Chris Renner

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Chris Renner

Chris Renner

@rennerchris

Follower of Christ. WKU ‘97, ‘99

Tennessee, USA Katılım Ocak 2010
494 Takip Edilen258 Takipçiler
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
@PseudoMnemonic It has been so long since the hobbits faced real danger in the Shire that they have forgotten how to defend themselves
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Yukon
Yukon@PseudoMnemonic·
My British brothers, if this is what happens while you're the majority, imagine the horrors once you are the minority. Your window is closing fast. Rise up.
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Chris Renner
Chris Renner@rennerchris·
As of July 4 1776 they weren't. Violence did not necessarily proceed from it, however. That was a choice by the Empire. Doing nothing, or compromise, were also options. But (unlike progressivism) there was no need to use coercion to get people to assent to the principles of independence. The principles were self evidently true. Many colonists remained loyal to Britain, however. Force ended up being required to secure the independence, due to how the Empire decided to respond. But that was not a necessary result of the principles themselves. I reject the premise implied in your initial question.
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PhillyCaralho
PhillyCaralho@CaralhoPhilly·
@rennerchris @GKCdaily No one invaded them. The land was British. How can British people invade themselves? Everyone in the colonies was British.
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G. K. Chesterton
G. K. Chesterton@GKCdaily·
I do not condemn Communism because it is violent and revolutionary. I condemn Communism because it is false. I condemn it because it is an erroneous ethical theory of the normal life of man.
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Chris Renner
Chris Renner@rennerchris·
My understanding is they have to sell high enough to cover the cost of what's in the ground now. You can't just cut your price on gas that you bought high just because buying more now would be cheaper. You'd lose money on that tanker full that is already bought and in your tanks.
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Chris Renner
Chris Renner@rennerchris·
@CaralhoPhilly @GKCdaily Actually I think an invading force occupied them--as a result of a declaration of truths--and they resisted. How aggression by a foreign occupier is a direct result of those principles is a bit of a leap.
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Chris Renner
Chris Renner@rennerchris·
@CaralhoPhilly @GKCdaily I'm just asking you for a definition, so we can operate of the same set of presuppositions. Surely you're capable of defining revolution?
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PhillyCaralho
PhillyCaralho@CaralhoPhilly·
@rennerchris @GKCdaily Are you claiming the American revolution was not a revolution? What level of pedantry are you aiming for?
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Chris Renner
Chris Renner@rennerchris·
@CaralhoPhilly @GKCdaily What a non sequitur. The British fired first. The principles behind independence were not inherently violent.
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Rocketshipalx
Rocketshipalx@rocketshipalx·
My thoughts after 3 months in the US/Texas🇺🇸: - Americans are way more extroverted than Europeans - Talking to strangers is normal here - My first H-E-B trip felt like Boris Yeltsin seeing an American grocery store - Some food is more artificial, but the amount of choices is insane - You can still eat healthy. You just have to choose it - High risk, high reward is real - Way more people are entrepreneurial - People dream bigger than in Europe, and they actually execute - Obv not everyone is smarter, but the smart people are world-class - Successful people here are way more down-to-earth. In Europe, successful people care about status and can be arrogant - Cars. Enough said - Americans have perfected artificial sweets - There’s still more freedom here than in Europe - One thing I didn’t expect: some Americans talk down on America - As an outsider, that’s weird, because imo it’s still the greatest country on Earth🇺🇸🇺🇸
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Chris Renner
Chris Renner@rennerchris·
@NC5 Hendersonville needs a Sir Pizza.
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Paul David Tripp
Paul David Tripp@PaulTripp·
During my years as a biblical counselor, I met with hundreds of workaholics and the families they left in the dust. These men and women were followers of Christ, members of a local church and readers of the Bible, but fundamentally dysfunctional when it came to their work. This shouldn't be surprising: because "the office" is such a significant dimension of our lives, it's very easy for our sin to infiltrate this environment. It impacts us in three common ways: 1. The office can make us feel able and competent. 2. In the office, even if it's over just one person or project, we get to flex our muscle and command co-workers and budgets. 3. Our culture paints the good life with lavishly furnished homes, luxury cars, overflowing wardrobes and flashy jewlery. If money is the key to unlocking those things, and the office is the doorway to money, no wonder we spend the majority of our time there! Don't be afraid to be ambitious with your career; don't be afraid to take a role of authority at your workplace; don't feel guilty for enjoying comfort after a long day of work. But, don't look to those things for your identity. Live in awe of God and let that impact everything you think, say and do in the office.
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Matt Smethurst
Matt Smethurst@MattSmethurst·
Mark Dever recently suffered a serious cardiac event. The Lord graciously spared his life, and Mark is recovering well. In God’s providence, listen to what he said on his most recent appearance on @9Marks’ 𝘗𝘢𝘴𝘵𝘰𝘳𝘴 𝘛𝘢𝘭𝘬. Praying for this dear brother.
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Perry E. Metzger
Perry E. Metzger@perrymetzger·
In the ancient world, the way many people gained great wealth was by forming gangs of strong men, beating up their neighbors, and taking their stuff. People still speak with admiration of men like Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar, but they were little better than gangsters who enriched themselves through armed robbery. This was a negative sum game, and assured that people remained poor and unhappy for thousands of years. Eventually, however, we figured out that respecting each other’s rights, building things, and trading meant that we could play positive sum games instead. We could increase the amount of wealth, and all would benefit. As a result, we moved from living in unheated shacks to living in what our ancestors would’ve thought of as paradise in only a few hundred years. However, there are still people out there who think that beating someone up and taking their stuff is a really great idea. It is the great task of our civilization to shun such people, as they are not fit to be part of society.
they/them might be giants ☭@babadookspinoza

If we liquidated Elon Musk as a financial entity we could each pocket $3,000. Just putting that out there. 3K. Not bad.

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Chris Renner
Chris Renner@rennerchris·
@AustinKingMT Agree. We are AT&T customers but I can’t stand being hassled. We purposefully go out of our way to avoid waking past them.
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Austin King
Austin King@AustinKingMT·
Costco needs to get rid of the AT&T people. Sir, I'm here to buy 8 pounds of chicken wings, 600 paper plates, and a years supply of oil for my truck, not be harassed about changing my phone plan.
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Gabor Gurbacs
Gabor Gurbacs@gaborgurbacs·
If you took $1 Trillion from Elon (assuming it was cash), it would run the U.S. government for 49 days. Not even 2 months. The U.S. doesn't have a billionaire/trillionaire problem, it has a spending problem.
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Ron DeSantis
Ron DeSantis@RonDeSantis·
Incomes not keeping pace with inflation has been the persistent economic issue for tens of millions of Americans for quite some time. When Congress borrows trillions and runs massive deficits, it is still an effective tax increase — it just comes in the form of higher prices.
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter

BREAKING: May CPI inflation rises to 4.2%, the highest level since April 2023. Core CPI inflation also rises to 2.9%, the highest since September 2025. Inflation in the US is officially back above 4% and more than double the Fed's target. Odds of Fed rate hikes are rising.

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