Lee Jones

8.3K posts

Lee Jones

Lee Jones

@lcj2137

Consultant

Global Katılım Haziran 2009
5.3K Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
SweetMarie
SweetMarie@Oceanbreeze473·
Most infamous window in the US. Guess where I was?
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Lee Jones
Lee Jones@lcj2137·
@CelebFest2024 😂 she was a cutie but that’s not her bust. Hingis built more like Kiera Knightley.
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CelebShrine
CelebShrine@CelebFest2024·
Martina Hingis
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O.W. Root
O.W. Root@owroot·
They used to push your groceries out to your car. Then they stopped it and they had the baggers. Then the baggers disappeared and so did the checkout worker. Finally we are left with self check out.
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Ari Meirov
Ari Meirov@MySportsUpdate·
#Patriots HC Mike Vrabel was at Arizona State’s Pro Day today, checking out 6’6”, 321-pound OL Max Iheanachor. No other HC does it like this. (🎥 @Blakes_Take2)
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LooseBets
LooseBets@Loose_bets·
Nashville has never felt like “Tennessee” to me. Growing up in Memphis, west and East Tennessee are “Tennessee”, Nashville has always been its own little detestable bubble.
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Miles Commodore
Miles Commodore@miles_commodore·
They only have about 1,000 restaurants or so in the US so they are still very small compared to the big boys, but in my opinion Culver’s is the best burger chain in America.
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Lee Jones
Lee Jones@lcj2137·
@ChrisMartin1961 You must be a liberal because a conservative would not care or really even notice.
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Christopher Martin 💙🤟👩🏻‍🦽‍➡️🌸⚾️
I’m seeing, yet again, this surge of hatred for the Boomer generation. I’m a late season Boomer, born in 1961; I’ve worked for nearly 50 years, have been in the same profession for 37 years, I’ve routinely worked 45-60 hours a week. I don’t get why we are so vilified.
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Lee Jones
Lee Jones@lcj2137·
@BoSnerdley She’s making it too easy. As soon as I see her face I change channels.
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Lee Jones
Lee Jones@lcj2137·
@Twidoit Cuonzo, such a great offensive mind 😂 He played the most boring brand of basketball I’ve ever seen. Then he parlayed that into Cal & Missouri, unbelievable.
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Volfan03
Volfan03@Twidoit·
Cuonzo Martin's best season at Tennessee was 24-13 with a Sweet 16 appearance in 2013-14. This year, Barnes is 24-11 and in the Sweet 16, despite the team underachieving during the regular season. Barnes is by far the best coach Tennessee has ever had.
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Lee Jones
Lee Jones@lcj2137·
@DeIudedShaniqwa It is garbage. About how the culture has de-evolved…. Gone backwards
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John Gullion
John Gullion@Tnwalrus·
Nate Ament could have called it a season. He showed what he could be in the SEC Tourney. When he got hurt, with a serious injury, he could have started getting ready to make millions in the NBA. Instead he’s powering through for his coach, his teammates and Vols fans.
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Lee Jones retweetledi
Dinesh D'Souza
Dinesh D'Souza@DineshDSouza·
German political leader Alice Weidel: “They flood our countries with illegal migrants and force our own people to feed & house them, all while terrorism stalks our street, crime explodes, & Islamic extremism takes root.”
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Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
The moment the West decided evidence no longer mattered — if it got in the way of utopia. Melanie Phillips (former Guardian journalist): “Objective evidence was cast aside because it was too inconvenient. The very idea of reason and rationality was dismissed. All these ideologies — multiculturalism, lifestyle choice, deep green environmentalism, moral relativism — were utopian. They promised perfection. Anyone who brought facts against them wasn’t just wrong… they were evil.” Result? - Evidence became “right-wing” - Dissenters were bullied, ostracized, fired, threatened - The Guardian itself became the heart of this ideological machine… until she fell foul of it. When ideology is sacrosanct and the world must be perfected, facts become the enemy — and truth-tellers become heretics. Have you watched this shift in real time — where inconvenient evidence gets labeled “hate” or “misinformation”? Which sacred ideology do you think has done the most damage to open debate? Your honest take 👇
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Mila Joy
Mila Joy@Milajoy·
When was the exact moment in America when everything started going downhill? I say when Barack “Barry” Obama was elected.
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Weigel's
Weigel's@weigelsstores·
You almost hate that for Vandy there. We don't, but you might.
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Long Story Farms, LLC
Long Story Farms, LLC@longstoryfarms·
Flannery O’Connor said it best: The South is struggling mightily to retain her identity against great odds and without knowing always, I believe, quite in what that identity lies…what has given the South her identity are those beliefs and qualities which she has absorbed from the Scriptures and from her history of defeat and violation: a distrust of the abstract, a sense of human dependence on the grave of God, and a knowledge that evil is not simply a problem to be solved, but a mystery to be endured.” —Flannery O’Connor, lecture at Georgetown Univ., 1963
Michael Brasher@2ndMississippi

The Allure and Burden of the "Lost Cause" [A note before we begin: I come from deep Confederate Southern roots, and I know the phrase "Lost Cause" carries freight it was never meant to bear. I don't mean here the postwar mythology that whitewashed history or excused what cannot be excused. I mean something older and larger — the thing that Margaret Mitchell and Robert Heinlein and C. Vann Woodward and Shelby Foote and William Faulkner all circled around in their different ways: the strange enduring human pull of causes carried forward even in defeat. I don't normally stray far outside strictly military history, but while I study and write about Atlanta's fall and recall how 'Gone with the Wind' fixed it in memory.... all this makes me occasionally take time and pause to think through what the South's memory of loss did to its literature, its music, its voice.] There is a curious power in a lost cause. Not the kind of power that wins battles or changes governments — the other kind, the kind that outlasts victory, that gets under the skin of a people and won't let go. History knows this. Literature knows it. Even science fiction has grappled with it. Defeat leaves a mark that triumph somehow doesn't. Victories get celebrated, then filed away and half-forgotten. Losses endure. They become identities. Margaret Mitchell understood. When she put words in Rhett Butler's mouth — her roguish, half-cynical hero who had seen through the Confederacy from the start — she gave him the line that would echo longer than anything else in 'Gone with the Wind': "I'm going to join the army. … I've always had a weakness for lost causes once they're really lost." Clark Gable delivered it in the 1939 film almost word for word, and it landed just the way Mitchell meant it: half-romantic, half-rueful, a recognition that there's something noble, even seductive, about throwing your lot in with a cause that cannot win. Not nobility in the cause itself, mind you. Nobility in the gesture — in the going forward when the end is already written. Three decades later, Robert A. Heinlein circled the same truth from a different angle. In 'The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress,' his philosopher-revolutionary Bernardo de la Paz — guiding a Lunar rebellion against Earth that had no business succeeding — put it this way: "Revolution is an art that I pursue rather than a goal I expect to achieve. Nor is this a source of dismay; a lost cause can be as spiritually satisfying as a victory." Where Rhett saw romance, the Professor saw dignity. Principle mattered even when it lost. Maybe especially when it lost. In both cases, defeat became not just an end but a kind of transcendence. These are fictional voices, but they resonate because they're rooted in something real. The South knew it before Mitchell or Heinlein ever set pen to paper. William Faulkner, who carried the South's ghosts in his bones, wrote it plainest in 'Requiem for a Nun': "The past is never dead. It's not even past." For Faulkner, defeat wasn't abstract. It was woven into the fabric of the present — individuals and families and whole communities laboring in webs spun long before their time, bound by consequence and memory they didn't choose but couldn't escape. The Confederacy's loss wasn't a closed chapter. It was a living ghost. C. Vann Woodward gave this sensibility its scholarly form in 'The Irony of Southern History.' He argued that the South bore a burden the rest of the United States did not — couldn't, really, because the rest of the country had never known total defeat. While the nation at large celebrated triumphs and expansion and exceptionalism, the South carried humiliation, poverty, racial crisis, and the plain fact of having been conquered. Woodward put it this way: "Southern history, unlike American, includes large components of frustration, failure and defeat. It includes not only an overwhelming military defeat but long decades of defeat in the provinces of economic, social, and political life." That's not sentiment. That's fact. The South lost the war, then lost the peace, then spent generations losing arguments about what it all meant. Defeat piled on defeat until defeat itself became the defining experience. Shelby Foote — novelist turned historian, Southerner to the marrow — said it even simpler in Ken Burns' 'The Civil War': "As a Southerner I would have to say that one of the main importances of the War is that Southerners have a sense of defeat which none of the rest of the country has." Where Woodward dissected irony, Foote described feeling. That sense of defeat became a cultural inheritance, passed down not in history books alone but in songs, in humor, in manners, in the way people talked about time itself. Taken together — Rhett Butler's gallantry, Heinlein's philosophy, Faulkner's haunted prose, Woodward's historical irony, Foote's cultural lament — these voices converge on a single truth: defeat carries its own kind of permanence. Victories can be celebrated and then forgotten. Losses endure. They become identities. They inspire literature and music, color politics and culture, shape how people see themselves in the stream of history. For the American South, that defeat was the Civil War. The Midwest remembers sacrifice and Union preserved. The West folded the war into its larger frontier myth. The North celebrated vindication. But the South? The South lives with memory of catastrophe. Its cause wasn't merely lost — it was woven into identity itself, inseparable from the question of what it meant to be Southern at all. That's why the South produced so much of the nation's most powerful literature, music, cultural expression. Because it carried the burden of memory. The blues, with its mournful beauty. Country ballads of loss. Faulkner's haunted Yoknapatawpha County, where every field held a ghost and every family carried a curse. All threads in that web. The past is not past. And in the South, defeat proved as enduring — perhaps even more spiritually satisfying — than victory. Shelby Foote and William Faulkner

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Noirchick In Old Hollywood
Noirchick In Old Hollywood@Noirchick1·
If a friend says they don't like black and white films, which one would you pick to show them what they're missing?
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That Guy Trey 🇺🇸
That Guy Trey 🇺🇸@PowerOwn45·
Watched ‘Sinners’ last night. If that is what is considered Oscar-worthy now we are in worse shape than I thought.
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Steve · Millionaire Habits
Steve · Millionaire Habits@SteveOnSpeed·
True or false: A marriage where partners refuse to share a bank account and Venmo each other money for their share of the bills is a marriage that won't last.
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