steve miller

27.3K posts

steve miller

steve miller

@stevemiNumbers

IT Professional. 2A supporter. Veteran and Patriot. Southerner. Follower of Jesus. Reformed.

Katılım Kasım 2013
879 Takip Edilen514 Takipçiler
Shipwreckedcrew
Shipwreckedcrew@shipwreckedcrew·
Whether Iran was an “imminent threat” or not depends on … How you define “imminent” and How you define “threat.”
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John Ziegler
John Ziegler@Zigmanfreud·
The @nytimes is being lavished with praise by the virtue-signaling brigade, but there are very basic problems with their Cesar Chavez story… -The “evidence” doesn’t come close to the threshold for such a devastating claim, especially against a man who has been dead for 33 yrs -We don’t know for sure that the 2 children who are now claimed to be his, via 2 “rapey” encounters, are biologically his, partly because his accuser had 4 kids with his BROTHER, which the NYTimes somehow left out of the story (along with the fact that she had at least 11 children with at least 4 men) -We somehow don’t even know the names of the two kids that were allegedly fathered by Cesar -The NYTimes ignored the numerous very positive recent public statements by Dolores Huerta about Cesar, including a YouTube video created during the #MeToo panic where she praised him for his protection of women against sexual harassment -The NYTimes insidiously conflates the 60 year old Huerta claims with the two allegations of child sex abuse, even though they have nothing to do with each other. They are using Huerta to prop up the stories on which the real scandal rests, which, on their own, despite claims from the NYTimes, have absolutely no real corroboration -Not only do the two claims of child sex abuse have no real corroboration (a love struck letter TO him from a 13 year old girl, which he never destroyed, and which makes no references to inappropriate contact, does NOT, on its own, count), they have at least one major factual/timeline issue -One of the VERY few details in the two claims of child sex abuse from the early 1970s includes the key use of a “yoga mat,” but yoga mats were not even a thing until at least 10 years, and possibly 20 years, later -There is absolutely no consideration of the many possible motives for those involved, especially Huerta, to shade, or even fabricate, the truth, even if their memories of over half a century ago haven’t been naturally clouded by old age -There was no context provided for just how incredibly crazy Huerta’s full story would be if her current version, told at the age of 96, is actually true Typical of how much journalism has recently died/decayed, the NYTimes piece, which is being widely lauded, is actually an abomination (regardless of whether Chavez was actually an abuser) that should be condemned by anyone who cares about journalistic standards, basic fairness, and the truth.
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Zero
Zero@Stefanos1909·
@ValerieAnne1970 Do they die instantly? A week after? Months? How large a portion dies out of that 70%? I get the caution regarding vaccines, especially the covid mandates but this a bit vague. Does he go into more detail?
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Valerie Anne Smith
Valerie Anne Smith@ValerieAnne1970·
"70% of elderly people get the flu shot every year, and it kills off a portion of them on day zero. It's got a day-zero kill record. It's in the Medicare data, and nobody's saying a damn thing about this." ~Steve Kirsch
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Alex Berenson
Alex Berenson@AlexBerenson·
This is starting to feel like the war game that began with a Soviet "excursion" and ended with... Armageddon. Trump seems to think China will push Iran to end the war with Asian crude at $150. But maybe China will push HIM instead. Since he's the one who started it. What then?
Alex Berenson tweet media
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steve miller
steve miller@stevemiNumbers·
@BrandonStraka The level of analysis that finds a joo to blame for everything that you dont like is idiotic.
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Brandon Straka #WalkAway
Brandon Straka #WalkAway@BrandonStraka·
The Jewish lobby targeted Joe Kent right after his Tucker Carlson interview. He is now under FBI investigation for allegedly leaking classified information.
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steve miller
steve miller@stevemiNumbers·
@Corgi_actual Great respect for his past service. His current accusations, based on nothing, are a disservice. As a member of the administration, he could have made his view known privately. Once the commander decides, his job was to snap to. If not, then resign...quietly.
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Earl of the South
Earl of the South@Corgi_actual·
I think Joe Kent is right. I believe he has served our nation honorably and sacrificed much more for it than most of us have. I refuse to believe that the character assassination bullshit being flung around right now by the administration or its mouthpieces is honest or honorable. If that’s a problem for you, you don’t have to be here reading my posts.
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The Sentinel Network
The Sentinel Network@thesentinelnet·
On Monday we connected Monica Reza to General McCasland. Over 25,000 of you read it. Then you started sending us names. Carl Grillmair. Caltech astronomer. Shot on his porch. His killer's charges were dismissed 11 days before. Nuno Loureiro. MIT fusion scientist. Shot at his home. His killer planned it for three years. Jacob Prichard. Jaymee Prichard. 1st Lt. Jaime Gustitus. All three worked at Wright-Patterson. All three dead in one night. AFOSI investigating. No motive. Melissa Casias. Los Alamos National Lab. Badged into a nuclear weapons facility, wiped her government phone, walked into the wilderness. Four days after Reza. Nine names. One institution. Nine months. Our full OSINT investigation is live. Every name sourced. Every connection documented. thesentinelnetwork.substitutestack.com/p/the-long-cou…
The Sentinel Network tweet mediaThe Sentinel Network tweet mediaThe Sentinel Network tweet media
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Ross Hendricks
Ross Hendricks@Ross__Hendricks·
@stevemiNumbers If you need to support wars of aggression to make you feel tough, I suggest seeing a therapist
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PLC
PLC@Humble_Analysis·
@BenjiBacker Why haven't deer evolved to avoid road collisions, yet? It would seem that the deer smart enough to avoid roads would have an evolutionary advantage.
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Benji Backer
Benji Backer@BenjiBacker·
While we're discussing wildlife overpasses, let's discuss why they're important: They prevent ~97% of wildlife collisions They singlehandedly save wildlife populations (and migration patterns) They can save our country $10B per year BUT...they (should) cost $5-15M, not $100M
Benji Backer tweet media
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steve miller
steve miller@stevemiNumbers·
@ineedanothernap The ugliness of sin is unbearable, except for the grace God gives. I pray for those who give counsel to the couple, especially the elders.
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Mrs. FD
Mrs. FD@ineedanothernap·
@stevemiNumbers I’m glad I’m not an elder and don’t have to make these calls 😂
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Mrs. FD
Mrs. FD@ineedanothernap·
@stevemiNumbers But I’m wondering if there’s an exception for outright lying and confessing Christ just to pull the rug out on the honeymoon. It feels like entrapment.
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Furkan Gözükara
Furkan Gözükara@FurkanGozukara·
Brilliant move by Iran. They are planning to levy a 10% toll on all ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz. This will generate $73 billion a year, completely offsetting US sanctions and paying for war damages. Checkmate.
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Emerald Robinson ✝️
Emerald Robinson ✝️@EmeraldRobinson·
I don't care about regime change in Iran. I don't really care about Israel either. I voted for regime change in America. And there will be hell to pay if I don't get it.
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John Strand
John Strand@JohnStrandUSA·
The Founding Fathers were patriots. The Founding Fathers were pioneers. The Founding Fathers were visionaries. The Founding Fathers were Christians. The Founding Fathers were many things. But they were not Muslims.
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K.O. Fights
K.O. Fights@ko_fights__·
Guy walks into a car meet demanding to take on over 200 people
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Right now, in barns and equipment sheds across the American Midwest, farmers are making the most consequential decision of this war. Not generals. Not senators. Farmers. At $683 per ton urea, corn economics have collapsed. Nitrogen is the single largest input cost for corn production. At pre-war prices a farmer could justify 180 pounds per acre and expect a margin. At $683 the math breaks. Soybeans fix their own nitrogen from the atmosphere through root bacteria. They do not need the molecule trapped behind the Strait of Hormuz. The seed decision is being made this week across roughly 90 million acres of American cropland. Once the planter rolls into the field, the choice is irreversible. Corn seed in the ground stays corn. Soy seed stays soy. The acreage allocation locks in. USDA Prospective Plantings reports March 31. That report will tell the world how American agriculture responded to the Hormuz blockade. But the decisions it captures are being made now, in conversations between farmers and agronomists and seed dealers who are looking at nitrogen prices and making the rational economic choice: plant the crop that does not need the input you cannot afford. Every acre that shifts from corn to soybeans tightens the corn balance sheet for the rest of the year. Corn feeds livestock. Corn feeds ethanol. The Renewable Fuel Standard mandates 15 billion gallons of corn ethanol annually, consuming roughly 43 percent of the US corn crop regardless of price. That demand is inelastic. If acres shift and production falls while the mandate holds, corn prices spike. Feed costs spike. The protein cascade reverses. The US cattle herd sits at 86.2 million head, a 75-year low. Poultry and pork margins that were benefiting from cheap feed compress when corn crosses $5 per bushel. This is how a naval blockade 7,000 miles from Iowa reaches the American grocery shelf. Not through oil. Not through shipping. Through nitrogen. The farmer cannot afford the molecule. The molecule cannot transit the strait. The farmer plants soy instead. The corn supply tightens. The ethanol mandate consumes its fixed share. The remaining corn reprices. The feed reprices. The meat reprices. The grocery bill reprices. The decision is not political. It is arithmetic performed on a kitchen table by a person who needs to plant in three weeks and cannot wait for a ceasefire, an escort convoy, or an insurance normalisation that the Red Sea precedent says takes years. The deepest penetrator in the American arsenal cannot reach a sealed Iranian doctrinal packet. But the fertiliser price it failed to resolve is reaching every planting decision on 90 million acres of the most productive farmland on Earth. The war’s most irreversible consequence is not happening in a bunker. It is happening in a barn. And by the time USDA publishes the data on March 31, the seeds will already be in the ground. Full analysis in the link. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
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