfield says he recently watched the Harry Potter films for the first time, but added: “we shouldn’t be putting money in the pocket of inhumane legislation right now through she that shall remain nameless.”
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Julian Bond
Julian Bond@julianbond12·
@ProudofusUK Should have jailed them instead, if they wouldn't let people just leave
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Proudofus.uk
Proudofus.uk@ProudofusUK·
Slavery existed for over 5,000 years. Every major civilisation accepted it. For most of history, nobody seriously tried to stop it at scale. Then Britain did something different. It didn’t just pass a law. 👇 In 1807, Britain abolished the slave trade. Then it enforced it. For 60 years, the Royal Navy hunted slave ships. 1,600 ships captured. Around 150,000 people freed. And it cost lives. Around 2,000 British sailors died doing it. Then in 1833: Britain abolished slavery across its empire. 800,000 people set free. It paid £20 million to do it. Around 40 percent of government spending. This wasn’t quick. This wasn’t easy. And it didn’t start with politicians. It started with ordinary people. Women boycotted sugar. Hundreds of thousands of them. Thomas Clarkson rode 35,000 miles to gather evidence. A movement that took decades. This is part of British history. Not perfect. But not what most people are told either. Almost no one explains it like this. Proud Of Us is funded entirely by our community. No sponsors. No advertisers. If you believe this history deserves to be told properly:👇 Be part of us. 👉 proudofus.co.uk/support 🙏 Be proud of us 🇬🇧
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Christopher Walker
Christopher Walker@chriswalker_12·
@DegenRolf "It is possible that resident women perceive the religious practices of newly arrived refugees as different from their own," Perceive.. lol..
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Rolf Degen
Rolf Degen@DegenRolf·
Male refugees from Afghanistan and Syria in Germany show a keen interest in forming relationships with local women, but the local women show little interest in forming relationships with them. Germany, in particular, received over 1,4 million refugees between 2014 and 2016, predominantly from Muslim-majority countries such as Syria and Afghanistan. The majority of these arrivals consisted of young, single men within prime marriageable age brackets. This study examines partnership preferences of male refugees from Afghanistan and Syria who arrived in Germany between 2014 and 2016 and female residents of similar age. Overall, our results indicate a high level of openness among male refugees towards partnering with female members of the resident population, but a comparatively low level of openness among the latter towards partnering with recently arrived male refugees. This implies a substantial incongruence in partnership preferences among the two groups. Regarding the educational level of a potential partner, we found that all respondents prefer highly educated partners over those with lower levels of education. This suggests that, for refugees, securing a highly educated partner might serve as a means of upward social mobility and integration into higher-status networks in the host society. Furthermore, it is possible that highly educated women, due to their greater exposure to diverse social environments and potentially less discriminatory attitudes, are perceived as more open to intergroup partnerships, making them a more attractive choice for refugees seeking acceptance and social integration. On the other hand, the reluctance of resident women to accept partnerships with refugees is largely explained by their rejection of the ‘imported’ religious Islam. It is possible that resident women perceive the religious practices of newly arrived refugees as different from their own, reinforcing a social distance that limits intergroup partnerships. Moreover, this reluctance might not only reflect religious differences but also concerns about gender norms or perceived lifestyle incompatibilities.
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