Patrick Robbins

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Patrick Robbins

Patrick Robbins

@pjrobbins8

Saved by Grace. Felicia is the best part of me, dad, MD, MBA. #MIIPs - IR/DR, IO, PEVAR, PAD, Kaizen, QI, #Saints #WhoDatNation. Posts not medical advice

Meridian, MS Katılım Kasım 2012
2.2K Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler
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Mex Asher
Mex Asher@Thatnsukkaboy_·
I worship a God who made me in his image.
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Christ Certified
Christ Certified@ChristCert·
One of the greatest historians of all time decided to disprove the Gospel accounts, read the gospel of Luke and Lo and behold… he became a Christian. AND said Luke was the greatest historian of ALL time. If you honestly examine the evidence, you will become a Christian.
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Saifedean Ammous
Saifedean Ammous@saifedean·
Fun fact of the day: If you don't think inflation has been the biggest problem in the world over the last century, you have been miseducated by people who get paid by inflation.
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RG | BEATS
RG | BEATS@DR_BEATS_KICK·
Can you rt this? Maybe we can make a difference
RG | BEATS tweet media
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Documenting Saylor
Documenting Saylor@saylordocs·
The max one can pay into social security per year is $10,453.20. If you did that every year from age 18 until retirement, the max you’ll get from SS is $4,873 /month. If you put it into an S&P index fund instead, you would receive $32,583 per month. Social Security is a scam.
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Oliver Burdick
Oliver Burdick@oliverburdick·
The odds of one man fulfilling 8 prophecies: 1 in 100 quadrillion 48 prophecies: 1 in 10¹⁵⁷ Yet Jesus fulfilled 353 Old Testament prophecies written centuries before his birth. This is not coincidence, this is proof that He is the Messiah.
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Elon Musk just described how the entire government operates in a single sentence. Musk: “Paying people to do nothing doesn’t make sense.” Then he told a Milton Friedman story that should terrify every bureaucrat on the payroll. Friedman watched workers digging ditches with shovels. He suggested they use excavators instead. Someone pushed back. “But then we’re going to lose a lot of jobs.” Musk: “Friedman says, well, in that case, why don’t you have them use teaspoons?” One sentence. That’s all it took to gut the entire logic of modern government. The teaspoon is not a punchline. It is the actual policy. Every agency that would cease to exist if it actually solved the problem it was created for. Every department that measures success by headcount instead of output. Every approval that routes through nine desks before someone can say yes. Teaspoons. The system doesn’t want excavators. Excavators finish the job. And a finished job is the one thing the system can’t afford. So it hands you a teaspoon. Calls it a career. Gives you a pension for never asking why the ditch took forty years. But this isn’t about laziness. It’s about control. A person digging with a teaspoon doesn’t have time to build something better. Doesn’t have the energy to question the plan. Doesn’t have a thought left to ask if the ditch even needed digging. Busy people don’t ask dangerous questions. That’s the point. The economy doesn’t run on productivity. It runs on the appearance of productivity. Millions of people sit at desks right now doing work a single script could replace by morning. They know it. Their managers know it. The people who sign their budgets know it. But the teaspoon stays in their hand. Because the moment you hand someone an excavator, they finish by noon. And a person with a free afternoon starts thinking. Starts building. Starts wondering why they needed permission to dig in the first place. That’s the thing the system can’t survive. Not unemployment. Free time. Musk didn’t tell a joke on Rogan. He described the longest con in modern governance. Keep them digging. Keep them busy. Keep the teaspoon in their hand so they never look up long enough to see the ditch was pointless from the start. Friedman told that story sixty years ago. He meant it as a warning. The system heard every word. It just made sure everyone kept calling it a joke so no one would recognize it as a confession.
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needGod.net
needGod.net@needGod_net·
Conversation with a Jehovah's Witness (JW)
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JD Vance
JD Vance@JDVance·
It’s been almost two months since President Trump took the bold step of officially forming the Task Force to Eliminate Fraud. We’ve already uncovered tens of billions of dollars in defrauded taxpayer money, prosecuted dozens of fraudsters, and stopped billions in suspicious payments. And we’re just getting started. So why has it taken the federal government until now to finally tackle fraud? Because Andrew Ferguson and I are taking a new approach. Here’s how.
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Lion of Judah
Lion of Judah@divinethree333·
Eternal Mindset: The Tiny Red Mark Imagine ur entire existence as a rope that stretches on forever and ever. Your few short years on this earth? Just a tiny red section on that endless rope. Yet most people are completely obsessed with that one small part chasing comfort, money, pleasure, travel, experiences and ‘living their best life now.’ They stress, grind, save and worry like that tiny red speck is all that matters. The Bible is clear: What u do in this tiny red part determines how u will spend the rest of the rope….for all eternity. The Apostle Paul refused to live for the red part. He said: Forget whats behind. Strain forward. Keep ur eyes locked on the finish line. Live for the moment u stand before God. You only get one chance at this life. It can end at any second. So why are you pouring everything into temporary comfort instead of investing it for what lasts forever? YOLO is a lie. Its a great deception that many live by. Most of the world is living foolishly consumed with the red part while ignoring millions and millions of years ahead. Dont be deceived. Put your faith in Christ. Receive the Holy Spirit. Be born of the Spirit. Turn from sin. Realign ur life and make repentance a lifestyle. We will all live forever. The only question is where. Eternity is coming. Be intentional to live with an eternal mindset and learn to follow Jesus by the power of the Holy Spirit. He will guide you in ur sanctification. The lifelong journey of transformation into the image of Christ (Rom 8:29).
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Uzi
Uzi@UziCryptoo·
Paying about $7,500 a year into social security from age 18 to 67 gets you roughly $3,200 a month in retirement. If you invested that same amount in low-cost mutual funds, you could end up with around $32,000 a month instead. about 10 times more. Social security is a scam.
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Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey
Allie interviewed Dr. Carlos Campo, President and CEO of Museum of the Bible, to talk about the accuracy and legitimacy of the Bible: "If men wanted to write a book, they wouldn't have written a book that makes them look so bad. Over and over again, we see the failures and the foibles of God's people and their rebellion, and if this were just a book written by people who wanted to tell the history of a particular group, they wouldn't include all of this stuff that proves that it's really God who's powerful.” Allie continues on to say, “If someone were to conspire together to try to build a man-made ideology just for power, it wouldn't have been the Bible." Campo responded: "It's true. It's one of the reasons I'm so proud to say I'm a person of this faith, because it doesn't try to hide our past. It doesn't try to say, ‘Look, we serve only perfect people.’” He says, “Despite our sin, God loves us and He has a story of reconciliation to tell us."
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Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
Joe Rogan and Abigail Shrier nailed a truth that feels increasingly rare to say out loud. In our safer, more comfortable era, the threshold for what counts as 'trauma' has dropped hard. Rogan put it simply: the 'worst thing that’s ever happened to you' is totally relative — a dented car can feel like the end of the world if that’s your biggest reference point. Shrier took it further: throughout human history, people lost parents, siblings, homes, and jobs… yet most rebuilt, formed families, showed up for work, and kept living. Resilience was the norm. Today we’re often telling kids that normal life struggles equal trauma they may never fully overcome. This conversation made me pause. It seems like many of us have turned ordinary setbacks into major emotional events. Our comfort might be quietly training people to be more fragile than generations that faced far worse. If we keep labeling everyday hardship as trauma, we risk raising people who lack the toughness that helped humanity survive real adversity for centuries. Have we over-diagnosed trauma and under-taught resilience — or is modern life actually harder on the mind?
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mrredpillz jokaqarmy
mrredpillz jokaqarmy@JOKAQARMY1·
Flock Cameras 📷 a major privacy concern
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