Jagdpanthercat🐱

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Jagdpanthercat🐱

Jagdpanthercat🐱

@meanassdevilcat

Pissed off Army vet. Tired of these stupid wars of choice the ruling class wants. Southern Nationalist. Late member of the prestigious Sam Francis Forum.

FL, but Georgia is on my mind. Katılım Ağustos 2021
558 Takip Edilen472 Takipçiler
Jagdpanthercat🐱
Jagdpanthercat🐱@meanassdevilcat·
@BWLH_ I wonder if that is the "Creative Loafing" reporter who appealed to the "Reverend" Joseph Lowery to save him from the rioting blacks? Lowery told him "I can't help you." The reporter got his ass beaten and later forgave the attackers.🙄
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Because We Live Here 🇺🇸
I think about this photo a lot. From Atlanta in 1992, during the Rodney King riots. Yes, blacks in Atlanta (then a 70% black city) rioted, burned down buildings and attacked White people. This White guy is actually on their side... they'd beat him with a AJC newspaper dispenser.
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Margo
Margo@MargoinWNC·
@thomasbsauer I think about this a lot. My daughter has lost several classmates from high school who joined at 18 and went straight to Afghanistan. It's so heartbreaking to watch them come home and struggle. 🙏🏻
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Tom Sauer
Tom Sauer@thomasbsauer·
I’ve lost more friends and teammates to suicide and addiction than al Qaeda, ISIS, and the Taliban combined. I know Memorial Day is about our war dead, but for many, there’s still a war going on at home.
Happy Captain@EODHappyCaptain

Remembering both of these guys today. Two best friends that did everything together. Both took their lives about a year apart from each other after coming back from deployment. Many of the wounds of war are unseen.

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Combination K
Combination K@Combination_K·
T-62 impressions from the 20th Tank Division: "I finished training school in the autumn; I was a gunner. Then, another half year later, I went on leave, and when I came back I was given the rank of junior sergeant and the position of tank commander. So I went through every kind of guard duty there was — as duty commander and sentry, right up to the garrison guardhouse. I went through a huge number of exercises! We especially disliked staff exercises. Tank marches would only take us outside the base and then right back again, followed by cleaning the tracks and washing the entire tank. I even remember there being a whole barrel of white spirit standing there. But the large-scale exercises, especially with live-fire shooting — now that was power! I remember a march from south to north right before demobilization, and I remember the Oder River where they drove the tanks for underwater driving training. And the firing exercises! If there’s one thing, I shot enough for a lifetime! Thank God only during exercises. With sub-caliber inserts, with live rounds, and with the machine gun! Probably not like nowadays. More than 25 years have already passed, and yet with what enthusiasm I’d climb back into my T-62 right now and fire at a target — the same one I once had to run around on foot as a tanker. And I don’t think I’d miss. Those were golden times !"
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Joseph Hardin
Joseph Hardin@ColJosephHardin·
@CynicalPublius No one has the seething hatred of a conservative southerner like a yankee Republican.
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Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
Republicans do not need to call Democrats "Nazis," because "Democrat" is bad enough. -The Trail of Tears. -Slavery. -The Civil War. -Jim Crow. -The KKK. -Concentration camps for Americans of Japanese descent. -Opposition to all civil rights legislation. -Embrace of Marxism. -Racial eugenics via 66 million aborted babies. -The Re-Racialization of American society in the 21st Century. In most nations throughout history, that's enough for a political party to be outlawed.
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Jefferson Davis
Jefferson Davis@Jeff_Davis1808·
In the spring of 1860, just months before the secession crisis engulfed the Union, the U.S. Senate debated the fate of Africans captured from illegal slave ships intercepted by the American navy while enforcing the long-standing federal ban on the international slave trade. Vessels such as the Wildfire and the William had recently arrived in Key West carrying hundreds of captives, prompting Congress to consider appropriations for their care and repatriation to Africa under existing U.S. laws and international agreements dating back to the 1808 prohibition. Southern senators took the lead in these discussions, insisting that the federal government must honor its commitments to suppress the trade rather than exploit the situation for domestic political gain. Judah P. Benjamin of Louisiana spoke for many when he declared on May 24 that “The government of the US has undertaken, in conjunction with other powers, to put a stop to the slave trade if possible. It is our duty to carry out these engagements,” underscoring a sectional willingness to uphold the law even amid rising sectional tensions. The debate revealed nuanced Southern positions on both humanitarian and fiscal grounds. North Carolina’s Thomas Clingman argued that, as a matter of basic humanity and consistent with the spirit of the anti-slave-trade laws, the United States should provide for the captured Africans’ survival and resettlement if they were returned to the African coast—potentially at federal expense—rather than abandoning them to certain death or re-enslavement. This stance reflected a broader Southern recognition that enforcement actions carried moral and practical obligations. Yet not every Southerner agreed on the financial details. I pushed back against expansive spending, contending that taxpayers should not be forced to shoulder costs beyond the strict requirements of treaties and statutes. In an exchange with Maine Republican William Fessenden, I noted that while small sums might seem inconsequential to some, “it would be an objection with those who object to paying taxes to this Government for any other than its legitimate purposes,” insisting the government must not turn treaty enforcement into open-ended charity. These exchanges demonstrated that leading Southern voices were actively working to enforce the ban on the international slave trade, not to revive or expand it. Far from plotting a “slave empire” that would flood the South with new imports from Africa, Benjamin, Clingman, and I engaged in good-faith deliberation over how best to fulfill existing federal and international duties. Their disagreements were limited to questions of cost and scope, never to the underlying principle that the foreign slave trade must remain closed. This episode, largely forgotten today, directly contradicts modern narratives that portray the South as uniformly obsessed with reopening the African trade for conquest or unlimited expansion. The historical record bears this out even more clearly in the Confederacy’s own founding document. The Confederate Constitution explicitly banned the international slave trade in Article I, Section 9, prohibiting the importation of slaves from any foreign country other than the United States or its territories—a provision Southern framers adopted without serious opposition. President Jefferson Davis himself later vetoed efforts to relax these restrictions. The 1860 Senate debate, therefore, stands as a quiet but powerful rebuttal to the “slave empire” conspiracy theories advanced by recent faux historians. By ignoring or downplaying such evidence, those accounts reduce complex constitutional and enforcement debates to simplistic morality tales that serve contemporary politics rather than historical truth.
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Jagdpanthercat🐱
Jagdpanthercat🐱@meanassdevilcat·
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories

In 1868, a bankrupt Louisiana banker with a ruined plantation and no income took some pepper seeds of unknown origin, mixed the mash with salt mined from underneath his own property, aged it in barrels, and bottled it in cologne bottles because manufacturing specialty glass after the Civil War was impossible. That bottle shape has not changed in 156 years... Edmund McIlhenny had lost almost everything in the Civil War. His banking career was gone. The Avery Island plantation he had married into was destroyed. When his family returned in 1865 they found the fields in ruin and allegedly a few volunteer chile plants still surviving in the wreckage. Nobody knows exactly how McIlhenny obtained the Capsicum frutescens pepper seeds that became the foundation of his sauce. What is documented is that he crushed the ripened peppers into a mash with rock salt mined from the natural salt dome underneath Avery Island, aged the mash in barrels, blended it with French white wine vinegar, strained it through cloth and bottled it in small cologne-type bottles with sprinkler fitments, sealed in green wax. Workers on the plantation used small red sticks called le petit bâton rouge to identify peppers at exactly the right stage of ripeness. In 1869 he sent exactly 658 bottles to grocers along the Gulf Coast at one dollar apiece. He secured a patent in 1870, and the sauce sold out immediately. Manufacturing specialised glass was essentially impossible in the post-Civil War South so McIlhenny used what was available. The sprinkler fitment on a cologne bottle turned out to be the perfect delivery mechanism for a concentrated pepper sauce best applied in dashes rather than poured. That practical wartime improvisation became one of the most recognisable pieces of packaging in the world. The original recipe, Tabasco peppers, Avery Island salt and vinegar, has not changed in 156 years. The salt still comes from underneath the same island. Every pepper seed used in production worldwide still originates from Avery Island. A bankrupt banker's post-Civil War improvisation, bottled in repurposed cologne bottles, became one of the most globally distributed food products in history. © Eats History

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Jagdpanthercat🐱
Jagdpanthercat🐱@meanassdevilcat·
@HarmlessYardDog On the table. Take it from me, a cat. It's cats who are bad about lying on top of the cushions and messing them up.
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Jagdpanthercat🐱
Jagdpanthercat🐱@meanassdevilcat·
@toddstarnes I have good news and bad news for you, Todd. The good news for you is Jews will get their war. The bad news is there won't be a "rapture". Instead, you're going down with this ship of fools like the rest of us.
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toddstarnes
toddstarnes@toddstarnes·
So, what's the latest on the war with Iran? Did we win? Is it still going on? Ceasefire? Taking a break for the summer months? Did we accomplish our goals?
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toddstarnes
toddstarnes@toddstarnes·
The average price for a gallon of gas in Tennessee is now $4.17. That's more than a 53 percent increase in 10 months.
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Battle Beagle
Battle Beagle@HarmlessYardDog·
A 4 Part Tragicomedy
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Brigadier Ketchup
Brigadier Ketchup@BrigadierKetch·
Alcohol was banned on naval vessels by order of SecNav Josephus Daniels in 1914. Coffee has since been referred to as "Cup of Joe" is his (dis)honor Current regs allow for 2 beers per sailor when a vessel has been underway for 45 continuous days and will be out at least 5 more.
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Brigadier Ketchup
Brigadier Ketchup@BrigadierKetch·
Attn: @SECNAV , wanna pick up an easy W that would improve morale and recruiting? How about allowing a beer ration underway?
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Geoff Duncan
Geoff Duncan@GeoffDuncanGA·
Oddly enough @realDonaldTrump, losing by 50% still feels better than supporting you. “Doing the right thing will never be the wrong thing” Thank you for your attention to this matter.
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Sassafrass84
Sassafrass84@Sassafrass_84·
For real. Comparing President Trump to hitler was a disgusting move by the democrats. Just goes to show that so many people need to be educated on what actual fascism and nazism are.
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