SimSez

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SimSez

SimSez

@sez_sim

Katılım Nisan 2017
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Art
Art@ZarkFiles·
People ask me constantly: do the clones actually vote? New York law is clear. One person. One voter ID. I've documented 2 million records that violate that law — 1.5 million still in the database, another half million deleted. But do they vote? I analyzed 5 snapshots of the NY state voter file spanning 2021–2025. I looked for clone groups — records sharing the same name and date of birth but carrying different state ID numbers — where two or more members each show a vote in the same federal general election. The table below shows what I found. 9,386 unique identity groups. Two or more different ID numbers. Same person. Same election. Both voted. That is not one vote recorded twice. These are separate records with separate IDs. Under the law, each one counts as a separate vote. And before anyone asks — the zeros for 2022 and 2024 in the early snapshots are not missing data. Those elections had not happened yet when those snapshots were taken. This is a floor, not a ceiling. I'll explain why in the next post.
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Angela Rose
Angela Rose@angelaroosee·
Is it possible for a Custom Crush Winery making 400,000 bottles per year (the amt needed to be worth $5M) to have $5M in expenses? Is it possible for a DC Consulting Firm operating out of a WeWork in DC to have $29.9M in expenses? In this video we learn simple math, and show how simple it is to provide documentation of travel and business expenses. I use my expose travels and youtube earnings as the example to show Ilhan Omar how simple a profit and loss statement is. My profit margin on the Ilhan Omar videos is about 50.74% overall. I spent a lot on car rentals, ubers, next day flights, etc because I am so curious as to WHAT THE HECK is going on lol How is it possible that her businesses without the expenses these businesses typically have, could have brought them down to the 18-95k range?
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🇺🇸 Ronald Carter
🇺🇸 Ronald Carter@USronaldcarter·
🚨 here's the chain of events you need to see.. Spencer Pratt sits down with CBS for a full hour.. CBS fact-checks Karen Bass on camera.. CBS "gets the call".. CBS cuts the interview to 5 minutes.. Pratt posts about it publicly.. calls it a hit piece.. the internet loses its mind.. demands the real version.. CBS quietly drops a 30-minute extended cut.. and here's the part nobody's connecting.. the only reason any of this happened is because Pratt went public.. if he stayed quiet.. you never see 30 seconds of that interview.. let alone 30 minutes.. a sitting mayor allegedly called a major network after getting fact-checked.. and the network folded.. until the public got loud enough that folding the other way was the safer move.. that's not journalism.. that's damage control with a rewind button.. the system worked for someone today.. just not for you. I'll keep you updated. Turn on notifications. 🚨
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
The man who was caught paying the homeless for signatures in Los Angeles and then swung at reporters when questioned about it has been identified His name is Philip Deshaun Brunson, a 50 year old man from Detroit, Michigan with a prior criminal history He was in California working as a paid signature gatherer. He travels from state to state and does this American taxpayers can’t even fathom the organized fraud taking place Imagine how many other people are getting paid to do this too
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Reverend Jordan Wells
Reverend Jordan Wells@WellsJorda89710·
🚨Peak Obama hypocrisy just hit different.🚨 Watching Barack Obama lecture President Trump about the “dangers” of weaponizing the DOJ against political opponents — with ZERO remorse for what his own side did — proves exactly what a colossal hypocrite he is. Here’s the actual record of lawfare they unleashed on Trump and Republicans: Obama laid the foundation: • Crossfire Hurricane: FBI launched a full counterintelligence op on the Trump campaign using the fake Steele dossier (Clinton-funded dirt). FISA abuse on Carter Page, spies in the campaign, illegal unmaskings. Obama was briefed. • IRS scandal: Conservative and Tea Party groups systematically targeted, harassed, and delayed for years while liberal ones got fast-tracked. Lois Lerner and the rest weaponized the tax code. Biden turned it into all-out war: • Four bogus indictments designed to bankrupt, gag, and jail Trump during the campaign — Manhattan hush-money zombie case, Georgia RICO election nonsense, Jack Smith’s two federal cases. • Coordinated raids, leaks, gag orders, and endless lawfare from DOJ, local Democrat prosecutors, and the White House. • Hunter Biden sweetheart treatment while Trump world got the full Gestapo. They tried to remove him from ballots, brand him a “convicted felon,” bankrupt him, and lock him up — all to rig the election. Then Obama has the nerve to lecture about “democracy” and “norms”? No apology. No sympathy for the victims. Just more gaslighting. This is why trust in institutions collapsed. Americans watched the Russia hoax, IRS abuse, two impeachments, and lawfare circus in real time — and they rejected it. Trump survived it all and won anyway. The American people saw through the weaponization of justice. Share this far and wide. The hypocrisy needs to be called out every single time. No more pretending. 🇺🇸 #ObamaHypocrisy #Lawfare #WeaponizedDOJ #TwoTieredJustice #TrumpWon #DeepStateExposed #AmericaFirst #HypocriteInChief
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Samuel Fitoussi
Samuel Fitoussi@SamuelFitouss10·
Pourquoi les intellectuels sont-ils si souvent socialistes ? Les intellectuels pourraient avoir un faible pour les théories qui ouvrent la porte à une forme d’ingénierie sociale, qui impliquent que les changements positifs doivent être impulsés par le haut, de manière verticale. Pourquoi ? Parce que si le progrès naît de la mise en place de la recette de la bonne société, alors les intellectuels sont les garants du bonheur de leurs concitoyens, investis d’une mission : orienter la société vers un avenir meilleur. En revanche, si le progrès advient surtout par le bas, par l’initiative spontanée d’individus, par la société civile, par le marché, alors les intellectuels doivent se limiter à un travail descriptif, et ne peuvent avoir d’influence significative, en tout cas pas d’influence positive significative. « L’idée de reconstruire entièrement la société, notait Hayek, séduit davantage l’intellectuel que les réflexions plus pragmatiques des tenants d’une amélioration graduelle de l’ordre établi. » Dans L’Opium des intellectuels, Raymond Aron raconte que si l’intelligentsia française, pendant la guerre froide, était plutôt hostile aux États-Unis, c’était justement parce que le pays avait enregistré d’immenses progrès grâce à l’entreprise individuelle de ses citoyens plutôt que par le biais d’une idée de génie (le communisme) appliquée à tous. [...] Thomas Sowell, lui, constate que les intellectuels ont tendance à étudier, décrire et s’enthousiasmer pour les périodes de l’Histoire où ont eu lieu des changements législatifs (nouveaux droits, acquis sociaux, etc.) dont ils imaginent pouvoir s’attribuer partiellement le mérite, mais semblent indifférents aux améliorations de la condition humaine, parfois plus significatives, imputables à la vitalité de la société civile (même lorsque ce sont précisément ces progrès qui rendent possibles les acquis sociaux des décennies suivantes). [...] Encore aujourd’hui, les sciences sociales ne se passionnent pas pour l’extraordinaire amélioration des conditions de vie en quelques décennies à Hong Kong, à Singapour, ou en Corée du Sud, permise par la réduction du poids de leurs gouvernements dans l’économie. Ce qui soulève une question : les intellectuels se disant attachés à la justice sociale ont-ils comme priorité l’amélioration du sort des plus malheureux, ou bien l’affirmation de leur propre importance dans l’amélioration du sort des plus malheureux ? « Ce qui préoccupe réellement les doctrinaires, écrivait Gustave Le Bon, ce n’est pas l’avènement du socialisme mais l’avènement des socialistes. » Dans la même veine, l’essayiste Vera Nikolski a montré que les intellectuels sous-estiment l’influence du progrès technique dans la libération de la femme (électroménager, pilule, avortement, augmentation générale de la productivité ayant dévalué l’importance de la force physique) et surestiment celle des idées égalitaristes. Il est aussi amusant de noter qu’au XIXe siècle, pendant que John Stuart Mill appelait les universités à former « des esprits capables d’améliorer et de régénérer la société », décrivant l’élite intellectuelle comme des « têtes pensantes », « en avance sur le reste de la société », « sans qui la vie humaine serait stagnante » , la révolution industrielle transformait radicalement la condition humaine. Elle était menée entre autres par Thomas Edison et Henry Ford, qui n’étaient presque pas allés à l’école, et par les frères Wright (inventeurs du premier avion), qui n’avaient pas le bac. [...] La discussion présente peut offrir une réponse à cette interrogation : comment expliquer la « tyranophilie » des intellectuels ? Pourquoi, tout au long du 20ème siècle, ont-ils affiché une telle complaisance pour les dictateurs de la pire espèce ? Réponse du philosophe Roger Scruton : « Les intellectuels sont naturellement séduits par l’idée d’une société planifiée, car ils pensent qu’ils en seront les responsables. » Selon l’anarchiste russe Bakounine, le but réel des intellectuels marxistes était l’instauration d’une « pédantocratie », c’est-à-dire un régime dans lequel les pédants (ici, les théoriciens marxistes) exerceraient les responsabilités. Le tort des démocraties libérales serait donc qu’étant libérales, elles « laissent une part à l’action spontanée de tous et de chacun, s’interdisent l’ambition de construire l’ordre social selon un plan et de soumettre l’avenir à leur volonté » (Aron). Si à l’inverse, le communisme a tant plu à l'intelligentsia, c’est peut-être car il s’agit, selon la formule de Jan Waclav Makhaïski, d’un « régime basé sur l’exploitation des ouvriers par les intellectuels ». Orwell, dès 1946, livrait la même analyse. Au Royaume-Uni, les intellectuels les plus favorables à Staline, écrivait-il, sont « en général des individus sans éclat, frustrés par le système […], avides de plus de pouvoir et de reconnaissance. Ces individus se tournent vers l’URSS et y voient, ou croient y voir, un système qui élimine la classe supérieure, maintient la classe ouvrière à sa place et accorde un pouvoir absolu aux gens comme eux. […] Leur désir inavoué : remplacer le socialisme égalitaire par une société hiérarchisée où l’intellectuel pourrait enfin s’emparer du fouet ». De retour d’un voyage à Cuba, Simone de Beauvoir, enthousiaste, a raconté la façon dont Sartre, elle-même et Fidel Castro ont arpenté l’île, notamment pour que ce dernier puisse « gronder » les paysans, leur « demander de faire mieux ». Un jour, ils sont passés devant des ouvriers qui construisaient un village. En un coup d’œil, Castro a discerné des défauts dans le projet architectural. Alors il « s’est jeté par terre de tout son long et il a dessiné sur le sable le plan d’un village ; on lui a apporté un bout de carton où il a recopié le plan. Les paysans l’ont acclamé : ils suivront ses indications. » Les ouvriers cubains, relate-t-elle avec ravissement, avaient « tout le temps la tête levée » pour voir si l’hélicoptère de Castro arrivait, avec l’espoir que celui-ci descende du ciel pour les éclairer de ses lumières. On ne peut donner plus belle métaphore de la verticalité. En lisant l’entretien où de Beauvoir dit toute son admiration pour la dictature cubaine, il est difficile de ne pas y déceler une forme de paternalisme intellectuel, une fascination romantique pour un modèle de société où une élite éclairée guide le petit peuple dans le droit chemin. Cela semblait d’ailleurs être l’un des fils directeurs de sa pensée politique. Quelques années plus tôt, elle se réjouissait que le régime maoïste, par son appareil de propagande, tienne le peuple « au courant des événements », « lui en explique le sens et les raisons » et « le forme politiquement ». Comme le notait Orwell, certains intellectuels ne voient pas « la révolution comme un mouvement des masses auxquelles ils souhaitent s’associer ; ils l’envisagent comme un ensemble de réformes que eux, savants, vont imposer aux autres, membres de l’ordre inférieur ».
Rothmus 🏴@Rothmus

It’s not “equality”. Based on Schumpeter’s Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy Lamont makes in his article the case that capitalism rewards practical doers who create value for consumers, while undervaluing abstract verbal brilliance, breeding resentment. Socialism elevates them to central planners & directors with status & protection from markets. TLDR: Capitalism rewards those who do. Socialism elevates those who direct. Note: this view is echoed by thinkers like Nozick and Sowell. Nozick argued intellectuals (“wordsmiths”) develop entitlement in school where verbal brilliance earns top status, then resent capitalism for rewarding practical value-creation for consumers over abstract intellect. Sowell described them as “the anointed” who overestimate their knowledge for grand social engineering, blame capitalism for society’s ills while ignoring trade-offs and dispersed practical wisdom, and promote visions that elevate their role as planners and critics.

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Ken LaCorte
Ken LaCorte@KenLaCorte·
In 2016, the AG's office subpoenaed me and other top Fox News executives after it convened a Grand Jury and Federal fishing expedition against Fox. They went through our emails, flew me across the country, and interrogated us under oath. My legal fees alone were over $100,000. After a year, they quietly dropped it. No charges. No apologies.
TheBlaze@theblaze

Obama: "The White House shouldn't be able to direct the AG to go around prosecuting whoever the president wants prosecuted. You can't have a situation where whoever is in charge of the government starts using that to go after their political enemies or reward their friends."

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SimSez@sez_sim·
@JasonJournoDC No surprise the CPUSA declined as the Democrats shifted left and adopted their planks.
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Jason Cohen 🇺🇸
Jason Cohen 🇺🇸@JasonJournoDC·
💥NEW VDH: “I don’t even think it’s a Democratic Party. I don’t think we should even use that term anymore. It’s a Jacobin party … the 1992 and 1996 platforms under Clinton would be called racist and fascist! … This isn’t Democrats. This is something COMPLETELY different.”
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America First Legal
America First Legal@America1stLegal·
BREAKING — AFL obtained new documents revealing Minnesota allowed THOUSANDS of voters to register under its “vouching” policy that allows people to register WITHOUT providing proof of residency, as long as a registered voter “vouches” for them. No proof. Just the honor system.
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Rand Paul
Rand Paul@RandPaul·
The DOJ's deadline to charge Fauci for lying under oath about funding gain-of-function research in Wuhan is in 6 days. We can’t allow the statute of limitations to run out. He MUST be charged! Agree? RT.
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Willis Eschenbach
Willis Eschenbach@WEschenbach·
Hilarious. The Michigan Democrat Convention is in disarray because they didn't use voter ID, and people voted who shouldn't. I mean, who would have guessed? w. statenews.com/article/2026/0…
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SimSez@sez_sim·
@RichardGrenell California voters should take notes from Venezuela's opposition party, who in latest election tallied the result with enough independent rigour that they proved Maduro stole the election. CA Dems will steal this result in any way possible.
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Richard Grenell
Richard Grenell@RichardGrenell·
Carl Demaio deserves enormous credit for getting the voter ID initiative on the California ballot. He was relentless. He was focused for a very long time. We all must now support this initiative to pass voter ID in America’s largest state. This is an incredible moment for not just California, but for America. We need national money for this initiative. Changing California changes Washington, DC.
Carl DeMaio@carldemaio

CA Dems have finally made it official: they want non-citizens voting in our elections. A new measure in LA would allow the city to extend voting rights to non-citizens. This should come as no shock, but here's how we can fight back - WATCH: youtube.com/watch?v=EMZkf6…

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SimSez@sez_sim·
@AJMarquesMendes @sfliberty I think it does: young people, unmoored from religion, nation and shared civic pride, trained in nihilistic philosophy get attracted to a passionate, unified bloc no matter the actual content of the bloc's beliefs or actions. Belonging as wrapping for an Authoritarian project.
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Students For Liberty
Students For Liberty@sfliberty·
She escaped the Gestapo in 1933. Then she spent 18 years asking one question: What actually creates tyranny? Some would say ideology and propaganda. Others would point to a strongman seizing power. Her answer was something far more ordinary, and far more dangerous. 🧵
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Students For Liberty
Students For Liberty@sfliberty·
The truth is that lonely people don't evaluate political arguments on their merits, but on whether accepting them produces belonging. When a large enough portion of a population is atomized, the movement that offers the strongest sense of identity wins. Not the one with the best ideas, the most historically grounded arguments, or the most defensible policies. Arendt offered no political program. Her antidote? The reconstruction of voluntary bonds: real people, real places, real shared action in a common world.
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Rand Paul
Rand Paul@RandPaul·
I've said it from the beginning: lying to Congress is a felony. Destroying federal records is a felony. Advising others to destroy federal records is a felony. Fauci did all three. His adviser was just indicted. Fauci is next. The deadline to prosecute Fauci is May 11. The DOJ must act now. nypost.com/2026/04/28/us-…
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Chicago Flips Red
Chicago Flips Red@FlipChicagoRed·
While the Democratic Party is lying to the masses about the Supreme Court disenfranchising the Black vote, wealthy white liberal racists are funding that narrative. The largest conservative group in Chicago is bringing facts and solutions to help save our city. As you know, three of our members sued the Chicago Teachers Union. You would think local media would speak on it—especially when our First Amendment rights were violated for protesting the fact that our children are not proficient in reading and math, while being taught ideology that should not be in public schools from nursery through 12th grade. As we enter this third chapter, we need to be everywhere like the CTU. Even when CTU isn’t there, a sticker will be. CHICAGO FLIPS RED LLC has a goal of $100,000. We are on a mission to combat the lies and hypocrisy of the Democratic Party, give the younger generation the right to think for themselves, and make sure they have a safe place to come, ask questions, and register to vote. WE NEED ALL HANDS ON DECK.✨🌹🇺🇸 FlipsRed.com #ChicagoFlipsRed
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The🐰FOO
The🐰FOO@PolitiBunny·
Virginia Republicans tried to elect the first black female governor in the country last year. @vademocrats backed the wealthy white woman. @SenLouiseLucas backed the wealthy white woman. @SpeakerDonScott backed the wealthy white woman. @BarackObama backed the wealthy white woman. @NAACP backed the wealthy white woman. @VEA4Kids backed the wealthy white woman. Democrats treated a republican black woman like garbage because she was in the wrong party. So kindly spare us your ‘republicans don’t want black people to vote’ garbage.
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SimSez@sez_sim·
@LeorSapir Agree. It's an example of the structural flaw in Progressivism: once you define radical change as your mode, no achievement is enough--you have to keep doubling down until your latest objectives start erasing earlier and more important gains.
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Leor Sapir
Leor Sapir@LeorSapir·
This is a superb, must-read post. I will disagree with one point, however, which is not central to the thesis of the article but still very relevant. "The gender benders of the 1980s were doing something genuinely radical. They demonstrated that biological sex and gender presentation could be separated without requiring a claim about inner identity. Boy George did not claim to be a woman. Annie Lennox did not claim to be a man. The affirmative model collapses precisely this distinction, insisting that cross-sex presentation is evidence of cross-sex identity and that discomfort with gender norms is evidence of gender incongruence. The gender benders suggested something different and developmentally more liberating. They suggested that the norms themselves were the problem, not the person failing to fit them." The distinction being described here, even if possible in theory, seems to me very hard if not impossible to maintain in practice. I don't think it's an accident that Judith Butler, who helped lay the theoretical foundations for the erasure of sex, gained prominence in the context of 1980s gender bending culture. At some point, radical gender bending is bound to invite speculation followed by forthright criticism of the very idea that humans are sexually dimorphic and that sex is defined by the organization of the body toward production of one of two distinct gamete types. (Trans, in the contemporary sense, is the theoretically incongruent marriage of this idea to that of "gender identity," which evolves out of 1960s psychology.) That's not to suggest that deviation from traditional sex roles is bad or should be condemned. It can, of course, be liberating and, up to a point, good. And it must be tolerated in a society that values free expression. But the notion that a clear, bright line can be drawn and--crucially--enforced between David Bowie-like gender bending and what we've come to know as gender ideology is one I find unconvincing. The attitudes and institutions that permit the one will, with time, almost certainly compel the other.
Read some Piaget please!@prof_curiosity1

x.com/i/article/2049…

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