@NatureofHistory@histories_arch Democrats are considered the lowest of the low.
Especially those that create hyperinflation like retards Carter and Biden.
Carter, responsible for the dept of education. Fast forward 40 years…America is ranked dead last in education.
@rfizzle3249@histories_arch Do you have an engineering degree from Annapolis, like Carter had? 🤔
I see you golf. Do you know about Trump's reputation for cheating at golf? He's notorious.⬇️
I'm sure you know that most golfers consider cheaters the lowest of the low. Do you agree?
palmbeachpost.com/story/news/tru…
On September 15, 1979, President Jimmy Carter entered the Catoctin Mountain Park Run, a 6.2-mile (10K) race organized by his own White House near Camp David in Maryland.
Carter had only taken up jogging the previous year, though he trained hard, averaging 40 to 50 miles per week by the summer of 1979.
The Catoctin course was notoriously hilly, rated an 8 out of 10 in difficulty by veteran road runners.
Carter wore a yellow headband and the number 39 on his T-shirt, starting near the front of the pack.
He split his first mile uphill in 8 minutes 25 seconds, then pushed even faster through his second mile in 7:45.
He was attempting to cut a full four minutes off his previous best time on the course, pushing from 50 minutes down to 46.
Around the four-mile mark, nearing the crest of a steep hill, Carter began to moan and falter, his face turning ashen and his legs going rubbery before a Secret Service agent caught him as he began to fall.
Initial fears at the White House were that the 54-year-old president had suffered a heart attack.
White House physician Dr. William Lukash diagnosed heat exhaustion, and Carter was given smelling salts and at least one liter of salt water intravenously.
Remarkably, about 90 minutes after the collapse, Carter stood at the finish line handing out trophies to the winners.
Photos of the ashen, staggering president flashed around the world almost immediately.
The images of a faltering Carter became a powerful political metaphor, with commentators drawing direct comparisons to his struggling presidency, suggesting he should step aside in the 1980 race just as he had stepped aside in the footrace. The incident raised questions about his general wellbeing and fitness for office, amplifying doubts that were already circulating as his approval ratings sagged and Democratic challenger Ted Kennedy prepared a primary challenge. The collapse crystallized a broader public narrative that Carter was a man overextended and overwhelmed, personally and politically, becoming one of the most enduring symbolic images of his troubled final years in office.
#archaeohistories
The big robot standing guard is Megatron (Transformers).
The blue skeleton with the skull goblet is Skeletor (He-Man).
The armored guy in the helmet chowing down is Shredder (TMNT).
The bald dude pondering with the tiny gun is Dr. Evil (Austin Powers).
The rest are fellow 80s cartoon baddies in a fun crossover mashup—winged horn guy looks like Venger (D&D cartoon).
Empty "MAD" chair is clearly saving a spot for the next recruit!
The man who reportedly has apparently the highest IQ claims he can prove with maths the existence of God. Have a listen and let me know if you think his logic is sound?
@MattWallace888 I’ve got a question for all you “deniers”, all you idiots, who think this whole thing was fake; WHY? Why would NASA, (the federal government), go to all the expense and trouble to FAKE it? What would be the motive for doing that?
This elderly man is upset because he lives on a golf course and a group of golfers broke his window with a bad slice. Should homes that lie on courses have extra protection for the windows that face them? Are the golfers responsible for replacing the window? I think it’s the right thing to do; I would.