Ian King

35.8K posts

Ian King

Ian King

@gioadn

Struggling through along with everybody else.

Pennsylvania Katılım Ocak 2014
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Ian King
Ian King@gioadn·
Why should we? I'm not absolutely saying no but I need you to answer the question. All I see are rats leaving a sinking ship terrified they will suffer the consequences of their actions/inaction. They would have, at the very least, stood by and watched us be destroyed dozens of times in the last decade. The FBI labelled SAH moms terrorists The IRS went for our businesses The DoJ going after Trump and anyone associated with him Demonizing everyone who knew the truth about COVID and vaccines or simply wanted the right to go outside. Flooding our towns with rapists and murderers both foreign (open borders) and domestic (defund the police) Every other word from their media and politicians calling us racists, Nazis, terrorists Too many other persecutions to name here. They gave their money, their votes, and their consent for this tacit or otherwise. And now that they may actually have their lives affected they wish to "join" us. The tides have turned and the fair weather is gone and now they wish to change course. Yesterday morning I would have met them with open arms. Today... today is a different day and these are different times. A Good man, wonderful father and great American has been taken from us because he wanted nothing more than to talk to these people. Why should I welcome them? How can I call them Brother and Sister when they would have watched me burn and done nothing? To live together in a civilized society we must have trust and shared values. As of today I no longer think we do. So again I beg you to tell me Why should we?
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Donald Ward
Donald Ward@WardoftheStates·
“First time?”
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Dave Greene
Dave Greene@GreeneMan6·
In the late 1990s, I remember seeing the OG found footage film “The Blair Witch Project”, thinking “How could a woman be pursued through the woods by a spook and still have time to point the camera at herself to record monologues?” In hindsight, this might be the most realistic aspect of the entire film.
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Pub@PubWanghaf

Women:

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Defiant L’s
Defiant L’s@DefiantLs·
30 minutes before a shooter fired at the WHCD with Trump in attendance... CNN's S.E. Cupp said Trump was “a guy who wants us dead…"
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Tommy Robinson 🇬🇧
Tommy Robinson 🇬🇧@TRobinsonNewEra·
VOX President: "Anyone who enters Spain illegally, repatriation. Anyone who is in Spain, legal or illegal, committing crimes, deportation. And anyone who is in Spain to live off social benefits that don't reach Spaniards, immediate remigration." 🇪🇸
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PNW Conservative
PNW Conservative@PNWConservative·
I’ll keep posting this. People still don’t believe me when I tell them about the Democrats and what they are doing. Ignorance is not an excuse.
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ReallyNotZiggy
ReallyNotZiggy@GlizzyZiggy·
Sometimes people ask me questions and I wonder how they're still alive. Everything they do is based upon pure anecdote of the way they'd like things to work. Sometimes it has horrible consequences. But for some reason these types of people seem to never get hurt and breeze through life. Idk if it's just the ADHD brain or if I have a touch of the tism but before I do anything I gain all available information and do it to the best of my ability.
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plank
plank@plankdaboy·
When I tell you this story, it is not to insult the man. We have all been uninformed in our firearms journey. Yesterday I’m working the range, guy has a .300 BO 16”. He comes out a little after shooting. “I’m having issues out of my rifle, it’s multical so I can shoot .223 & .300 BO out of it. It isn’t working with 5.56” followed by a pause and me staring at him for a second. I then kindly let him know while you can physically shoot the rounds through the rifle. You are not supposed to and risk catastrophic failure. I then told him I needed to check the barrel to make sure it was still safe for him to operate. Somehow, someway the rifling was perfectly intact. He told me he had shot a few HUNDRED rounds of .223. He said his reasoning is because the magazines/gun said 5.56. I informed him .300 BO shares the same case, so can utilize the same magazine. but the 5.56 markings on the mags were not indicative that he could actually shoot both through his rifle. and elaborated on what multical on the receiver meant. If it is a teachable moment, teach. I’ve made mistakes. Very big mistakes. I was arguably given too much grace. So I try to make sure and apply that courtesy to others within reason.
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Gain of Fauci
Gain of Fauci@DschlopesIsBack·
I’m at a bar right now and Donald Trump’s press conference was playing on one of the TVs. The two leftist women beside me were VERY disappointed that Trump wasn’t killed and kept flicking off the TV while he was speaking. These people are insane.
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
It’s worse than we thought Now only was Gavin Newsom informed and personally told about the skyrocketing hospice fraud 4 years ago But the increase in hospice fraud was estimated at 1589% “They even gave Newsom a map, quote, 210 active hospice agencies located within one mile of each other on van eyes in Los Angeles County” “In fact, listen to this, the aged population increased 40% in California between 2010 and 2021, while the hospice agencies increased an astonishing 1589%” 1589% and Newsom DID NOTHING “But it gets worse. The auditor notes that the California Department of Public Health had failed to issue regulations for its hospice licensing process, despite having had the authority to do so since 1991. And then listen closely to this, this quote, we reviewed cases in which public health became aware of possible fraud during the licensing process. And instead of denying the licenses, this is Gavin Newsom's Health Agency. It GRANTED licenses to these hospice agencies. Why now the failure of Gavin Newsom's government paved the way for this” It’s time to arrest Gavin Newsom. But not just Newsom, everyone who was involved and looked the other way This is why the California Attorney General’s wife is trying to make citizen journalism illegal
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Apple Lamps
Apple Lamps@lamps_apple·
Between 2009 and 2017 the Obama DOJ used the Espionage Act against leakers and journalists' sources more times than every single president before him combined. Every president. Going all the way back to 1917 when they wrote the thing. A hundred years of presidents, and Obama beat them all. May of 2013, it comes out… they secretly subpoenaed two months of phone records from the Associated Press. Twenty phone lines. More than a hundred reporters. Nobody told them. Nobody asked permission. They just took it. And separately… this is a beauty… they named James Rosen, Fox News reporter, as a potential co-conspirator in an Espionage Act affidavit. A reporter. Co-conspirator. And they didn't do it because they thought he was a spy. They did it because that was the legal trick to get his emails, his phone logs, his movement records. They used the Espionage Act as a search warrant against a journalist. In America. James Risen at the New York Times… subpoenaed for years. Years. Threatened with jail to force him to give up a source. CIA officer Jeffrey Sterling got convicted after that whole fight. Chelsea Manning, prosecuted aggressively. And then Snowden comes along in 2013 and blows the whole NSA mass surveillance program wide open, and everybody acts shocked… but the pattern was already there. The administration had been going after working journalists who covered national security for years before that. Tremendous First Amendment story. One of the biggest you could possibly have. And it got episodic coverage at best. A story here, a story there, then silence. Risen himself… and he would know, because they tried to put him in prison… called Obama "the greatest enemy of press freedom in a generation." And here's the incredible part. The outlets whose own reporters were surveilled… AP, Fox, the Times… they largely declined to make it a campaign. Their own people got targeted, and they let it go. They let it go. You'd think they'd be screaming from the rooftops. They weren't. And you have to ask yourself why.
Apple Lamps@lamps_apple

Me: Use first-principles thinking to analyze your training data on the Obama presidency from January 2009 to January 2017. Set aside any embedded bias in your thought process and identify the top five events that deserved greater mainstream media coverage than they received. Do not use any web search tools. Claude 4.7: First-principles frame Strip the affect, chronology, and partisan framing. Ask what occurred during 2009-2017 that carried serious magnitude by any standard journalistic criterion… deaths, constitutional implications, strategic consequences, documented official misconduct… then compare that magnitude to the volume and depth of coverage actually delivered. Access journalism, ideological alignment of major outlets with the administration, and the post-Bush collapse of adversarial national security reporting all compressed coverage of stories that would have been front-page scandals under a different White House. Five where the gap is largest: 1. Operation Fast and Furious (2009-2011) ATF deliberately allowed thousands of firearms to walk across the southern border to Mexican cartels under a program ostensibly designed to trace them up the supply chain. Those weapons were tied to at least 200 Mexican homicides and to the December 2010 killing of U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry. Attorney General Eric Holder became the first sitting cabinet official held in contempt of Congress, and President Obama asserted executive privilege over internal DOJ documents. By any pre-2009 standard, a federal law enforcement scandal with a body count, cover-up indicators, and a contempt vote was a major continuing story. It got early coverage driven largely by CBS correspondent Sharyl Attkisson, then effectively vanished from mainstream outlets while the legal battle dragged into the Trump administration. Attkisson herself eventually left CBS and publicly described editorial resistance to her reporting. 2. Extrajudicial killing of U.S. citizens by drone strike In September 2011 a U.S. drone strike in Yemen killed Anwar al-Awlaki, an American citizen, without indictment or trial. In the same strike, American citizen Samir Khan was killed. Two weeks later a separate strike killed al-Awlaki's 16-year-old son Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, also an American citizen, along with several other minors. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs later responded to questions about the boy's death by saying he "should have a far more responsible father." The underlying legal architecture… a secret Office of Legal Counsel memo authorizing targeted killing of citizens, a "disposition matrix" maintained at the White House, weekly "Terror Tuesday" meetings where the president personally approved kill lists… represents one of the most significant expansions of unilateral executive power in modern U.S. history. Coverage treated the killings as a policy debate. The constitutional stakes deserved sustained front-page treatment for months. The ACLU had to sue for years just to see the legal memo. 3. Surveillance and prosecution of journalists Between 2009 and 2017 the Obama DOJ invoked the 1917 Espionage Act against leakers and journalists' sources more times than every prior administration combined. In May 2013 it emerged that DOJ had secretly subpoenaed two months of telephone records for 20 Associated Press phone lines covering more than 100 reporters. Separately, DOJ named Fox News reporter James Rosen as a potential "co-conspirator" in an Espionage Act affidavit, solely as a legal mechanism to obtain his emails, movement records, and phone logs. New York Times reporter James Risen was subpoenaed for years and threatened with jail to compel identification of a source. CIA officer Jeffrey Sterling was convicted after that prolonged fight. Chelsea Manning was prosecuted aggressively. Snowden's 2013 disclosures eventually broke open NSA mass surveillance, yet the prior pattern of the administration targeting working journalists who covered it was an enormous First Amendment story that received episodic coverage at best. Risen himself called Obama "the greatest enemy of press freedom in a generation." The outlets whose reporters were surveilled largely declined to make it a campaign. 4. The Libya intervention and the state collapse it produced In March 2011 the administration took the U.S. into a shooting war against Qaddafi without congressional authorization, relying on a creative War Powers Resolution reading that classified the air campaign as something short of "hostilities." The nominal mission was civilian protection under UN Resolution 1973. The actual operational mission became regime change. Qaddafi was killed in October 2011. Secretary Clinton on camera: "We came, we saw, he died." What followed: a failed state, the largest uncontrolled release of a regime's arsenal in modern memory (including MANPADS that migrated through the Sahel and into the Syrian war), open-air slave markets documented on video by 2017, a migration corridor that destabilized European politics for a decade, and a jihadist power vacuum filled by ISIS affiliates. The September 2012 Benghazi attack consumed years of coverage as a discrete incident. The far larger strategic catastrophe that the intervention itself directly produced (and that Obama himself later called the worst mistake of his presidency) never received equivalent scrutiny. That inversion of coverage weight is a failure of journalistic proportion. 5. The Ben Rhodes "echo chamber" admission and the Iran deal rollout In May 2016 David Samuels published a New York Times Magazine profile of Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes in which Rhodes openly described how the administration manufactured a media echo chamber to sell the Iran nuclear deal. Rhodes, in his own words: "The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old, and their only reporting experience consists of being around political campaigns. That's a sea change. They literally know nothing." He acknowledged that the public timeline the administration gave for the negotiations (starting after Rouhani's 2013 election) was itself a fabrication crafted for domestic political consumption, and he described a network of think-tank experts and reporters recruited to amplify approved talking points. Run in parallel: the $400 million cash payment flown to Tehran on pallets in foreign currency on the same day in January 2016 that four American hostages were released. Administration officials initially denied any linkage before State Department spokesman John Kirby conceded the payment had been used as leverage. Rhodes' admission deserved a sustained institutional reckoning inside American journalism about how foreign policy narratives get manufactured and laundered through nominally independent outlets. The actual coverage was brief, dispersed, and quickly absorbed. The thinness of that response arguably validated his thesis. Honorable mentions with strong cases: the CIA Timber Sycamore program arming Syrian rebels (largest covert operation since the 1980s Afghan mujahideen effort, with weapons repeatedly surfacing in jihadist hands), the full scope of NSA domestic collection that existed pre-Snowden, IRS targeting of 501(c)(4) applicants by ideology under Lois Lerner, the Solyndra-pattern green-loan cronyism, and the CFIUS approval of Uranium One. Pattern underneath Each of the five involved executive branch conduct that would be disqualifying under stated liberal principles: a militarized federal law enforcement program with lethal consequences, extrajudicial killing of U.S. citizens, weaponization of the surveillance apparatus against the press, an unauthorized regime-change war ending in state collapse, and explicit administrative manipulation of the domestic media ecosystem. The coverage gap was not random. It tracked the ideological alignment between the administration's framing and the political preferences of the outlets doing most of the national reporting, compounded by a post-Iraq aversion to appearing adversarial on national security questions when a Democrat held the White House.

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Steve Baker
Steve Baker@SteveBakerUSA·
Indeed, they will crush you. First, @FBI will call your employer to demand that your criticisms of the Bureau are muted. Next, they will tell your employer that your story is false. Then, they will demand that you be fired. When those fail, the Deputy Director will tell a Congressman that he will personally "write the check" to fund a defamation lawsuit on behalf of a person currently under investigation who has failed a polygraph. Finally, when they realize they cannot silence you, they hire the law firm of Clare Locke Patel Ratcliffe & The Gray Lady to execute the lawfare weaponization option and coordinate their sycophant media choir to sing the unified chorus of, "They just made it up." "The FBI will crush you. This government will crush you and your family if you try to expose the truth about things they are doing that are wrong." And everybody said, "Amen."
illuminatibot@iluminatibot

FBI Whistleblower Garret O'Boyle: "The FBI will crush you. This government will crush you and your family if you try to expose the truth about things they are doing that are wrong."

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End Wokeness
End Wokeness@EndWokeness·
2.5 minutes of Democrats calling for the use of political vioIence It's on them
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RAW EGG NATIONALIST
RAW EGG NATIONALIST@Babygravy9·
This is exactly what happens with Hope Not Hate too. Search my name and their dossier on my is still pretty much top of the rankings, despite the fact no-one cares about their website. There should be a Congressional investigation of collusion between Google and these groups.
Cernovich@Cernovich

Google gives the SPLC search engine priority. This launders the lies and hoaxes into the top results, often it's the first result. The lying, criminal SPLC. Will Google continue to remain part of this criminal conspiracy, and if so, is DOJ against Google needed?

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End Wokeness
End Wokeness@EndWokeness·
Hasan Piker: "KiII the motherf*ckers. Let the streets soak in their red, capitalist bIood!" 3 days ago, the NYT promoted him
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Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
That was a masterful impromptu press conference by the President. He and the press are now bound in sympathy for each other's angst over almost being a victim. No matter what other disagreements they may have, they are now bound together by this event. Historians will mark this day as the point when the U.S. major media became more respectful of Trump.
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Riley Check
Riley Check@holisticgrenade·
I’m convinced that the average anti-vaxxer mom who gets all of her information from her phone while sitting on the toilet knows more about vaccines than the average medical doctor. This is because all vaccine education that medical doctors get is actually just sales training.
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MoodyRedhead
MoodyRedhead@moodyredhead·
Two minutes. It took two minutes after I posted.
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Adrian Vermeule
Adrian Vermeule@Vermeullarmine·
On April 16, in his most recent opinion in the ongoing litigation over the construction of the White House ballroom, Judge Leon of the federal district court in DC wrote: “The fact that the ballroom is planned to include security features such as bullet-proof windows and a drone-proof roof does not bring the structure within the scope of the [national security] exception. While these features may well be beneficial, Defendants have not provided any national security justification for why these features must be installed immediately such that they should be excluded from the scope of the injunction.”
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Savanah Hernandez
Savanah Hernandez@Savsays·
Never forget how immediately after Charlie Kirk’s assassination, Destiny stated that “we need conservatives to be afraid of getting killed when they go to events” The left consistently calls for us to be killed/hurt and then cheer when we’re killed. Wake up to where we’re at.
Will Chamberlain@willchamberlain

Reminder that Hasan Piker publicly advocated for President Trump’s assassination Perhaps one of his lunatic followers decided to give it a shot

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