Mark Orme

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Mark Orme

Mark Orme

@morme1

Union Dues paying conservative Science teacher. Teacher: Middle School, High School, Community College. Chemical Industry: Marketing Specialty chemicals

California, USA Katılım Mart 2013
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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
𝗟𝗼𝘃𝗲 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗪𝗮𝗿 𝗔 𝗽𝗼𝗲𝗺 𝗯𝘆 𝗠𝘆𝗿𝘁 𝗪𝗮𝗹𝗹𝗶𝘀 Dedicated to her sons, and son-in-law, veterans. Young Crow warriors rode into war      their hearts filled with joy Wanting to live with courage and honor      Willing and eager to die for glory
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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
@AlanRoberts Did they need a wide angle lens? 2 hours to hoist him out. How long if it was a 175 pound man? Poor rescue team - no joking until they're back at the station. 500-Pound Man in Hospital After Falling Into A Hole | KABC-AM share.google/4z50N5dMgvFjlr…
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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
This is a thing we do now - that I hate. 30 years after a man is dead, he's accused of a crime and assumed guilty. Only when he can't respond. Only when he can't present evidence. Only when his politics are no longer in favor. Cesar Chavez was in favor of deportation, lots of deportation!
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Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
Since we now know that Cesar Chavez was a megalomaniac who routinely raped teenage girls, why does the National Park Service still have a glowingly positive National Monument dedicated to him? Perhaps some of that revisionist history we are always being fed about our Founders and our great Nation might be appropriate here. Not saying NPS needs to destroy the monument, as it is a part of American history, but how about telling the truth? Oh wait, I forgot... he was a "social justice" advocate. Explained.
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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
@ggreenwald Will we ever know what the true time line was? Loss of Security Clearance- then allowed to resign. OR Resign AND THEN lose Security Clearance. Only an insider knows.....
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James O'Keefe
James O'Keefe@JamesOKeefeIII·
UPDATE: LA District Attorney confirms they have received our election fraud footage and a review is underway. @LADAOffice
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James O'Keefe@JamesOKeefeIII

CALIFORNIA ELECTIONS FRAUD CASH FOR BALLOTS PART I: Homeless Bribed with Cash & Drugs In Exchange For Registering To Vote & Signing Election Petitions Caught On Tape Undercover On Skid Row In California. “You can just put Pinocchio Lane.” California NGOs Encourage Fake Addresses To Homeless People To Sign Petitions & Register Voters, A State & Federal Felony. Footage Shows 28 Instances Of Cash Changing Hands For Ballot Signatures & Voter Registration Forms. Many of the petitioners had no understanding of the petitions’ purpose they were advertising. Circulators also instructed individuals to use fake addresses. “Oh, you can just fake an address.” Weingart Center, which received hundreds of millions in public funding, is on tape directing people to where the fraudulent petitioners are located, and directing homeless individuals to petitioners & coaching plausible deniability. “See they say ignorance is no excuse for the law. But a lot of times, I have to say ‘I didn’t know, I had no idea.’” We encountered 28 instances of petitioners offering cash, cigarettes, and marijuana for signatures on petitions. Weingart employees advised: “See they say ignorance is no excuse for the law. But a lot of times, I have to say ‘I didn’t know, I had no idea.’” All happening outside taxpayer-funded housing organizations. Weingart CEO earned $432,000 before resigning from the Los Angeles County Affordable Housing Solutions Agency. James O’Keefe and the OMG Team went undercover on Skid Row, posing as homeless individuals. On hidden cameras, petitioners admitted they are paid $7–$10 per signature, sometimes earning $1,000 or more per day, collecting signatures from individuals with minimal knowledge of what they were signing. “$7 a signature, $5 a signature, $10 a signature.” “We gon’ give you $2.” Populus Inc., a political consulting firm, was circulating petitions funded by @Uber, @Delta, @United, and the American Hotel & Lodging Association (@AHLA). On camera, one petitioner said, “We have one that taxes billionaires 5%. One-time tax. 5% and that’s gonna go towards healthcare.” Other petitions sought to overturn LA’s $30 minimum wage for hotel and airline workers. Paying per signature and encouraging fake addresses violates federal and state election law and is proof of fraud happening in California. Weingart employees were caught directing the homeless to the location of the petitioners and coaching them on plausible deniability. Intake coordinator Jason Warren told an undercover journalist exactly where and when to find them: “Most time they be right across the street, under that tree… Monday through Friday.” In 2016, nine individuals were arrested on Skid Row for exchanging cash and cigarettes for signatures; in 2019 they were charged on 14 counts under the exact same California Elections Code section. Yet when confronted, nearby LAPD officers dismissed the activity as “a civil lawsuit.” “Paying per signature violates state election law and is evidence of election fraud in California,” the investigation concludes. On Skid Row, we captured conduct on tape that violates Federal Law 52 U.S. Code §10307 and state law California Election Code §18603. Part II coming soon. @CAgovernor @MayorOfLA @AGPamBondi @TheJusticeDept @NathanHochmanDA @GovPressOffice @LADAOffice @CASOSVote @USAttyEssayli @GavinNewsom Follow Citizen Justice League @ctznjusticelg A network of citizen journalists exposing corruption and demanding accountability for America YT: @citizenjusticeleague?si=SYUXXv7nN0eshG_a" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@citizenjustic… IG: instagram.com/citizenjustice… FB: facebook.com/share/1CdcJb1b… TikTok: @citizenjusticeleague?_r=1&_t=ZP-94juhHbdzIN" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">tiktok.com/@citizenjustic… Paid partnerships with: American Independence Gold: Free Extra Gold & Silver with Qualifying Purchases. Go to OKEEFEMEDIAGOLD.com

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The Western Journal
The Western Journal@WesternJournalX·
Bombshell Video: James O'Keefe just dropped indisputable video proof of a huge California voter fraud network. The video was so thorough that even Newsom's office and the LA county attorney instantly began calling for prosecutions.
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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
Feynman was one of the few individuals who possessed incredibly high intelligence AND wisdom, along with humor. He was also productive due to his high powered work ethic- fueled by curiosity and wonder. Read the accompanying 1974 CalTech commencement. It's not just informative, it's Entertaining.
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Crémieux
Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil·
Endorsed. Sometimes, you have to wonder why people analyze certain subjects in the ways they do rather than in the best ways available when doing so only adds a few minutes of work. Feynman actually talked about this in his Cargo Cult speech in the context of maze-running rats:
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Ben Landau-Taylor@benlandautaylor

Having high standards in a field doesn't *feel* like having high standards. It feels like everyone else has bafflingly low standards and almost no one is even trying.

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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
Had 40 acres in Indiana, 12 in corn/beans, 3 in alfalfa, 4 pasture a few momma cows. Cows ONLY need help calving at night when there's freezing rain. Your best crop year- will be a flood year! My favorite quote from a farmer in a neighboring town. After winning the lottery..... "What are you going to do with your lottery winnings?" "I think I'll just keep farming until the money's gone." 🤣
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Larry Correia
Larry Correia@monsterhunter45·
Yeah, I know this is engagement bait bullshit from a European with no clue, but I see this kinda RETURN TO FARM post on X all the time, and it's always some idylic dreamscape of rural niceness, which makes it really fucking obvious to all of us who come from farming backgrounds that these people have zero fucking clue, and would probably end up wrapped around an auger on their first day. News flash. Farming is HARD. What these people are imagining is rural living on a big plot of land, where they've got income from something else, and maybe a couple of animals to keep down the grass and a little garden on the side. That's what I do now that I'm a rich guy. It's pretty awesome. I also know that if I had to make a living off this land I could probably do it (because unlike these weenies, I know how) but I don't want to, because it would absolutely fucking suck. Because in reality making a living off being a farmer is brutal. It's nonstop backbreaking labor where everything that can go wrong, will. And it will go wrong at absolutely the worst possible time. (especially if cows are involved!) Modern squishy internet people do not even sorta comprehend how hard farming is. I worked on dairy farms. I can't speak for the dirt farmers but I'm sure they've got their own set of wacky nonsense they get to put up with. It is LONG hours. I once did a stint opening up a new dairy where I worked 72 hours straight, with a couple of thirty minute naps in a truck or on the barn floor snuck in. There's nothing quite as fun as dealing with fifteen hundred pound animals and dangerous heavy equipment when you're so tired you're starting to see things that aren't there. Oh, and you'd better get real comfortable with blood, shit, piss, and death. Dealing with lots of farm animals is not for the squeamish. They're going to get sick, get injured, get stuck in infuriating and mysterious ways, and die stupidly on you. Every kind of livestock has got its peculiar way of being a pain in the ass. Cows are loveable, curious, stupid, and sometimes homicidal. I've been kicked, trampled, hooked, and smashed into/through fences. These sheltered idiot city people say crap like "go buy a farm" having zero comprehension of how much good farmland costs, or the insane costs of equipment, or livestock involved. If they saw what a good tractor cost they'd shit themselves. "Buy land"... Have you priced land? Oh, you can still buy cheap land, but it's usually cheap for a reason. As in you can't farm it, or it doesn't have water, or it's a nightmare hellscape of windy death. So farming is expensive to get into, hard to make a profit at, and insanely difficult the entire time. Oh yeah, and just when you think you've got it figured out, the government will absolutely fuck with you, because it's also super regulated. Yay. "skip the degree"... Lady, I got into college on an ag scholarship, and started out as an ag science major. Successful farmers are educated because this shit is complicated. (I then changed majors and got an accounting degree so I wouldn't have to pull calves at 3:00 AM, a decision which I have not regretted) These fuckers think farming is just strolling around in a sun dress picking wild flowers or some shit. Oh hell no. Farmers farm because they want to, and the juice is worth the squeeze for them.
Pamela@PamelaBies

Advice to the younger generation: Skip the degree. Buy land. Become a farmer.

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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
@KelleyKga Teacher in Orange County California... Past Catholic school teacher, MOST of the parents wanted: high academics, religious instruction and a drug free & crime free environment. Some were hoping for Ivies, but most were aiming for UCLA or related schools.
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Kelley K
Kelley K@KelleyKga·
This is a very narrow view of private school that only applies to some families. MANY parents choose private schools to ensure their kids get a type of education that isn't available on public schools, whether that's more rigorous, or traditional, or religious, etc.
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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
Whenever ANYONE starts talking about "global citizen", I know that they are: ▪︎Lacking in intelligence ▪︎Loyal to no country, no people, no religion, no culture. ▪︎Lacking in original thought capacity. ▪︎Unworthy to be in charge of anything greater than a fast food franchise.
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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
@OwenGregorian Yesterday in Needles, CA: gas $6.90/gallon. 60 miles down the road in Kingman Arizon: half the price, $3.53/gallon That premium in California is 100% politics.
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Owen Gregorian
Owen Gregorian@OwenGregorian·
Gas prices reach highest level since October 2023 as oil holds above $100 per barrel; US stocks jump | Taylor Herzlich, New York Post Brent crude oil held above $100 per barrel on Monday, pushing national average gasoline prices to their highest level since October 2023 as President Trump urged allies to help protect oil tankers from Iranian attacks in the key Strait of Hormuz. As the US pressed hard to reopen the conduit, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose about 550 points, or 1.2%, as of 10:15 a.m. Eastern Time and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq went up 1.3% and 1.5%, respectively. The gains came after steep losses last week. Iran’s shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz — a critical Persian Gulf chokepoint that typically sees 20% of the world’s oil supply pass through — has resulted in the largest oil supply disruption in history. Oil benchmarks have soared more than 40% since the Feb. 28 start of the war, with Brent hitting $102.27 and West Texas Intermediate crude at $94.36 on Monday. National average gasoline prices notched $3.72 on Monday, their highest level since October 2023, according to AAA, while diesel jumped to $4.99 – threatening to hammer the trucking industry and send prices higher on food, apparel and other retail goods. Prices could soon surge even higher since gasoline demand tends to spike around spring break, as temperatures warm up and more drivers hit the road, according to AAA. Trump, meanwhile, has hinted at additional strikes on a vital Iranian oil hub that could further disrupt global supply and prices, after saying US attacks on Kharg Island over the weekend targeted military infrastructure, not energy equipment. The strikes on Kharg Island “totally demolished” most of the island, but “we may hit it a few more times just for fun” if Iran continues to attack tankers in the strait, Trump told NBC News on Saturday. The site contains Iran’s main oil export hub, so a direct strike there could further worsen supply disruptions and significantly ramp up geopolitical tensions. Trump has also demanded allies help protect tankers attempting to traverse the strait, as Iran has reportedly begun laying mines throughout the maritime route and attacking oil vessels. The White House is planning to announce as soon as this week that multiple countries have agreed to help escort tankers through the treacherous waterway, the Wall Street Journal reported, though officials are yet to decide whether the assistance would start before or after the war ends. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Monday that the US has been allowing Iranian oil tankers to move through the strait in an effort to minimize supply disruptions. “The Iranian ships have been getting out already, and we’ve let that happen to supply the rest of the world,” Bessent told CNBC during an interview in Paris, where he was meeting Chinese officials for trade negotiations. “We think that there will be a natural opening that the Iranians are letting out, and for now we’re fine with that. We want the world to be well supplied,” he said, adding that the US believes Indian and Chinese ships have been able to make it out of the Gulf. Even if the war ends soon, analysts have warned that it could take time for oil and gasoline prices to normalize due to energy infrastructure damage and obstacles throughout the strait. Despite a record release of oil reserves and a temporary pause on Russian energy sanctions, oil prices have continued to rise – raising fears that energy shocks could ripple across consumer prices and lead to a toxic mix of inflation and slow growth known as “stagflation.” The International Energy Agency last week announced a historic release of 400 million barrels of oil reserves. The US said it would release 172 million barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Though Energy Secretary Chris Wright previously said gas would soon be back below $3 a gallon, he appeared to backpedal over the weekend. “There’s no guarantees in wars at all,” Wright told ABC News on Sunday. “I can guarantee the situation would be dramatically worse without this military operation to defang the Iranian regime.” As oil prices have skyrocketed over the past few weeks, small investors have poured money into exchange-traded funds with oil ties – with some analysts comparing the trend to meme stock frenzies like GameStop. Net retail buying of oil ETFs jumped to a record $211 million last Thursday – above the previous record high during the pandemic-era swings in May 2020, according to Vanda Research. nypost.com/2026/03/16/bus…
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Matt Van Swol
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol·
Just so we are all on the same page... There was never a housing problem. There was an illegal immigration problem. There was never a debt problem. There was a fraud problem. There was never a border problem. There was an enforcement problem. There was never a crime problem. There was a prosecution problem. There was never a homelessness problem. There was a fraudulent NGO problem. There was never a failing school system problem. There was an indoctrination problem. There was never a funding problem. There was a theft problem. There was never a healthcare affordability problem. There was an illegal alien free-load problem. There was never an American dream problem. There was a Democrat problem.
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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
@MoundLore Relics of the early mining unfortunately include mercury and cyanide. They're still causing problems: Legacy mining mercury still pollutes Nevada rivers, raising concerns across Mountain West share.google/sowXuKbBHaKs74…
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MoundLore
MoundLore@MoundLore·
The Comstock Lode produced 200 million ounces of silver and it consumed hundreds of millions of board feet of timber. When the strike near Virginia City, Nevada erupted in 1859, miners quickly drove tunnels deep underground. But you see deep mines collapse without support. So engineers built them out of wood. Using Philip Deidesheimer’s square-set timbering system, entire chambers were framed with interlocking beams. Historians estimate the Comstock mines consumed 600–750 million board feet of lumber. Forests across the eastern Sierra Nevada were cut to feed the mines. Whole mountainsides of pine and fir became underground supports. To keep the timber moving, the Virginia & Truckee Railroad hauled logs from the Sierra Nevada to Virginia City through the 1860s and beyond. Inside the mines, the beams stacked so densely that visitors said the tunnels looked like an underground forest. The Comstock created enormous silver wealth. But the structure holding those mines together came from somewhere else. The forests of the Sierra Nevada. Silver came out of the mountain. But the mine itself was made from the forest above it. In the end the Comstock Lode didn’t just dig into the earth. It turned an entire mountain range into a mine.
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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
𝗖𝗮𝗹𝗶𝗳𝗼𝗿𝗻𝗶𝗮 𝗴𝗮𝘀 𝗽𝗿𝗶𝗰𝗲𝘀: 𝗡𝗲𝗲𝗱𝗹𝗲𝘀, 𝗖𝗔 $𝟲.𝟵𝟬/𝗴𝗮𝗹𝗹𝗼𝗻 60 miles further in Kingman, AZ it's half the price. $3.53/gallon
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ColonelTowner-Watkins
ColonelTowner-Watkins@ColonelTowner·
Unfortunately Brad is a clear example of institutional capture. It’s hard to wrap my head around a retired Army officer teaching at a PME school, doxxing another retired Army officer that he disagrees with bc of his politics. It’s the equivalent of an ALO lighting up a “friendly” to eliminate the competition back home bc he felt threatened by a team mate. He personifies the institutional rot and evil nature of ppl in a system that will sacrifice everything and everyone for “the system”. Mentioning Powell as an icon is brain numbingly retarded. I’ve met Powell a few times. Everyone I met at the Pentagon (Army of otherwise) had zero respect for him except the politicians. He was a useful tool. He, like Brad, sold his soul. Powell was referred to as a Beltway bandit. Even when he wasn’t assigned in DC he was a frequent visitor. He was a paper general and not a leader, so it’s no surprise Brad would put him on a pedestal while throwing .@CynicalPublius in front of the approaching enemy forces. The positive: Brad exposes the danger .@PeteHegseth identified as hazardous to the future of our military. Instead of intellectually engaging a peer, he picked up a proverbial weapon and stabbed him in the back. He personifies the PME cadre that are spineless, vile, intellectually weak personnel teaches our war fighters while clinging to the losers of yesteryear that spent 3 decades attriting our military in body bags. Brad blocked me a long time ago because he is a weak man with zero balls. Fuck you Brad, may you rot in hell with the rest of your idols.
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DataRepublican (small r)@DataRepublican

Hello Brad Duplessis, You pre-emptively blocked me here on 𝕏, so I am forced to make this "Hello" a standalone post. You are a retired Army infantry officer. You served in Iraq and Afghanistan. You graduated from the National War College in 2018. You are now an Assistant Professor at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Belvoir, Virginia. Thank you for your service. But reputations are not defined by resumes. They are defined by choices. Today, you chose to doxx @CynicalPublius. Today, you published your debut article on War on the Rocks. You published his legal name. His profession. His pseudonym. All in one sentence. Indexed, archived, permanently searchable. You have changed the course of his life forever, and revealed him to the leftist ghouls who will demand his blood for forever. It doesn't matter if he was planning to reveal his identity eventually. You still made that choice. And I will make sure you are remembered for this. So, what was CP's sin such that you saw it fit to throw him to the wolves? Last month, he dared to write an article for American Greatness, centered around nine recommendations for War College reform. The recommendations included firing most civilian faculty and ending permanent military faculty positions. You hold a permanent civilian faculty position at a War College. You did not mention this in your article. In short, you named him, exposed his life to danger, because you really are arguing for your job and self-preservation. Know what is the most disgusting, hypocritical part of this is? In the Fall 2017 issue of eARMOR (the U.S. Army Armor Branch professional journal) you published an article. You titled it "Our Readiness Problem: Brigade Combat Team Lethality." You opened with General Milley: "Our fundamental task is like no other — it is to win in the unforgiving crucible of ground combat." Your thesis: "If we are to get after GEN Milley's No. 1 priority, we must first address brigade combat team (BCT) lethality." The word "lethality" appears in your article about fifty times. You meant it as a compliment. Now contrast to today's piece. You wrote this: "In staking out this Huntingtonian position, the cult of lethality does a disservice to service members and the American people." The same word. Nine years apart. You were a field commander then, and lethality was the mission. You are a faculty member now, and lethality is what your critics embarrassingly worship. Frankly - and you will never realize this - but you yourself are the living, walking example of the thesis which @PeteHegseth is proving. Also, you named a section of today's article after Colin Powell. You called him your model of what War College education produces. Colin Powell endorsed Barack Obama in 2008, endorsed Joe Biden in 2020, and publicly called Donald Trump "dangerous for our democracy." Powell, who infamously tipped the scales at the UN to start the Iraq war even after privately doubting the WMD intelligence, is your hero in an article about who gets to reform the military in 2026. In addition to being a doxxer, you look a lot less like someone who's defending institutions, and a lot more like someone who exemplifies institutional capture in the name of self-preservation. And you disclosed none of it. Let me reiterate. @CynicalPublius wrote under a pseudonym and identified himself as a retired Army colonel with Afghanistan and Iraq experience. He argued about curriculum policy. You responded by putting his name on the internet. Your career depends on the institutions you are defending. Your article defending those institutions is the same article that ended his anonymity. You taught your students about the instruments of national power, Professor Duplessis. You are now a living, breathing demonstration one of them. And why reform must happen.

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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
My brother worked off shore rigs and boats. Their number 1 recruitment tool - food quality. Anyone working hard, long hours, away from home puts a high value on a decent meal. MORE SO in the military, where it's easy to essentially be eating backpacking food for weeks at a time. That fresh, well prepared food means a lot.
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Buzz Patterson
Buzz Patterson@BuzzPatterson·
I don’t give a shit what Democrats think. If you’ve ever been deployed thousands and thousands of miles away from home and family and lived in miserable conditions eating MRE’s, you truly value senior leadership when they think of you! Steak and lobster dinners bring America to us! And morale soars! Pete thought of our troops and Democrats can fuck off. All the way. @PeteHegseth
Steve 🇺🇸@SteveLovesAmmo

I ate MREs for months in RC-East Afghanistan, flew in to Bagram and had steak and lobster on a Friday. Deployed troops should get this every night.

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Mark Orme
Mark Orme@morme1·
Different not better. Dad grew up in poverty, worked his ass off to make sure we did not. Lots of love. Time- whenever possible, still a bunch of camping and positive time. Tough/Hard, unwavering- to the point of being scary. Me: More time with kids, more activities more homework help... Less strict. Give me another 10 years to determine which is better! 😂
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Geoffrey Miller
Geoffrey Miller@gmiller·
Men who have kids: Are you a better dad to your kids than your dad was to you?
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Mark Orme@morme1·
Completely unnecessary. Shrinking population = fewer "bids" on homes, and a significant downward pressure on prices. Solves itself- exceptions for "special" areas. Montecito - Oprah, Megan & Harry, Movie stars, Rock n rollers ...... Median home price $7.5 million!🤣 Of course the population is dropping- not really a neighborhood for young kids!
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Hunter📈🌈📊
Hunter📈🌈📊@StatisticUrban·
We should pass some sort of national law where, if: - A city's population drops from one year to the next for two years consecutively, and - The median house exceeds the median household income by >3.0x All zoning laws for residential construction are immediately pre-empted.
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