Michael Hooker

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Michael Hooker

Michael Hooker

@mikhook78

Jesus Christ loving, Constitution supporting, American!

Katılım Eylül 2025
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
@LWCnewswire That woman bishop is historical proof that Eve took the first bite of the apple.
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
@HumanityAs @RealCandaceO I guess it went over your head. I am doing the same thing that Candace does. An accusation with no evidence, but just hang on the evidence is coming.
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Matthew Linder
Matthew Linder@HumanityAs·
@mikhook78 @RealCandaceO No captain engagement bait. I say pics. Which you dont have. You have public disclosures. Guess what. Schumer and the DNC donated to all the republicans. And the GOP donated to all the dems. They always do. You haven't learned anything except money is bad.
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Matthew Linder
Matthew Linder@HumanityAs·
@mikhook78 @RealCandaceO Ill pay you 75 trillion dollars to post a pic of the corner of a document that looks even slightly official or like a 5 year old didnt draw it in MS paint.
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
Of all the leakers that have been in the government. Why can't someone leak the list of payouts regarding congressional Improprieties. Swallows Well is not the only one.
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Stanley Lwin
Stanley Lwin@stanleylwin·
@AmericaRedVoice I am from 3rd world country but legally here. So trump and Americans want to deport me too ?
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America Red Voice 🇺🇸
America Red Voice 🇺🇸@AmericaRedVoice·
🚨BREAKING: President Trump is now posting that we only have two options "Deport every single 3rd world migrant, illegal alien and America hating Visa holder..." "...or surrender your nation the way the UK have, and watch your society collapse in the coming years." I bet Stephen Miller loves reading this. IT'S TIME TO SAVE AMERICA! Do you firmly support Trump on this? A. Huge Yes B. No IF Yes, Give me a THUMBS-UP👍!!
America Red Voice 🇺🇸 tweet media
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
This is what I think of Allah yaḥtariq fī jahannam
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
People need to understand if the bombs went off in New York and killed people. The Mayor, his wife and Islamist across the world would shout Allah Akbar!
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
Tariffs have been a core part of U.S. economic and trade policy since the nation's founding, used by presidents for revenue generation, protecting domestic industries (protectionism), retaliating against unfair trade practices, or addressing national security/emergencies. There is no single exact number of presidents who "leveraged" tariffs because almost every president has dealt with them in some way—tariffs were the primary federal revenue source until the income tax in 1913, and Congress (or delegated authority) set rates during most of U.S. history. However, many presidents actively supported, signed, raised, lowered, or imposed tariffs as a deliberate policy tool. Key Historical Context Early Republic (1789–1860): Tariffs were mainly for revenue but often included protective elements. Presidents like George Washington (signed Tariff Act of 1789), Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams (Tariff of Abominations 1828), Andrew Jackson (handled Nullification Crisis over high tariffs), Martin Van Buren, John Tyler (Black Tariff 1842), James K. Polk (lowered via Walker Tariff 1846), and James Buchanan (signed Morrill Tariff just before Lincoln) all engaged with tariff legislation. Civil War to Great Depression (1861–1933): High protective tariffs dominated (averaging ~50%), especially under Republican presidents. Abraham Lincoln raised them during the war, and this continued through presidents like Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, Grover Cleveland (Democrat who lowered some), Benjamin Harrison (McKinley Tariff 1890), William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson (lowered via Underwood Tariff 1913), Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover (Smoot-Hawley 1930, which raised them dramatically). Post-1930s (Modern Era): After Smoot-Hawley worsened the Depression, policy shifted toward lower tariffs and free trade via reciprocal agreements (Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act 1934 under Franklin D. Roosevelt). Presidents delegated more authority but still used targeted tariffs: Richard Nixon (steel/import surcharge 1971). Gerald Ford (oil tariffs). Jimmy Carter (some protections). Ronald Reagan (motorcycles, Japanese electronics, steel). George H.W. Bush (limited). Bill Clinton (steel from multiple countries). George W. Bush (steel tariffs 2002). Barack Obama (Chinese tires, solar panels). Donald Trump (broad on China, steel/aluminum; and in second term, even wider reciprocal tariffs on many countries). Joe Biden (maintained/expanded some on China, e.g., EVs, steel). Rough Count Nearly all of the 47 individuals who have served as president (46 presidencies, with Grover Cleveland counted once) have "leveraged" tariffs in the broad sense—signing bills, negotiating, or using executive authority—since tariffs were routine until mid-20th century. For protectionist or significant use (raising/imposing to protect industries or leverage trade): At least 20–30 presidents, especially Republicans from Lincoln through Hoover, and scattered modern ones (Nixon, Reagan, Bush 43, Obama, Trump, Biden). High protective eras were shorter-lived, and broad/high tariffs often led to political backlash or economic issues (e.g., Nullification Crisis, Smoot-Hawley). In short, most U.S. presidents have leveraged tariffs to some degree—it's baked into American economic history. If you're asking about those who aggressively used them for protectionism or trade wars (like recent examples), it's a smaller but still substantial group, with Donald Trump standing out in modern times for scale and breadth. Let me know if you'd like details on a specific president or era!
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
Tariffs have been a core part of U.S. economic and trade policy since the nation's founding, used by presidents for revenue generation, protecting domestic industries (protectionism), retaliating against unfair trade practices, or addressing national security/emergencies. There is no single exact number of presidents who "leveraged" tariffs because almost every president has dealt with them in some way—tariffs were the primary federal revenue source until the income tax in 1913, and Congress (or delegated authority) set rates during most of U.S. history. However, many presidents actively supported, signed, raised, lowered, or imposed tariffs as a deliberate policy tool. Key Historical Context Early Republic (1789–1860): Tariffs were mainly for revenue but often included protective elements. Presidents like George Washington (signed Tariff Act of 1789), Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams (Tariff of Abominations 1828), Andrew Jackson (handled Nullification Crisis over high tariffs), Martin Van Buren, John Tyler (Black Tariff 1842), James K. Polk (lowered via Walker Tariff 1846), and James Buchanan (signed Morrill Tariff just before Lincoln) all engaged with tariff legislation. Civil War to Great Depression (1861–1933): High protective tariffs dominated (averaging ~50%), especially under Republican presidents. Abraham Lincoln raised them during the war, and this continued through presidents like Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, Grover Cleveland (Democrat who lowered some), Benjamin Harrison (McKinley Tariff 1890), William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson (lowered via Underwood Tariff 1913), Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover (Smoot-Hawley 1930, which raised them dramatically). Post-1930s (Modern Era): After Smoot-Hawley worsened the Depression, policy shifted toward lower tariffs and free trade via reciprocal agreements (Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act 1934 under Franklin D. Roosevelt). Presidents delegated more authority but still used targeted tariffs: Richard Nixon (steel/import surcharge 1971). Gerald Ford (oil tariffs). Jimmy Carter (some protections). Ronald Reagan (motorcycles, Japanese electronics, steel). George H.W. Bush (limited). Bill Clinton (steel from multiple countries). George W. Bush (steel tariffs 2002). Barack Obama (Chinese tires, solar panels). Donald Trump (broad on China, steel/aluminum; and in second term, even wider reciprocal tariffs on many countries). Joe Biden (maintained/expanded some on China, e.g., EVs, steel). Rough Count Nearly all of the 47 individuals who have served as president (46 presidencies, with Grover Cleveland counted once) have "leveraged" tariffs in the broad sense—signing bills, negotiating, or using executive authority—since tariffs were routine until mid-20th century. For protectionist or significant use (raising/imposing to protect industries or leverage trade): At least 20–30 presidents, especially Republicans from Lincoln through Hoover, and scattered modern ones (Nixon, Reagan, Bush 43, Obama, Trump, Biden). High protective eras were shorter-lived, and broad/high tariffs often led to political backlash or economic issues (e.g., Nullification Crisis, Smoot-Hawley). In short, most U.S. presidents have leveraged tariffs to some degree—it's baked into American economic history. If you're asking about those who aggressively used them for protectionism or trade wars (like recent examples), it's a smaller but still substantial group, with Donald Trump standing out in modern times for scale and breadth. Let me know if you'd like details on a specific president or era!
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Patrick Bet-David
Patrick Bet-David@patrickbetdavid·
The US Supreme Court has just STRUCK DOWN President Trump’s tariff authority, 6-3. China is celebrating! All China wanted is to delay tariffs until POTUS is out. All this does is delay the approach to negotiate with China who doesn’t have America’s best interest in mind. I don’t agree with this but trust the U.S. constitution. Having said that, the Supreme Court didn’t kill tariffs, they killed one method. Trump is creative and his strategies are fluid. They were prepared for this and I trust have their next 5 to 10 moves ready to deploy.
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
Tariffs have been a core part of U.S. economic and trade policy since the nation's founding, used by presidents for revenue generation, protecting domestic industries (protectionism), retaliating against unfair trade practices, or addressing national security/emergencies. There is no single exact number of presidents who "leveraged" tariffs because almost every president has dealt with them in some way—tariffs were the primary federal revenue source until the income tax in 1913, and Congress (or delegated authority) set rates during most of U.S. history. However, many presidents actively supported, signed, raised, lowered, or imposed tariffs as a deliberate policy tool. Key Historical Context Early Republic (1789–1860): Tariffs were mainly for revenue but often included protective elements. Presidents like George Washington (signed Tariff Act of 1789), Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams (Tariff of Abominations 1828), Andrew Jackson (handled Nullification Crisis over high tariffs), Martin Van Buren, John Tyler (Black Tariff 1842), James K. Polk (lowered via Walker Tariff 1846), and James Buchanan (signed Morrill Tariff just before Lincoln) all engaged with tariff legislation. Civil War to Great Depression (1861–1933): High protective tariffs dominated (averaging ~50%), especially under Republican presidents. Abraham Lincoln raised them during the war, and this continued through presidents like Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, Grover Cleveland (Democrat who lowered some), Benjamin Harrison (McKinley Tariff 1890), William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson (lowered via Underwood Tariff 1913), Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover (Smoot-Hawley 1930, which raised them dramatically). Post-1930s (Modern Era): After Smoot-Hawley worsened the Depression, policy shifted toward lower tariffs and free trade via reciprocal agreements (Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act 1934 under Franklin D. Roosevelt). Presidents delegated more authority but still used targeted tariffs: Richard Nixon (steel/import surcharge 1971). Gerald Ford (oil tariffs). Jimmy Carter (some protections). Ronald Reagan (motorcycles, Japanese electronics, steel). George H.W. Bush (limited). Bill Clinton (steel from multiple countries). George W. Bush (steel tariffs 2002). Barack Obama (Chinese tires, solar panels). Donald Trump (broad on China, steel/aluminum; and in second term, even wider reciprocal tariffs on many countries). Joe Biden (maintained/expanded some on China, e.g., EVs, steel). Rough Count Nearly all of the 47 individuals who have served as president (46 presidencies, with Grover Cleveland counted once) have "leveraged" tariffs in the broad sense—signing bills, negotiating, or using executive authority—since tariffs were routine until mid-20th century. For protectionist or significant use (raising/imposing to protect industries or leverage trade): At least 20–30 presidents, especially Republicans from Lincoln through Hoover, and scattered modern ones (Nixon, Reagan, Bush 43, Obama, Trump, Biden). High protective eras were shorter-lived, and broad/high tariffs often led to political backlash or economic issues (e.g., Nullification Crisis, Smoot-Hawley). In short, most U.S. presidents have leveraged tariffs to some degree—it's baked into American economic history. If you're asking about those who aggressively used them for protectionism or trade wars (like recent examples), it's a smaller but still substantial group, with Donald Trump standing out in modern times for scale and breadth. Let me know if you'd like details on a specific president or era!
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
@danthehangman every time you go PPV you get your tinny ass beat. You are giving people with my last name a bad name. You Aussi puss.
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
@LibOrNormal Brandon did you take out the trash? "Mom I am making a making a video.......god!
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Brandon
Brandon@LibOrNormal·
This crazy Liberal says Socialism is coming....
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
@EndWokeness Stop eating so much then there will be enough food for your kids and you won't have to be on snap.
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End Wokeness
End Wokeness@EndWokeness·
This is who Dems chose to speak about "not having enough food" if SNAP is cut
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Michael Hooker
Michael Hooker@mikhook78·
@ericswalwell Fuck you swallows well! It's you and your parties fault that it's to this point you spy fucking moron. 1. Democratic party allowing illegals to flood in by the millions.
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Eric Swalwell
Eric Swalwell@ericswalwell·
Accountability is coming to ICE
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USA NEWS 🇺🇸
USA NEWS 🇺🇸@usanewshq·
Would you support President Trump banning Sharia Law in the United States? A. YES, it’s long overdue! B. NO, not necessary! C. Possibly, convince me in the comments.
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