Adam

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Adam

Adam

@realadjo

Reformed attorney. Lover of Liberty 🇺🇸 bourbon 🥃 and Hawkeyes ⬛️🟨.

Milwaukee, WI Katılım Eylül 2012
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Adam
Adam@realadjo·
@theblaze @grok “He gave $5,800 to Adam Kinzinger after Jan. 6” WTF is wrong with Oklahoma?
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Adam
Adam@realadjo·
@theblaze @grok What do we know about Armstrong’s political ideology?
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TheBlaze
TheBlaze@theblaze·
Oklahoma governor names political outsider to replace Markwayne Mullin dlvr.it/TRgYS9
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Owen Gregorian
Owen Gregorian@OwenGregorian·
Two-Fifths of American Women Want to Permanently Move Overseas | Amy Curtis, Townhall Almost a year ago, we learned that more than half of Leftist women between the ages of 18 and 29 have at least one diagnosed mental illness. It shows. There's a reason we refer to them as AWFULs — Affluent White Female Urban Leftists — after all. Now it turns out a significant number of those women between the ages of 15 and 44 want to leave the U.S. and move permanently overseas, according to Gallup. 40% of American women, ages 15-44, would like to permanently move overseas, if possible, per Gallup. — unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) March 23, 2026 To that, we say, don't let the door hit ya. Contrary to the narrative, women in America are not oppressed. They have not been stripped of their rights or freedoms, and they're not in any danger from President Trump or Republicans. But because Trump Derangement Syndrome is real, no amount of logic will get these women to see that they will not have it better anywhere else. In fact, one woman moved to Costa Rica to escape President Trump and regretted it. But the consensus is that no one would be sad to see them go. This might actually be good Send them away, let them express renounce citizenship and stop voting, let American men more easily sponsor foreign brides Country could be back on track fast — Rex Panther ☠️ (@shavil0mi) March 23, 2026 The Democrats would take a major hit, losing 40 percent of their voting base. Many of that 40% are the ones you see wandering around with green, purple, or blue hair. — Red Dot in a Blue Dot in a Red State (@reddotaustintx) March 23, 2026 Safest assumption ever. This just in!! Nearly 90% of the 40% who responded have never lived anywhere outside the US longer than a vacation. — Grumpy (@GrumpyDogma) March 23, 2026 Everyone should travel the world. It will make you appreciate America more. But taking a vacation is not the same as living somewhere. Proposal accepted. I would help pay for it if they would each take two illegals with them. — Adam (@realadjo) March 23, 2026 This is not a terrible idea. ... The reality is this: they know, deep down, how good they've got it here. And this is all performative. But at some point, they should either put their money where their mouths are or stop pretending America has been turned into Gilead. It hasn't, and there is no better place for women to live than in America. townhall.com/tipsheet/amy-c…
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Adam
Adam@realadjo·
@NancyMace Not sure who is worse, Graham or Murkowski. Both should be tossed out of office in disgrace.
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Nancy Mace
Nancy Mace@NancyMace·
Lindsey Graham wants American troops on the ground in Iran. Not his kids. Yours. For the price of oil.
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Lara Logan
Lara Logan@laralogan·
Absolutely brilliant - great find. Here it is in their own words - one standard for others, no standard for us. “The SAVE America Act asks Americans to do less than what NDI demands of Nicaragua, less than what NDI praises in Morocco, and far less than the biometric fingerprint-and-facial-recognition system NDI supervised in Nigeria. Eighty-four percent of Americans support photo ID to vote. Two-thirds of Democrats support it. Jimmy Carter's own 2005 bipartisan commission recommended it. You voted no. Your party's international arm, funded with taxpayer money, chaired by your party's former Senate leader (Tom Daschle), staffed by your party's most prominent voting-rights advocate, says yes. For everyone else. NDI's guides are publicly available on their website. You might consider reading them before you spout mindless drivel to protect your own grift.”
DataRepublican (small r)@DataRepublican

Hello Representative Levin, I'd like to introduce you to an organization called the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs. NDI is one of the four core institutes of the National Endowment for Democracy, established by Congress in 1983. It is the Democratic Party's official international arm. Its board members include Stacey Abrams, Donna Brazile, and Michael McFaul. Its previous chair was Madeleine Albright, who served until her death in 2022. Also on the board: Eric Kessler, founder of Arabella Advisors, the largest dark money network in Democratic politics. NDI reported $181.5 million in revenue in fiscal year 2023, nearly all in government grants. NDI's mission, for four decades, has been to tell countries around the world how to run democratic elections. And what NDI consistently tells them, across dozens of countries, is that voter identification is a fundamental pillar of election integrity, and that proving citizenship is a basic prerequisite for participation. Here is what NDI has demanded of other countries: NDI's foundational guide, Building Confidence in the Voter Registration Process (2001), describes voter ID systems as standard democratic infrastructure. It states that voter registries should contain "voters' photographs and even their fingerprints" and that registered voters should be issued "a voter or other ID card that serves as proof of their right to vote." NDI explains that "issuing ID cards, either national or voting, requires a second point of contact between election officials and voters, which introduces an additional safeguard into the system." (pp. 10–11, 15) NDI's 2015 study of voter registration across the Middle East and North Africa goes further, laying out that voters must "prove their identity, essentially demonstrating that they are who they say they are" and must "affirm their citizenship and age." (p. 11) That same 2001 guide identifies married name changes as a routine voter roll maintenance challenge: "Election officials must update information about people who have moved or who have married and changed their surname." NDI also notes that voter lists "may omit information about changes of address or name for those eligible people who have recently moved or married." NDI's recommendation is not to eliminate voter ID. It is to maintain clean, continuously updated voter rolls that accommodate name changes within the system. In its 2009 Bangladesh report, NDI praised the country's new photo-voter list and national ID card system, noting that the ID cards gave "a sense of empowerment and belonging to the disadvantaged and marginalized people of the country, particularly women." Read that again. NDI itself called voter identification empowering for WOMEN! In every case, NDI's position was identical: marriage-related name changes are a solvable administrative problem. The solution is better record-keeping and updated systems. Not fewer safeguards. Not the elimination of voter ID. Your party's own international arm has already solved the problem you bring up. The answer is: maintain the rolls. Update the records. Issue the IDs. Accommodate name changes within the system, don't use them as a reason to have no system at all. The exact opposite of what you push here - refusing to clean voter rolls. By NDI’s own standards, by the standards of your own international soft power branch, YOUR position is the anti-feminist position. The SAVE America Act asks Americans to do less than what NDI demands of Nicaragua, less than what NDI praises in Morocco, and far less than the biometric fingerprint-and-facial-recognition system NDI supervised in Nigeria. Eighty-four percent of Americans support photo ID to vote. Two-thirds of Democrats support it. Jimmy Carter's own 2005 bipartisan commission recommended it. You voted no. Your party's international arm, funded with taxpayer money, chaired by your party's former Senate leader (Tom Daschle), staffed by your party's most prominent voting-rights advocate, says yes. For everyone else. NDI's guides are publicly available on their website. You might consider reading them before you spout mindless drivel to protect your own grift.

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Adam
Adam@realadjo·
@RantyAmyCurtis Mehdi asks a questions. Blocks most replies. 🤣
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Adam@realadjo·
@unusual_whales Proposal accepted. I would help pay for it if they would each take two illegals with them.
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unusual_whales
unusual_whales@unusual_whales·
40% of American women, ages 15-44, would like to permanently move overseas, if possible, per Gallup.
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Charlie Smirkley
Charlie Smirkley@charliesmirkley·
IRS 2023 net gains by state: 🔴 Trump states gained $37.2 B. 🔵 Harris states lost $40.8 B. 🔴 FL $+20.6B 🔴 TX $+5.3B 🔴 SC $+4.1B 🔴 NC $+3.9B 🔴 TN $+2.7B 🔴 AZ $+2.7B 🔴 NV $+1.5B 🔴 ID $+981M 🔵 NH $+743M 🔴 GA $+678M 🔵 CO $+671M 🔵 DE $+562M 🔴 AL $+545M 🔴 MT $+499M 🔵 ME $+494M 🔴 UT $+460M 🔴 AR $+446M 🔴 SD $+258M 🔴 OK $+251M 🔴 WY $+145M 🔵 VT $+87M 🔵 RI $+34M 🔵 HI $+11M 🔴 WV $+10M 🔴 MS $-65M 🔵 NM $-85M 🔴 WI $-109M 🔴 KY $-121M 🔴 ND $-145M 🔴 AK $-211M 🔴 MO $-235M 🔴 NE $-246M 🔴 IA $-271M 🔴 IN $-353M 🔴 KS $-369M 🔵 CT $-495M 🔵 OR $-526M 🔵 WA $-549M 🔴 LA $-806M 🔵 DC $-864M 🔵 VA $-935M 🔴 MI $-1.0B 🔵 MN $-1.5B 🔴 OH $-1.7B 🔵 MD $-1.9B 🔴 PA $-2.3B 🔵 NJ $-2.8B 🔵 MA $-4.2B 🔵 IL $-6.1B 🔵 NY $-10.6B 🔵 CA $-12.9B Net AGI from IRS migration 2022–23.
Charlie Smirkley@charliesmirkley

IRS net migration data is out of 2023: 🔴 Red states gained $37.2 billion in income and 492k filers. 🔵 Blue states lost ~$40.8B and 520k filers. CA −$11.9B, NY −$9.9B, IL −$6.0B, MA −$4.2B, NJ −$2.8B.

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Will Chamberlain
Will Chamberlain@willchamberlain·
Basically every major development in the Iran War has vindicated Trump’s decision to strike. 1) Overwhelming current disparity in traditional military capability = now is a good time to strike, we can destroy their capabilities with limited losses of personnel/material 2) Iran flings ballistics and drones at a nearly a dozen non-combatant neighbors = they are crazy and can’t be trusted with nukes 3) Iran opens negotiations with Witkoff with “we have enough 60% enriched material for 11 bombs and we will not give you anything at the negotiating table that you couldn’t achieve militarily” = diplomacy would not have solved the problem 4) Iran fires ballistics at Diego Garcia = they were not far from having ICBMs that could hit the Eastern Seaboard The case for hitting Iran is STRONGER than it was for ISIS!
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Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
RE: Lawyerly Thoughts I have retired from the law and placed myself in “inactive status” in my two licensed jurisdictions. This finally gives me the freedom to share my unvarnished thoughts on the law and lawyers in a way I have been unable to do so before. I’m thinking of writing a series of lawyerly musings posts that I can later combine into a full length article. This is the first one. I believe I have a unique perspective on the law, having completed a successful military career before I stepped into law school. This meant that I was not wide-eyed and bushy-tailed in law school like most of my full time program (much younger) peers, and my earlier perspectives as a military decision maker made me cautious about some principles that I questioned as potentially being flawed or dangerous. So let’s talk about one: “EVERY CLIENT IS ENTITLED TO ZEALOUS LEGAL REPRESENTATION.” This is a bedrock concept of the practice of law, and one that lawyers are justifiably proud of as it is an essential component of equal justice under the law. But it has its flaws in the modern era. I remember one summer in law school I was an intern in a public defender’s office. One of our cases was a mass rapist who had been terrorizing women in local parks. This guy had blackish eyes that glowed with a sort of deep evil that seemed to come straight from the pits of Hell—it was like out of a horror film. He was as guilty as guilty could be, but we were trying to get him off on a claim of a bad search and seizure of some critical evidence. We were zealously representing a deranged rapist. The guy needed to be locked away for eternity, but we were trying to get him off. I know most lawyers are comfortable with that and consider it righteous, but for me it was the event that convinced me that I wanted nothing to do with criminal law. But that’s small potatoes to what I think is the bigger, profession-wide problem of “zealous representation.” Whether you are a litigator or a corporate lawyer (like I was), “zealous representation” means taking the facts at hand and interpreting them in the way most favorable to your client. I have found that “most favorable” means taking facts and pushing them in a client-favorable way right up to the edge of the line of lying, but not crossing it. You’re not lying, but are you really telling the objective truth? Over time that thought process of twisting facts away from what most reasonable laymen would consider as “true” changes a lawyer’s brain patterns. If you do this enough, you might stop being able to do anything else. Your brain changes, and not in a good way. I often found myself lapsing into this, but thankfully there remained a little portion of my brain that was still an Army colonel, and I think that little voice held me back. What ends up happening to too many lawyers is that every moment of their lives starts to consist of looking for angles to twist whatever facts are at hand into the manner most favorable to them. That’s a slippery slope. That’s why words like “oily” and “sleazy” are so popular when describing lawyers, and why jokes that involve lawyers at the bottom of the ocean as shark food are so popular. The problem is that as long as you never step right over the line into lying, none of this is against legal ethics. I’m not sure how to fix this exactly. Perhaps continuing legal education needs to focus on the limits of “zealous representation.” Or perhaps every lawyer needs to be on watch to not lose their soul. There are so many excellent lawyers that none of this applies to, but there are just as many who have no problem going into total sleaze-mode to win for their client. But then everything they do in life becomes sleaze-mode, and they harm themselves, their families and society as a result. It’s a large-scale problem. Think of this: “It depends of what the meaning of “is” is.” -Slick Willard
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Adam
Adam@realadjo·
@Amer1can_Barbie Lindsey Graham is trying to charter a submarine. 🤣
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Adam@realadjo·
@RealJessica She said the quiet Marxist part out loud.
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Based Jessica
Based Jessica@RealJessica·
New York Gov Kathy Hochul is begging wealthy people who have moved to Florida and Texas to come back to New York and pay taxes. 🤣 "I need people who are high net worth to support the generous social programs that we want to have in our state. Now, there are some patriotic millionaires who stepped up. OK, cut me the checks if you want to be supportive, but maybe the first step should be go down to Palm Beach and see who you can bring back home." "I have to look at the fact that we are in competition with other states who have less of a tax burden on their corporations and their individuals. And I would say remote work changed everything." "There were people who could only work in an office in Manhattan and work in New York state. And they were captives to our state, they were going to stay. We saw that that's not the case. Wall Street businesses looking at Texas, they're not going there because they have a nicer governor. They're going there because of the tax rate."
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Mark Belling
Mark Belling@MarkBellingShow·
Wisconsin State Senate has just voted 21-12 to approve giveaway bill giving state tribes monopoly to operate online sports betting. GOP Senate Leader LeMahieu cuts deal with Democrats to pass bill that many Republicans oppose. The Madison Swamp wins and free market loses again. Will vers sign or veto? My guess is he rolls over to tribes just like Doyle did. Online sports betting should be legal but with competition and no tribal monopoly
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Wisconsin Right Now
Wisconsin Right Now@wisconsin_now·
I just won two major journalism awards for Wisconsin Right Now from the Milwaukee Press Club!! It’s the most prestigious journalism contest in Wisconsin. Best public service story Best critical review I will know the place (1st, 2nd, or 3rd) at the event. I’m especially proud of the public service story because it helped expose an injustice - the criminal charge against disabled Vietnam veteran Fred Smith. The charge was later dismissed. Also my UWM students won 13 awards for work done in my classes, including video, audio, photo, investigative journalism, feature writing, multimedia, etc. Very proud of them.
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