iwt2nd 💪🏿🎓🔑🪜 1911

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iwt2nd 💪🏿🎓🔑🪜 1911

iwt2nd 💪🏿🎓🔑🪜 1911

@iwt2nd

Because you're of questionable character I'm obligated to ask.

Plant Earth Katılım Haziran 2010
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iwt2nd 💪🏿🎓🔑🪜 1911 retweetledi
Appodlachia
Appodlachia@appodlachia·
Rep. Justin Pearson is assaulted by a law enforcement officer in the Tennessee state capitol, and rightfully gives him an earful
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iwt2nd 💪🏿🎓🔑🪜 1911 retweetledi
Bishop Talbert Swan
Bishop Talbert Swan@TalbertSwan·
Flags at half mast speak loudly about who a nation chooses to honor. When Charlie Kirk, a racist agitator who trafficked in division and grievance, died, Trump moved swiftly to lower the American flag, a symbolic gesture of national mourning. But when Reverend Jesse Jackson, a global civil rights icon, freedom fighter, and lifelong advocate for justice, dignity, and unity passed away, there was no such urgency. No national gesture. No unifying call to honor a man whose life’s work helped expand democracy and human rights for millions. Instead, the president took to social media to center himself rather than the legacy of a giant who marched with Dr. King, negotiated for the oppressed, and spent decades bringing people together across race, class, and nation. Let that contrast sink in. A figure known for stoking division is memorialized with the full weight of presidential symbolism, while a civil rights statesman whose mission was reconciliation, equality, and global justice is met with indifference. That is not just an oversight. That is a statement of values. History will remember who was honored, how they were honored, and who was quietly minimized. And it raises a sobering question: What does it say about the soul of a nation when a divider is mourned with national symbols, but a unifier is not? Talbert Swan
Bishop Talbert Swan tweet media
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iwt2nd 💪🏿🎓🔑🪜 1911 retweetledi
Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🇺🇸 Texas Democrat Rep. Gene Wu just said the quiet part out loud: "The day the Latino, African-American, and Asian realize they share the same oppressor is the day we start winning. We are the majority now."
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