longgrass

757 posts

longgrass

longgrass

@longgrass19287

Longgrass

Katılım Kasım 2023
728 Takip Edilen6 Takipçiler
longgrass retweetledi
Owen Shroyer
Owen Shroyer@OwenShroyer1776·
Trump posted no more RINOs and a Lindsey Graham endorsement in the same day.
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longgrass
longgrass@longgrass19287·
@JohnCornyn You are wildly out of touch that you have no idea how evil you are.
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Senator John Cornyn
Senator John Cornyn@JohnCornyn·
I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. 2 Timothy 4:7:
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Nick shirley
Nick shirley@nickshirleyy·
🚨 California just voted to pass AB 2624 aka “The Stop Nick Shirley Act”: This bill puts journalists at civil risk for investigating fraud and makes it harder to expose fraud in “immigration support services,” including NGOs, nonprofits and health care facilities that receive hundreds of millions from the state of California each year. This bill would have made it criminal to expose fake hospices in LA or the Somali “learing center” in Minnesota if they then claim “reasonable fear” and the business owner gives a written demand not to post the video. Plain and simple, California is trying to make it harder to expose fraud and scare individuals from investigating fraud in their communities, as they could be sued for an injunction to remove the video + forced to pay their attorney fees + minimum $4,000 in damages. The Attorney General's wife, Mia Bonta, created this bill and is now trying to make it law. How is this not a conflict of interest? California is full of FRAUDSTERS!
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CajunCybertruck
CajunCybertruck@CajunCybertruck·
@realtalkstruth How is leasing ever a good financial decision? I can’t see how it works out in anyone’s favor.
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Chaddy
Chaddy@ElitistPopulism·
@ShadowofEzra They rejected God, broke their covenant and continue to oppose Christ today. You aren't a Christian if you compare Christ with the Sons of Perdition
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🇺🇸 Justice
🇺🇸 Justice@250_Revolution·
How is it Joe Biden brought in 87,000 IRS agent and not one of them ever found the Somalia fraud in Minnesota? Anyone?
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Duprii 🙌🏾
Duprii 🙌🏾@Duprii23·
As a black person in 2026 your literally living our ancestors wildest dreams. As a racist white person in 2026 your living your ancestors worst nightmare. Lol we won so the internet hate will never move me.
Dr.D@DeArimus

New doc on the block 🎓

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longgrass
longgrass@longgrass19287·
@HistorianUSA1 Great life lesson to the kid in red. He will think twice through the rest of life.
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DocumentingLibs
DocumentingLibs@HistorianUSA1·
This video is going around of a high school wrestling match that happened yesterday. One player showed clear poor sportsmanship… followed immediately by a pretty blatant cheap shot in response. Did the bad behavior ‘earn’ it? Or is a cheap shot never justified no matter what? Team Blue, Team Orange, or are both punks? Sports need passion but where’s the line? Thoughts? 👀
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longgrass
longgrass@longgrass19287·
@StrategicCPT @MrPatMineo Control the first and you won't have the second. This might be the best lesson for that kid in life.
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Chris Nelson
Chris Nelson@StrategicCPT·
@MrPatMineo They’re both in the wrong. Neither behavior has any place in wrestling.
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Matt Van Swol
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol·
🚨HOLY CRAP!!! Over 19 people are injured and 3 are hospitalized at "Black Bike Week" after multiple fights caused a STAMPEDE that ended in a MASS CASU*LTY INCIDENT at in Myrtle Beach SC. This is the largest African American motorcycle event in the United States.
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Morgan Ariel
Morgan Ariel@itsmorganariel·
Anything you do and say to a medical professional will be used against you. Stay away from psychologists and psychiatrists. If you need someone to talk to then talk to the Lord. A really dangerous precedent is being set here.
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TaraBull
TaraBull@TaraBull·
Teen takeovers are a plague on our society that need to be eradicated. Enough is enough. Shut this chaos down.
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Stew Peters
Stew Peters@realstewpeters·
Megyn Kelly on the Trump family’s monetizing of the presidency. I’ll add that as for the amount of shekels stolen from the Goyim, Donald Trump has surpassed every one of his predecessors, combined.
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Clown World ™ 🤡
Clown World ™ 🤡@ClownWorld·
A customer at an upscale steakhouse in Little Rock Arkansas claims the owner shoved a steak in her face and punched her during an altercation and is now alleging the assault was racially motivated. In the middle of the chaos her first instinct was to announce she has 30 million followers. Nobody asked but okay 😂👀
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Clown World ™ 🤡
Clown World ™ 🤡@ClownWorld·
A man in New York City walks into a bakery with a large bag and cleans out the entire display case. The same witness ran into him half an hour earlier at Home Depot where he was stealing there too. Two stores. One morning. One bag. Zero consequences. This is what happens when you decriminalize theft in a Democrat run city 🤡
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mira
mira@miranowhere·
It's illegal to bring a plant into our country because it might upset the ecosystem but bringing in millions of people from the 3rd world is supposed to make it better.. right
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Lee Carter
Lee Carter@LeeCarter18270·
@Serenitee_Sam That’s insane arresting a kid for a prank. No where else in a western society would this happen. Complete madness
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✨️Serenitee♡Sam✨️
✨️Serenitee♡Sam✨️@Serenitee_Sam·
One "funny" prank, a 911 hoax, and a life lesson that went viral for all the wrong reasons. 11-year-old Ava Rose Langone from Port Orange, Florida, was arrested after she sent a series of text messages to 911 falsely reporting that her 14-year-old friend had been kidnapped by an armed man in a white van. For approximately 90 minutes, she texted 911 dispatchers, providing updates and claiming she was following the kidnapper’s van in a blue Jeep. She also alleged that the suspect was armed with a gun. The false report triggered a significant response, including deputies from the Volusia Sheriff's Office, officers from multiple local police departments (Edgewater, New Smyrna Beach, and Port Orange), and the use of the department's helicopter, "Air One." After an extensive search failed to locate any suspect or vehicle, authorities tracked the cell phone used to send the texts to a residence in Port Orange. When deputies arrived, they confirmed the report was a hoax. Ava admitted to authorities that she got the idea from a YouTube challenge and believed the stunt "would be funny." She was charged with making a false police report concerning the use of a firearm in a violent manner (a felony) and misuse of 911 (a misdemeanor). Following her arrest, she was processed at a Family Resource Center and transferred to a juvenile detention center, later being placed on house arrest. As part of the conditions of her home detention, it was established that if her parents were not present, her grandmother was required to supervise her. ​Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood strongly condemned the action, emphasizing that the hoax wasted valuable emergency resources that could have been used to assist individuals in genuine distress. The case served as a high-profile example used by officials to urge parents to closely monitor their children's internet and social media activity. Following the event, the Sheriff's Office hosted several community forums to discuss protecting children from internet-related dangers.
✨️Serenitee♡Sam✨️@Serenitee_Sam

At 17, Fred Weatherspoon was sentenced to life without parole. Today, he is a community leader managing youth mentoring programs on Chicago’s South Side. His secret to reaching kids? Radical listening. He quickly realized that changing lives isn't about lecturing people on your past mistakes. It’s about pulling up a chair, sitting in the circle as equals, and building real relationships. True accountability looks like healing, not just locking people away. The detailed story of Fred Weatherspoon is a profound look at the reality of juvenile sentencing in America, the trauma of long-term incarceration, and the power of grassroots restorative justice. His life essentially splits into three distinct chapters: his youth and conviction, his 25 years inside, and his modern mission as a mentor on Chicago's South Side. Chapter 1: The Making of a "Lifer" at 17 Growing up in Chicago, Weatherspoon was an intelligent kid who did well in school and loved baseball—especially the Chicago Cubs. However, by his late teens, he became deeply entrenched in the street economy, eventually turning to selling drugs. In 1993, at just 17 years old, he was arrested and charged with a double murder and kidnapping. Facing the reality of the legal system, he accepted a plea deal. The sentence handed down was staggering for a teenager: natural life in prison plus an additional 30 years. At 17, his path was legally locked in; he was fully expected to die behind bars. Chapter 2: 25 Years on the Inside Weatherspoon spent 20 of his 25 years at the Menard Correctional Center, a notorious maximum-security state prison situated on the banks of the Mississippi River in southern Illinois. While serving his time, Weatherspoon began notice a deeply troubling trend: the incoming inmates were getting younger and younger. He spent years sitting down and listening to these young men. In hearing their backstories, he realized that their paths to prison weren't just random acts of delinquency; they were "one long, trauma-fueled ride" from the day they were born. Listening to these younger inmates planted the seeds for his future calling, giving him a massive, raw education on how systemic trauma impacts kids. Chapter 3: An Unrecognizable Home & Finding PurposeFollowing landmark legal changes regarding the unconstitutionality of mandatory life sentences for juveniles, Weatherspoon was able to successfully appeal his case. In 2018, at the age of 42, he walked out of prison a free man. Returning to Chicago after a quarter-century was a profound culture shock: Family Decoupling: Having had very limited communication with his family while locked away, he returned to find them struggling emotionally, mentally, and financially. The vibrant elders and father figures he remembered had succumbed to severe illness, aging, and substance abuse. Financial Pressure: Needing immediate income, he initially took a grueling job in construction. His life pivoted a year later when a friend he met while incarcerated invited him to an event hosted by a local non-profit. That organization was the Precious Blood Ministry of Reconciliation (PBMR), located in Chicago’s Back of the Yards and Englewood neighborhoods—areas heavily impacted by poverty and systemic gun violence. His Impact Today: Restorative Justice Today, Weatherspoon serves as the Mentoring Program Manager at PBMR, working with vulnerable youth and young adults aged 12 to 24. Admittedly, he started the job naively, assuming he would just lecture kids about his mistakes and they would listen. He quickly realized that lecturing doesn't work. Instead, he deployed the skill he mastered at Menard: radical listening.

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🤍 𝕂𝕚𝕥𝕥𝕖𝕟 🤍
A mother is recording her children create a messy nightmare for store employees... With zero correction, how will these kids adapt to civilized society in 10-15 years? 🤔
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