Thomas Coulter Jr

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Thomas Coulter Jr

Thomas Coulter Jr

@divide_bydesign

I'm tired of tired liars and crooks being propped up by the enemies of our country. If you think it is still republican v. democrats, you should pay attention!

Near Pittsburgh, PA Katılım Nisan 2018
1.1K Takip Edilen933 Takipçiler
Mostly Peaceful Memes
Mostly Peaceful Memes@MostlyPeaceful·
3x Trump Voter here. I was shocked by the president’s comments on Robert Mueller’s passing. I will not be voting for him in 2028.
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Clown World ™ 🤡
Clown World ™ 🤡@ClownWorld·
Got roasted online for his beef being dry, so he made another one to redeem himself… but it’s still looking kinda questionable. Is this better or still dry? 👀
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𝒦𝑒𝓁𝓁𝓎࿎☽
This scene is so REVOLTING, it actually made my jaw drop. 😨😢 🚨 WATCH TO THE END 🚨 RIP child star Jonathan Brandis. 🙏 (4/13/1976-11/12/2003) Forever in the 27 club. 💔
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Khan 🧢 🌟
Khan 🧢 🌟@Khanstillday·
What kind of church is this 😭
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Sassafrass84
Sassafrass84@Sassafrass_84·
I agree. Tolerance must go out the door. 💯
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Lewis Miles
Lewis Miles@Maga4liberty·
Be honest No Cheating
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Irish_eyes
Irish_eyes@Stephx2007·
God dammit 🤣
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Dr. Jebra Faushay
Dr. Jebra Faushay@JebraFaushay·
First they came for the skinny jeans And I did not speak out. 👖 Then they came for the no-show socks And I did not speak out. 🧦 Then they came for the clean hair. And I had to speak out.🪮 Trying to make dirty unwashed hair trendy and stylish is where I draw the line.
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Thomas Coulter Jr
Thomas Coulter Jr@divide_bydesign·
@DoctorLemma Jason was hotter than a two-dollar pistol! I love that he said "I was hot as a pistol." 😆
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Dr. Lemma
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma·
19 years ago, a high school basketball coach put his team manager into a game for the final four minutes. The kid had never played a single minute of competitive basketball in his life. He scored 20 points. Jason McElwain was diagnosed with severe autism at age two. He didn’t speak until he was five. He couldn’t chew solid food until he was six. He wore a nappy for most of his early childhood. As a baby, he was rigid, wouldn’t make eye contact, and hid in corners away from other children. He tried out for his school basketball team every year and got cut every time. Too small. Too slight. Barely 5’6 and about 54 kilograms. But he loved the game so much that his mum called the school and asked if there was any way he could be involved. The coach created a team manager role for him. For three years, McElwain showed up to every practice and every game. He wore a shirt and tie on match days. He ran drills, handed out water, kept stats, and cheered every basket like he’d scored it himself. On 15 February 2006, the last home game of his final school year, the coach let him suit up in a proper jersey and sit on the bench. With four minutes left and a comfortable lead, the coach sent him in. His first shot missed. His second missed. Then something shifted. He hit a three-pointer. Then another. Then another. His teammates stopped shooting entirely and just kept passing him the ball. He hit six three-pointers and a two-pointer. 20 points in four minutes. The highest scorer in the game. When the final buzzer went, the entire crowd rushed the court and lifted him onto their shoulders. His mum tapped the coach on the shoulder, in tears. “This is the nicest gift you could have ever given my son.” McElwain won the ESPY Award for Best Moment in Sports that year, beating out some of the biggest names in professional sport. He’s 36 now. He works at a local supermarket, coaches basketball, has run 17 marathons including five Boston Marathons, and travels the country speaking about never giving up. When asked about that night, his coach still gets emotional. “For him to come in and seize the moment like he did was certainly more than I ever expected. I was an emotional wreck.”
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Thomas Coulter Jr
Thomas Coulter Jr@divide_bydesign·
The fact that he dropped 20 points is amazing! Now THAT is an inspirational story.
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma

19 years ago, a high school basketball coach put his team manager into a game for the final four minutes. The kid had never played a single minute of competitive basketball in his life. He scored 20 points. Jason McElwain was diagnosed with severe autism at age two. He didn’t speak until he was five. He couldn’t chew solid food until he was six. He wore a nappy for most of his early childhood. As a baby, he was rigid, wouldn’t make eye contact, and hid in corners away from other children. He tried out for his school basketball team every year and got cut every time. Too small. Too slight. Barely 5’6 and about 54 kilograms. But he loved the game so much that his mum called the school and asked if there was any way he could be involved. The coach created a team manager role for him. For three years, McElwain showed up to every practice and every game. He wore a shirt and tie on match days. He ran drills, handed out water, kept stats, and cheered every basket like he’d scored it himself. On 15 February 2006, the last home game of his final school year, the coach let him suit up in a proper jersey and sit on the bench. With four minutes left and a comfortable lead, the coach sent him in. His first shot missed. His second missed. Then something shifted. He hit a three-pointer. Then another. Then another. His teammates stopped shooting entirely and just kept passing him the ball. He hit six three-pointers and a two-pointer. 20 points in four minutes. The highest scorer in the game. When the final buzzer went, the entire crowd rushed the court and lifted him onto their shoulders. His mum tapped the coach on the shoulder, in tears. “This is the nicest gift you could have ever given my son.” McElwain won the ESPY Award for Best Moment in Sports that year, beating out some of the biggest names in professional sport. He’s 36 now. He works at a local supermarket, coaches basketball, has run 17 marathons including five Boston Marathons, and travels the country speaking about never giving up. When asked about that night, his coach still gets emotional. “For him to come in and seize the moment like he did was certainly more than I ever expected. I was an emotional wreck.”

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×Punkness×
×Punkness×@Punkness1·
I've written about love and pain for as long as I can remember. Even when I was a child in the system, being trafficked, silenced, and surviving things no child should ever have to survive, words became life to me. They were the way I poured out what I couldn't speak, the way I was able to keep breathing beneath the weight of it all. Yet I sit here by the grace of God alone. Were it not for His hand upon my life, I would not have survived the fires I've walked through. And the same grace is what delivered these words from within me onto the page. Cinder & Ivy: Poetry and Prose for the Beautifully Broken is the book that resulted from that walk. It holds the echoes of brokenness and resilience, the ache of loss, and the stubborn promise of love. I wrote it for me, yes, but more than anything, I wrote it for the survivors. For the foster kids. For the people who know what it is to be broken and still reach for something greater. a.co/d/iNaDgts
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Cynthia Holt
Cynthia Holt@Ghostofcynthia·
The most hilarious thing right now is liberals and far-right woke retards screeching that I’m “irrelevant” because I’ve got a rainbow flag in my bio and that I’m a lesbian. Wait… WHAT?? Y’all spent YEARS screaming “love is love” and “queer rights are human rights,” begging us to come out, waving your little pride flags like weapons… and now that a loud, unapologetic lesbian is MAGA as fuck and cheering when Trump drops bombs on terrorists, suddenly the rainbow makes me “irrelevant”? LMFAOOOOOO the mental gymnastics are Olympic level, bitches! Keep coping. I’ll keep being based, gay, and winning. 🇺🇸🌈🔥
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CarolinaConservative3
CarolinaConservative3@1776Carolina3·
@PolitiBunny Better idea....you and I take a road trip to pick it up and document alllll the many mishaps and adventures that occur on the journey until we inevitably end up driving off a cliff, Thelma and Louise style....funsies!!
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The🐰FOO
The🐰FOO@PolitiBunny·
So ... this may be a weird ask, but can any of you suggest a company to transport a new car from Wyoming to Virginia? lol Weird and oddly specific, I know. But we did win a car, and I'm trying to do my homework and figure out the most affordable and safest way to get it here. There are SO MANY carriers, and they are so aggressive in their quotes that I can't even begin to figure out which makes the most sense or will take the best care of my new vroom-vroom. Thought I'd ask you maniacs, which might not be a great idea either, lol. Thoughts?
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