The Evening Redness in the West

70K posts

The Evening Redness in the West banner
The Evening Redness in the West

The Evening Redness in the West

@fen1der

Ruralist. Defender of downtrodden insurance companies and corporations of the world - Klose is the King of BBQ -

Coolsville Katılım Şubat 2011
6K Takip Edilen1.4K Takipçiler
The Hormuz Letter
The Hormuz Letter@HormuzLetter·
BREAKING: Iran says contrary to what the US claims, the now fully leaked "Memorandum of Understanding" contains no Iranian commitments to hand over nuclear stockpiles, remove equipment, shut down nuclear facilities, or even commit to not build a nuclear bomb. Instead, all nuclear issues are deferred to a 60 day period of negotiations after signing, per Fars News. For this period to start, the US would need to accept no nuclear commitments from Iran, agree to release $100 billion of Iranian frozen assets, lift the naval blockade, lift all oil and petrochemical sanctions during the negotiation period, pay $270 billion in war reparations, and accept Hormuz under "full permanent sovereign Iranian management and authority" at pre-war traffic levels with no US presence.
English
833
3.2K
10.5K
953K
Hermann O.
Hermann O.@Clarsonimus·
The Leftist Brain despises free market capitalism because it sees competition as a destructive force. It can’t see that this “creative destruction” is a blessing, not a curse. It can’t take that leap of faith and accept that its purpose is to create, not to destroy.
English
5
2
6
118
C3
C3@C_3C_3·
Every single welfare recipient in America should have to reapply. Everything verified and checked. Then routine follow up verifications. Welfare fraud is staggering and American taxpayers are abused. Our National Debt is mostly from fraud. We’re being robbed. Facts.
English
414
4.1K
14.9K
71.8K
Andrew Long, MD, ESQ
Andrew Long, MD, ESQ@AverageSizeAndy·
Got this sweet Shih-Tzu tumbler in the mail. At least I.m not 6’ tall.
Andrew Long, MD, ESQ tweet media
GIF
English
12
0
52
906
The Evening Redness in the West retweetledi
DataRepublican (small r)
DataRepublican (small r)@DataRepublican·
🧵 THREAD: The history of Medea Benjamin, co-founder of CODE PINK Jodie Evans gets most of the attention as the co-founder of CODEPINK and Neville Singham's wife. But Medea Benjamin's history may be more interesting. While creating the linked thread below, I dived into Medea Bejamin briefly - who had an interesting history of speaking to Chinese media. She co-founded Global Exchange with her husband, Kevin Danaher, which goes on a number of "Reality Trips" to various closed countries - Cuba, Venezuela, among others. If you've followed me long enough ... you know that's a big red flag. State-facilitated exchange trips are one of the most common "soft power" tools that countries have in exporting their ideology to others.
DataRepublican (small r) tweet mediaDataRepublican (small r) tweet media
DataRepublican (small r)@DataRepublican

I received the following email from CODEPINK. "We are writing to formally address and correct the false and defamatory statements made in your recent social media posts regarding CODEPINK. These claims—which falsely allege that our organization is funded by China, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), or any foreign government or entity—are entirely baseless and constitute libel." So, I will share the facts without spin: Per Wikipedia, CODEPINK is 25% funded by Neville Singham, who is living in Shanghai and got rich off spreading CCP propaganda, and is under investigation by Congress for FARA violations. CODEPINK is running a campaign called "China is Not Our Enemy," which promotes pro-China messaging, including denial of the Uyghur genocide, an atrocity affirmed by the U.S. Department of State. The founder of CODEPINK, Jodie Evans, is married to the aforementioned Neville Singham. In fact, the Uyghur denialism goes so far that Jodie Evans said in a YouTube interview, that Uyghurs are terrorists trained in Yemen and Syria who bomb shopping centers.

English
386
9K
20.7K
1M
The Evening Redness in the West retweetledi
Phil Magness
Phil Magness@PhilWMagness·
Here you go, Nick. A list of 100 currently living Marxist professors: David Abraham — University of Miami (Law, retired) Ervand Abrahamian — CUNY Baruch College (History, emeritus) Jaafar Aksikas — Columbia College Chicago (Cultural Studies) Jack Amariglio — Merrimack College (Economics, emeritus) Bill Ayers — University of Illinois Chicago (Education, emeritus) Asatar Bair — Riverside City College (Economics) Rick Baldoz — Oberlin College (Sociology) Gopal Balakrishnan — UC Santa Cruz (History) Tithi Bhattacharya — Purdue University (History) Bruno Bosteels — Columbia University (Latin American Studies) Samuel Bowles — Santa Fe Institute (Economics) Neil Brenner — Harvard University (Urban Theory) Robert Brenner — UCLA (History) Wendy Brown — Columbia University (Political Science) Ben Burgis — Morehouse College (Philosophy/Logic) Michael Burawoy — UC Berkeley (Sociology, emeritus) Paul Burkett — Indiana State University (Economics) Charisse Burden-Stelly — University of Wisconsin Madison (African American Studies) Hazel Carby — Yale University (African American Studies, emeritus) Vivek Chibber — NYU (Sociology) Ronald H. Chilcote — UC Riverside (Political Science, emeritus) Harry Cleaver — UT Austin (Economics, emeritus) George Ciccariello-Maher — formerly Drexel University (Politics) Joshua Clover — UC Davis (English) Angela Davis — UC Santa Cruz (History of Consciousness, emerita) Greg Dawes — NC State University (Latin American Studies) Jodi Dean — Hobart and William Smith Colleges (Political Science) Cedric de Leon — UMass Amherst (Sociology) Lisa Duggan — NYU (American Studies) Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz — CSU East Bay (History, emerita) Silvia Federici — Hofstra University (Political Philosophy, emerita) Samuel Farber — CUNY Brooklyn College (Political Science, emeritus) Johanna Fernández — CUNY Baruch College (History) Duncan K. Foley — New School for Social Research (Economics, emeritus) Barbara Foley — Rutgers University (English, emerita) John Bellamy Foster — University of Oregon (Sociology) Harriet Fraad — New School (Psychology) H. Bruce Franklin — Rutgers University (English, emeritus) Nancy Fraser — New School for Social Research (Philosophy) Grover Furr — Montclair State University (English) Michael Goldfield — Wayne State University (Political Science) Alyosha Goldstein — University of New Mexico (American Studies) Michael Hardt — Duke University (Literature) David Harvey — CUNY Graduate Center (Anthropology, emeritus) Gerald Horne — University of Houston (History) Michael Hudson — University of Missouri Kansas City (Economics, emeritus) Aaron Jaffe — SUNY Old Westbury (Philosophy) Adrian Johnston — University of New Mexico (Philosophy) Sharryn Kasmir — Hofstra University (Anthropology) Robin D.G. Kelley — UCLA (History) Andrew Kliman — Pace University (Economics) Karl Klare — Northeastern University School of Law (Labor & Employment Law) David Laibman — CUNY Brooklyn College (Economics, emeritus) Paul Le Blanc — La Roche University (History) Li Minqi — University of Utah (Economics) Peter Linebaugh — University of Toledo (History, emeritus) George Lipsitz — UC Santa Barbara (Black Studies) Stephanie Luce — CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies (Labor Studies) Biju Mathew — Rider University (Business) Paul Mattick Jr. — Adelphi University (Philosophy) Robert McChesney — University of Illinois (Communications, emeritus) Randall H. McGuire — SUNY Binghamton (Anthropology) Peter McLaren — Chapman University (Education, emeritus) David McNally — University of Houston (Political Science) Jodi Melamed — Marquette University (English) Salar Mohandesi — University of Pennsylvania (History) Jason W. Moore — Binghamton University (Sociology) Fred Moseley — Mount Holyoke College (Economics) Kirstin Munro — New School for Social Research (Economics) Immanuel Ness — CUNY Brooklyn College (Political Science) Bertell Ollman — NYU (Politics) Christian Parenti — CUNY (Journalism/Economics) Michael Perelman — California State University Chico (Economics, emeritus) Michael J. Piore — MIT (Economics, emeritus) Minnie Bruce Pratt — Syracuse University (Writing, emerita) Barbara Ransby — University of Illinois Chicago (History) Adolph L. Reed Jr. — University of Pennsylvania (Political Science, emeritus) Touré Reed — Illinois State University (History) Gabriel Rockhill — Villanova University (Philosophy) David Roediger — University of Kansas (American Studies) John Roemer — Yale University (Economics) William I. Robinson — UC Santa Barbara (Sociology) Mike Rotkin — UC Santa Cruz (Lecturer) E. San Juan Jr. — University of Connecticut (English, emeritus) Anwar Shaikh — New School for Social Research (Economics) Tommie Shelby — Harvard University (Philosophy/African American Studies) Nikhil Pal Singh — NYU (Social and Cultural Analysis) Robyn Spencer — Lehman College CUNY (History) Neferti Tadiar — Barnard College (Women's Studies) Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor — Princeton University (African American Studies) Alberto Toscano — UC San Diego (Sociology) Mark Tushnet — Harvard Law School (Constitutional Law, emeritus) Alan M. Wald — University of Michigan (English, emeritus) Thomas E. Weisskopf — University of Michigan (Economics, emeritus) Richard Wolff — New School for Social Research (Economics, emeritus) John Womack — Harvard University (History, emeritus) Robert Wrenn — University of Maine (Economics, emeritus) Michael D. Yates — formerly University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown (Economics) Gale A. Yee — Episcopal Divinity School (Biblical Studies) Michael Zweig — SUNY Stony Brook (Economics, emeritus)
Nick Burns@NickBurns

@CliffordAsness @PhilWMagness If that’s anywhere near true then it would be easy to name hundreds of actual, bona fide Marxist professors. But somehow no one can?

English
94
95
755
396.6K
Shadow🩶 Vibes🇺🇲
Shadow🩶 Vibes🇺🇲@Shadow007US·
I think at this point it’s safe to say, Ex President Biden and the Ex President Obama were far better than DJ Trump in every regard. Do you miss J Biden and B Obama? YES or NO? ✋
Shadow🩶 Vibes🇺🇲 tweet media
English
5.2K
173
537
61K
The Evening Redness in the West
@braxton_mccoy @RodeoProfessor Yeah. I think I have some years on you all … but back in the 1970s Butch Otter talked the “Sagebrush Rebellion”— I was all for it … before I was adamantly against …. And now it seems the attempts are much more devious and misleading.
English
0
0
2
25
Braxton McCoy
Braxton McCoy@braxton_mccoy·
@RodeoProfessor I am sorry to keep doing this but how many hours we have spent over the years trying to explain this to the transfer people. It's like Sisyphus
English
8
3
198
3.9K
RodeoProfessor
RodeoProfessor@RodeoProfessor·
The Idaho constitution requires the state to mange state public land for “long term financial return.” What that means is a 5th generation Teton ranching family will get the boot from their lease when well connected billionaires ask the Idaho Land Board to sell, like what happened with this Tetons Driggs 160 case. The Mike Lee thing failed, so the next move in the playbook is transferring public land to the states who will then say “we can make more money off this land so we are selling it off.” They’re saying he won’t build a subdivision here, but there’s nothing stopping him as it’s private land now. The billionaire who bought the parcel is a New York movie producer and tech investor with a lot of financial interests in AI and data centers. He lives full time in Pittsburgh. When we carve up the American West like this, and make something that once was public private, the possibility for development of open land increases. What made conservation of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem possible as one of the only fully intact ecosystems left in America was the scale and connectivity of public land for seasonal migrations of elk, mule deer, pronghorn, and bison. Herds follow green waves of grass with the season. Suburban development has stopped these migrations almost everywhere else. Public land prevents fragmentation into housing developments that would end these migrations too. Ranchers are a big part of this as ranch lands are often some of the most productive low elevation habitat for herds or they fall along migration corridors. Ranches maintain these large open spaces that allow migration to continue. If the buyer keeps the land undeveloped, that would be great, but now that it’s private and the 5th gen family who had a grazing lease there into the 2030s is gone, there’s no guarantee. Another part of America sold off to the highest bidder because the line must go up.
RodeoProfessor tweet media
The Evening Redness in the West@fen1der

No. idahocapitalsun.com/2026/05/22/sta…

English
82
656
2.8K
305.9K
The Evening Redness in the West retweetledi
KC NoDak Brim 🇺🇸
Just a reminder: North Dakota has already sold off more than 80% of its State Trust Lands. FYI - She already knows that. The biggest concern many miss with this bill (and others like it) is the long-term impact and the slow creep toward worse policy. This bill will further reduce public land access, leading to fewer hunting opportunities and in result…fewer hunters overall. At first glance, that might seem fine or actually even as a good thing, right?. Well no, IMO it’s another step toward turning hunting into a pure “pay-to-play” sport. If you own private land, get gratis tags, or can afford guided hunts and expensive leases, this might even feel like another net positive, because it is for you, at least in the short term. I get it. But over the mid to long-term, as the hunting population and its supporters continue to shrink (potentially by two-thirds or more), it becomes much harder to fight back against anti-hunting legislation…the strong ones we’re already seeing in Oregon and other blue states. Private land, gratis tags, or money for outfitters won’t matter if hunting is banned outright. Small steps like this add up. They’re quietly paving the way for a future where anti-hunting policies enjoy majority support, and our kids or grandkids lose the chance to hunt all together no matter their situation. It all might sound extreme or far fetched but look at how much our culture has shifted in just the last 15–20 years. This is a real issue outdoorsmen could be facing within the next decade IMO.
Congresswoman Julie Fedorchak@RepFedorchak

H.R. 2252, the North Dakota Trust Lands Completion Act, just passed the House of Representatives unanimously! 🧵 Here’s what it means for North Dakotans:

English
15
49
207
28.1K
The Evening Redness in the West retweetledi
RodeoProfessor
RodeoProfessor@RodeoProfessor·
Same song in North Dakota:
KC NoDak Brim 🇺🇸@brim006

Just a reminder: North Dakota has already sold off more than 80% of its State Trust Lands. FYI - She already knows that. The biggest concern many miss with this bill (and others like it) is the long-term impact and the slow creep toward worse policy. This bill will further reduce public land access, leading to fewer hunting opportunities and in result…fewer hunters overall. At first glance, that might seem fine or actually even as a good thing, right?. Well no, IMO it’s another step toward turning hunting into a pure “pay-to-play” sport. If you own private land, get gratis tags, or can afford guided hunts and expensive leases, this might even feel like another net positive, because it is for you, at least in the short term. I get it. But over the mid to long-term, as the hunting population and its supporters continue to shrink (potentially by two-thirds or more), it becomes much harder to fight back against anti-hunting legislation…the strong ones we’re already seeing in Oregon and other blue states. Private land, gratis tags, or money for outfitters won’t matter if hunting is banned outright. Small steps like this add up. They’re quietly paving the way for a future where anti-hunting policies enjoy majority support, and our kids or grandkids lose the chance to hunt all together no matter their situation. It all might sound extreme or far fetched but look at how much our culture has shifted in just the last 15–20 years. This is a real issue outdoorsmen could be facing within the next decade IMO.

Filipino
1
29
248
13.9K
The Evening Redness in the West
@RodeoProfessor I would be the last to say I am an expert on Montana — which seems to be the east coasts favorite western state — but it has significantly less public land than Idaho and seems more like a millionaire/billionaire’s playground
English
0
0
0
21
The Evening Redness in the West
@RodeoProfessor Yup. People who rail against the federal government being involved in the management of land within individual states do not appear to have thought this true. We have recent examples here in Idaho and the Teton land deal is the most recent.
English
0
0
0
9
UnHerd
UnHerd@unherd·
‘It appears impossible to the junior curators of a provincial museum that anyone might enjoy and even admire a novel without considering whether they would agree with its author on all subjects.’ Read @PhilipHensher on the attempt to cancel Charles Dickens 👇 buff.ly/0eJEoLl
English
2
3
13
2K
The Evening Redness in the West retweetledi
The Evening Redness in the West retweetledi
Gordon G. Chang
Gordon G. Chang@GordonGChang·
Mr. President, finish the job, end the regime, hit Iran hard.
English
1.8K
2.8K
16.3K
273.9K
NiedermeyersDeadHorse aka NDH
Much of this generation takes pride in their ignorance. They have no shame about their lack of competence. They're proud of both the ignorance and the incompetence. Toss in a complete lack of perspective, and a lust for victimhood, and they're really a screwed generation, but not for the reasons they claim.
Crispr (Third-Worldist) 🌍📉@CollapseAnime

boomers who spent the 80s and 90s drunk driving from work to cheap restaurants to eat 5$ steak dinners on their way to drunk driving home to their cheap houses bought on one income want me to eat cut up hot dogs on crackers

English
9
11
69
1.8K
Novara Media
Novara Media@novaramedia·
Frank Sinatra smuggled an estimated $1m in cash to pay for weapons for a Jewish paramilitary group in Palestine at the height of a Zionist ethnic cleansing campaign, his daughter Nancy has claimed. The My Way singer met Teddy Kollek, the Washington representative of the Haganah militia, at the infamous Copacabana nightclub in New York City in March 1948. Since the pair knew that Kollek was under FBI surveillance, Sinatra was able to use him as a decoy to distract the authorities’ attention, while he went and delivered payment to the captain of a boat packed with munitions set for Palestine, Nancy Sinatra revealed on X last week. The Haganah were the primary underground Zionist militia in British Mandatory Palestine and one of the forerunners of the modern day Israeli Defense Forces (IDF). The group was linked to multiple acts of terrorism, including the 1940 sinking of the SS Patrial, a boat in the port of Haifa containing 1,800 Jewish refugees whom the British authorities were deporting to Mauritius. The Haganah intended to immobilise the boat to stop the deportations, but instead killed 267 people and injured a further 172 after their bomb ripped the steel frame off one side of the ship. The group also served as the primary military force behind the displacement of Palestinians, developing Plan Dalet to take control of Mandatory Palestine and playing a significant role in its execution. The campaign included the siege of Palestinian Arab villages, the bombing of neighbourhoods, forced expulsions, and setting fields and houses on fire. The “Nakba” - meaning “catastrophe” in Arabic - saw more than 700,000 Palestinians displaced from their homes and an estimated 15,000 killed. Nancy shared the post about her father’s smuggling on 15 May, a date known as Nakba Day in reference to the mass displacement. She has previously shared the story on X, describing it in 2023 as her father’s “most gallant and heroic moment”. Frank Sinatra was known throughout his career as a passionate supporter of Israel and the Zionist cause. He visited Israel for the first time in 1962, performing seven concerts, including one for Israeli soldiers.
Novara Media tweet media
English
147
146
309
157.5K
LBS
LBS@NY_LBSS·
@wutnow_wut @fen1der Shocked you communists want the government to own everything.
English
2
0
0
149