Nick Gordon

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Nick Gordon

Nick Gordon

@nick_jcg

“If men had postponed the search for knowledge and beauty until they were secure, the search would never have begun”

Aberdeen, Scotland Katılım Ağustos 2011
301 Takip Edilen202 Takipçiler
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
Watching back @ChrisWillx and @ericweinstein’s last conversation from six months ago in anticipation for the new episode of Modern Wisdom. This clip about the prospect of Kamala Harris replacing an unfit Joe Biden is telling. Truly fascinating to see how the media have turned Kamala from an obviously inept candidate to Saviour of the West in a heartbeat.
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@Not_the_Bee Can only imagine the mental gymnastics she must do at every Super Bowl
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Not the Bee
Not the Bee@Not_the_Bee·
In all honesty I think there’s a real chance the woman doesn’t even know what a Roman numeral is
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Not the Bee
Not the Bee@Not_the_Bee·
She accidentally said her net worth in millions. Standard slip of the tongue.
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@MattWalshBlog Omar finally learns to count to a higher number than her fingers will aid with and she’s universally mocked. It’s a shame this is what we have descended into.
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Matt Walsh
Matt Walsh@MattWalshBlog·
God forbid we ever have World War 3, Ilhan Omar will think we’re on World War One Hundred Eleven
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@Not_the_Bee Omar finally learns to count to a higher number than her fingers will aid with and she’s universally mocked. We should celebrate others achievements, not belittle them!
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@PaulaYScanlan Omar finally learns to count to a higher number than her fingers will aid with and she’s universally mocked. Us Brits were taught that Americans celebrated others achievements. Clearly not!
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@Veritas_KA @pureMetatron He requested it to be blocked, and because their blocking is an automated system, it recognised the video was on Hijab’s platform first, it complied. YouTube reviewing it so it should be overturned.
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Metatron
Metatron@pureMetatron·
Signaling this. Abusing the copyright strike feature because you're butthurt you lost a debate is the ultimate sin within the YouTube space. It doesn't matter who does it or where they stand. It doesn't matter if they have your politics, your religion etc. This ModammedHijab guy should remove the strike immediately, or we should all make videos about it to call him out. Supporting @GodLogic_GL on this. He is in the right.
GodLogic_GL@GodLogic_GL

Dear @TeamYouTube: The YouTube channel (@MohammedHijab) is abusing the copyright system to attack other channels. Here is a video clip of him giving me VERBAL CONSENT to put our discussion on my channel. After I posted it, he filed a copyright complaint. Why is this being allowed? Are people allowed to deceptively give verbal consent to post content in order to get the person a strike? Video that got struck: youtube.com/watch?v=vxPkAv…

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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@Veritas_KA @pureMetatron Under fair use law, unless there was a specific agreement to NOT post the video, then the default would be shared ownership of the intellectual property.
Nick Gordon tweet media
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Veritas
Veritas@Veritas_KA·
@pureMetatron He did say no go live. He didn’t say he can post it on YouTube. Guess depends how YouTube takes it. He gave permission to go live with the debate, not post it on YouTube as videos.
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@pureMetatron Hijab lost a defamation case recently against Douglas Murray after he was found to have lied in court and contrived evidence. Declared himself bankrupt shortly after to get out of paying Murray’s legal fees. He’s nothing short of a complete fraud! spectator.com/article/the-sp…
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@GadSaad Hanged, drawn and quartered would be appropriate, the day after the sentence is handed down.
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Nick Gordon retweetledi
Connor Boyack 📚
Connor Boyack 📚@cboyack·
178 yrs ago today, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels published The Communist Manifesto. It's one of the most influential political documents ever written. It also provided the intellectual blueprint for what became the deadliest ideology in human history. Marx was 29 and Engels was 27 when the Manifesto was published in London on February 21, 1848. Europe was a powder keg. Workers in newly industrialized cities labored in brutal conditions (children included). The old feudal order was crumbling. Poverty was grinding and visible. People were searching for answers. And Marx was a decent observer of problems. Give him that much. His descriptions of industrial exploitation, of workers treated as disposable inputs in a machine, of wealth concentrating among a connected elite while masses suffered: these observations had real substance. He saw genuine suffering and wanted to explain it. Many of the conditions he described were indefensible. Child labor in coal mines. 16-hour workdays. Dangerous factories with no recourse for the injured. These were real problems that deserved real scrutiny. But diagnosing a disease correctly doesn't mean your prescribed cure won't kill the patient. Marx and Engels looked at the suffering around them and concluded that the problem was private property itself, that the solution was the abolition of individual ownership, the centralization of all production in the hands of the state, and the revolutionary overthrow of the existing order by force. The Manifesto doesn't hide this: "The theory of Communists may be summed up in the single sentence: Abolition of private property." They called for centralized control of credit, communication, transport, factories, and education. All of it. In the hands of the state. What they failed to understand, fatally, is that the very problems they identified were largely products of state power, not free exchange. The monopolies, the exploitation, the barriers to advancement that crushed workers in 1848 were enabled by governments granting privileges to the politically connected. The solution to state-enabled cronyism was never more state power. It was less. But the Manifesto's call to revolution spread like wildfire, and the 20th century became its proving ground. The results are now a matter of historical record, and they are staggering. The Soviet Union: roughly 20 million dead under Stalin alone through forced collectivization, purges, and the Gulag system. Mao's China: 40-80 million dead, w/ the Great Leap Forward producing one of the worst famines in recorded history, entirely man-made. Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge: nearly 2 million killed, roughly a quarter of the entire population, in just four years. North Korea, Cuba, Ethiopia, Vietnam, Eastern Europe. The pattern repeated everywhere the ideology took root. Centralized control. Suppression of dissent. Economic collapse. Mass death. The total body count of communist regimes in the 20th century is conservatively estimated at 100 million people. (!!) These weren't casualties of natural disaster or unavoidable tragedy. They were the direct, predictable consequences of an ideology that believed individual rights could be sacrificed for the collective, that a vanguard class of planners could allocate resources better than millions of free people making voluntary decisions, and that the ends justified any means necessary to achieve utopia. Every single time, the utopia never arrived. What arrived instead was poverty, surveillance, political imprisonment, and death. And yet. Walk through any university campus today and you'll find the Manifesto assigned sympathetically in classrooms, Marx quoted approvingly by tenured professors, and hammer-and-sickle imagery worn without a shred of the revulsion that would rightly accompany any other symbol of mass murder. Imagine wearing a swastika to class. Now ask yourself why the communist equivalent gets a pass despite a higher death toll. The answer, I think, is that Marx's diagnosis still resonates emotionally. People see inequality, suffering, exploitation, and they want someone to blame and something to fix it. The Manifesto offers both: blame the property owners, and fix it with revolution. It's seductive in its simplicity. It validates resentment and promises justice. But resentment isn't a foundation for a just society. Envy dressed up as compassion is still envy. And centralizing power in the hands of the state doesn't liberate workers. It replaces one set of masters with another, only now those masters have absolute authority and no competition. Free markets aren't perfect. But they're the only system in human history that has consistently reduced poverty, increased prosperity, and respected individual choice. The answer to exploitation has always been more freedom, not less. More competition, not central planning. More individual rights, not collective ownership enforced at gunpoint. The Communist Manifesto turns 178 today. Read it if you haven't. Know what it says. Understand its appeal. Then look at what happened every single time someone tried to implement it. Ideas have consequences. These ideas had 100 million of them.
Connor Boyack 📚 tweet mediaConnor Boyack 📚 tweet mediaConnor Boyack 📚 tweet media
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@scotlandscoeff1 Ahhhhh, crafty! I hadn’t considered games not involving Scotland. Knew there had to be a more specific link or you could have used any stadium from each qualifying group. Great trivia, cheers!
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Scotland’s Coefficient
Scotland’s Coefficient@scotlandscoeff1·
@nick_jcg You're correct, but to be even more precise, it's the stadium in which our qualification was secured. Not always in a match involving Scotland (Norway Vs Spain last time for example)
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Scotland’s Coefficient
Scotland’s Coefficient@scotlandscoeff1·
What do Racecourse ground Hampden Park Anfield Windsor Park Olympic Park Vasil Levski National Stadium Luzhniki Stadium Celtic Park Rajko Mitić Stadium Ullevaal Stadion all have in common?
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Julian Dorey
Julian Dorey@juliandorey·
@nick_jcg @TokeMalone i cut off 5-6 inches 2 months ago and been trimming it once a month since i like it this length
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Julian Dorey
Julian Dorey@juliandorey·
we’re halfway there
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Nick Gordon retweetledi
Tim Allen
Tim Allen@ofctimallen·
When Erika Kirk spoke the words on the man who killed her husband: “That man… that young man… I forgive him.”  That moment deeply affected me.  I have struggled for over 60 years to forgive the man who killed my Dad. I will say those words now as I type: “ I forgive the man who killed my father.” Peace be with you all.
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@AberdeenFC Are you sure? The players haven’t turned up to a game this season!
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Aberdeen FC
Aberdeen FC@AberdeenFC·
On location.
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@michaelmalice It’ll blow his mind when he finds out Karl Marx’s father hadn’t even heard of communism.
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Michael Malice
Michael Malice@michaelmalice·
in this case, it's pretending one's ideology is genetic
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Mile High Trucker@stlowell

@michaelmalice What lie? Do you mean about the angry white boy who has two Republican parents, grew up ultra conservative Utah, and went to a conservative college?

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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
The world has lost one of the good guys. Devastated for Charlie’s family. RIP
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Nick Gordon
Nick Gordon@nick_jcg·
@AscendedYield Without a doubt, non-combative sport. Including Scotland, the UK is the birthplace of most of the world’s most popular sports.
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camilo
camilo@AscendedYield·
England’s greatest cultural contribution to the world?
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