Suki Iyer

2.9K posts

Suki Iyer

Suki Iyer

@suk1927

Dallas, TX Katılım Şubat 2011
776 Takip Edilen198 Takipçiler
Suki Iyer
Suki Iyer@suk1927·
@SlavBritt Feel bad for the fans who paid so much money to watch this game
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Britt | 🌟
Britt | 🌟@SlavBritt·
Arena broken. Team broken. Just broken.
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x - Dallas Stars
x - Dallas Stars@DallasStars·
For our city. For our state.
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Hoodlum 🇺🇸
Hoodlum 🇺🇸@NotHoodlum·
Iran is trolling Trump again. Hard. This is what happens when global politics becomes reality TV.
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Tim Alberta
Tim Alberta@TimAlberta·
Starts the day bowing his head in faux prayer; ends the day posting racist memes online. Perfect. On so many levels, just…perfect.
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Jonah Goldberg
Jonah Goldberg@JonahDispatch·
“Good morning. It’s Wednesday. Rumor has thumb guy comes home today. We will be here and we will demand an explanation — and some belly rubs. Also, I love you.”
Jonah Goldberg tweet media
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Suki Iyer
Suki Iyer@suk1927·
@SportsSturm I am not a Christian and love this! We need it the most at these awful times.
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Bob Sturm
Bob Sturm@SportsSturm·
He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God. Micah 6:8
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Jennifer Griffin
Jennifer Griffin@JenGriffinFNC·
Wow.
Roman Sheremeta 🇺🇸🇺🇦@rshereme

Brilliant speech and a wake up call by Zelenskyy in Davos: "A year ago here in Davos I ended my speech with the words: 'Europe must know how to defend itself.' A year has passed and nothing has changed. I must say the same words again." "There was so much talk about the protests in Iran. But they were drowned in blood. The world did not help the people of Iran enough. And what will Iran become after this bloodshed? And if this regime survives it will send a clear signal to every aggressor — kill enough people and you will remain in power." "Maduro is in court in New York. I am sorry but Putin is not in court. And this is the fourth year of the largest war in Europe since World War II and the one who started it is not only free — he is still fighting for his frozen funds in Europe and he is having some success. Putin was able to stop Europe unfortunately." "There is still no real progress regarding the creation of a special tribunal for Russian aggression against the Ukrainian people. Europe has not even reached the stage where there is a building for the tribunal. Often in Europe there is something more urgent than justice." “Today Europe relies mainly on the belief that in case of danger NATO will take action. But no one has ever seen the alliance tested at full strength. If Putin decides to seize Lithuania or strike Poland who will react? NATO exists thanks to the belief that the US will take action — that they will not stay on the sidelines and will provide aid. But what if that does not happen?" "Europe must learn to defend itself. Sending 14 or 40 soldiers to Greenland — what is that supposed to achieve? What signal does it send to Putin? To China? And perhaps most importantly what signal does it send to Denmark?" "Ukraine can help protect Greenland. We have the necessary expertise and weapons; Russian ships will sink near Greenland just as they sink near Crimea. We could act if we were asked, if Ukraine were in NATO. But we are not in NATO."

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Jonah Goldberg
Jonah Goldberg@JonahDispatch·
This is just wonderful.
Mr PitBull Stories@MrPitbull07

"My name's Hank. I'm 66. I deliver propane to homes. Rural routes, farms, folks off the grid. I fill their tanks, check connections, drive to the next house. Most customers just sign the slip, barely look up. I'm just the propane guy. But last February, during that brutal cold snap, I noticed something at the Miller place. Pulled up to fill their tank, gauge showed empty. Completely dry. In 15-degree weather. I knocked on the door. Mrs. Miller answered, three kids bundled behind her in coats. Inside the house. "Ma'am, your tank's bone dry. How long you been without heat?" "Four days." Her voice was steady, but her hands shook. "Bill's due Friday. We're waiting on my husband's paycheck." Four days. Three kids. Fifteen degrees. "Ma'am, I'm filling it now." "I can't pay until" "I'll mark it as a delivery error. Computer glitch. Nobody'll know." She started crying. "Why would you do this?" "Because those kids are wearing coats inside." I filled their tank. Checked the furnace. Made sure heat kicked on before I left. Drove away thinking about what I'd seen. Kids doing homework in winter jackets. A mom choosing between heat and food. Started paying attention different after that. The elderly veteran whose tank was at 10%, he was rationing, keeping one room warm. The single dad whose payment was two weeks late, he'd been burning firewood he couldn't really afford. I started doing something I shouldn't. When I saw someone struggling, someone who'd run out, someone rationing heat—I'd add 50 gallons. Mark it as "meter calibration" or "pressure test residual." Small amounts. Enough to get them through. Did it eleven times that winter. My boss noticed the discrepancies. Called me in. "Hank, we're showing extra gallons delivered but not billed." I told him the truth. Everything. He stared at me for a long time. Then said, "My daughter was a single mom once. Chose between heat and groceries every winter. I wished someone had helped her." He didn't fire me. Instead, he created something, "Warm Hearts Emergency Fund." Customers could donate. We'd match it. Use it for families in crisis who couldn't afford propane. But here's what broke me, Mrs. Miller came to our office in May. She'd gotten a better job, caught up on bills. She handed me an envelope. Inside, $200. "For the next family. The one you'll find in February, four days without heat, trying to be brave for their kids." She grabbed my hands. "Hank, my youngest has asthma. Four more days in that cold... I don't know if..." She couldn't finish. Last winter, the Warm Hearts Fund helped 23 families. Not with handouts, with heat when they had none. With dignity when they felt broken. And here's the thing, other propane companies heard about it. Started their own programs. Now there are "emergency heat funds" in six states. But the moment that destroyed me happened last month. Got a call to deliver to an address I recognized, the Miller place. Mrs. Miller answered. "Hank! Come in, please." Inside, warm, kids doing homework at the table, laughing. She handed me a check. Full payment, plus extra. "For the fund. But also..." She pulled out a drawing her youngest had made. Stick figure man with a propane truck. Caption in crayon: "Mr. Hank, my hero." "She asks about you every winter. 'Is Mr. Hank making sure people are warm?'" I'm 66. I deliver propane to houses nobody notices. But I learned this- Cold doesn't wait for paychecks. And no child should do homework in a winter coat inside their own home. So if you deliver anything, oil, propane, firewood, and you see someone struggling, someone empty, someone rationing, Find a way. Mark it wrong. Call your boss. Start a fund. Do something. Because heat isn't a luxury. It's survival. And the difference between freezing and living shouldn't be whether your paycheck arrived on time. Be the reason someone stays warm." . Let this story reach more hearts.... . Ai image is for Demonstration purpose only . Credit: Mary Nelson

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Bill Kristol
Bill Kristol@BillKristol·
Take a look at this video. And tell me that ICE as it now exists and operates is consistent with living in a free country.
Jesus Freakin Congress@TheJFreakinC

🚨 BREAKING: ICE/Border Patrol agents once again threaten to illegally arrest a U.S. citizen… for standing on a public sidewalk and filming them. Yes. Really. In the video, in Beaverton, Oregon, multiple agents swarm a man who is doing nothing more than observing and recording from a public sidewalk, something that is 100% legal and protected by the First Amendment. An agent claims they “know who he is” and accuses him of driving erratically and being “a danger to the public.” Which is rich, coming from an agency with a long history of hitting people with vehicles, assaulting women and children, and “accidentally” firing or dropping loaded firearms. But, even so, they are not police and cannot arrest someone for a traffic violation. Then the threats start. “You are interfering with our operations.” “You could be arrested.” “We will arrest you.” Again, the man is standing on a sidewalk. Not blocking anyone. Not touching anyone. Not saying anything beyond asserting his rights. Another agent jumps in with, “You were following us yesterday.” Cool story. Still not illegal. They repeatedly claim he has “interfered with operations,” yet, the only behavior they can actually point to is… observing them. Existing near them. Filming them. When the man calmly says, “I’m not interfering,” the response is: “If you continue, you will be in handcuffs.” Let’s be crystal clear about what that means: ICE agents are threatening to arrest a U.S. citizen for continuing to legally observe and film them in his own neighborhood. When the man states the obvious, “I’m not breaking the law and you know it,” the agent completely loses it. He steps inches from the man’s face, points at him, shoves into his shoulder or chest, and screams, “One more time and I will put you in handcuffs.” This isn’t law enforcement. This is intimidation. The man tells him to get off him. The agent responds, “No, I’ll stand right here, pal. Right here all day,” while continuing to press into him. The citizen points out the setup perfectly: “If I touch you, you’re going to arrest me, right?” Exactly. That’s the game. That’s when the agent snaps completely, screaming that the man is “worthless” and has “no honor.” Which… feels like projection. This video shows exactly what ICE and Border Patrol are doing across the country: They are trying to scare people into not filming. They are trying to bully citizens out of exercising their rights. And when intimidation doesn’t work, they escalate. Because they know that cameras expose them. So here’s the takeaway: Always film. State your rights calmly. Keep your hands visible and on your phone. Narrate everything that’s happening. They want silence. They want fear. They want no witnesses. Don’t give it to them.

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Joe Walsh
Joe Walsh@WalshFreedom·
ICE agents may not lawfully pull you over just to ask if you’re a U.S. citizen. This kind of stop is considered a seizure under the Fourth Amendment—and it is unconstitutional unless ICE has reasonable suspicion that a law has been violated. What PAXIS.app teaches us: ICE is bound by the Fourth Amendment. They cannot stop you on the street or in your car without specific, lawful reasons. Suspicion based on language, race, or appearance is not enough. You have the right to remain silent. You do not have to answer questions about citizenship or immigration status. You do not have to show ID unless you are in a state with a “stop and identify” law and law enforcement (not ICE) has legal grounds to stop you. You have the right to record ICE. The First Amendment protects your right to record public officials in public spaces, including during traffic stops—as long as you don’t interfere with their actions. Hold your phone steady. State clearly: “I am recording for my protection.” Support and learn more abut PAXIS at: gofund.me/a50ad0493
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Jonah Goldberg
Jonah Goldberg@JonahDispatch·
Surgery tomorrow. Have a good thought please.
Jonah Goldberg tweet media
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Joe Walsh
Joe Walsh@WalshFreedom·
Thank you for this @RnaudBertrand. This is a super important piece. Please give it a read.👇
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand

Venezuela killed the US. Or rather, it revealed it was already dead. In the history of the US’s relation with Latin America, what just happened in Venezuela is hardly unique: the U.S. government has intervened to change governments in Latin America a total of 41 times (revista.drclas.harvard.edu/united-states-…). What is unprecedented however is the brazenness, the unabashedly predatory nature of the intervention. Trump is not pretending this is about anything else than resource extraction. He explicitly stated "we're going to be taking out a tremendous amount of wealth out of the ground" and that this wealth would “go to the United States of America in the form of reimbursement for the damages caused us by that country." (npr.org/2026/01/03/g-s…). Stunningly, the US isn’t even insisting on regime change. They’re quite happy for the Chavista government to stay in place under acting president Delcy Rodríguez as long as she “does what we want,” (said Trump: edition.cnn.com/2026/01/04/pol…), vowing to bomb the country again if she didn’t. In other words, there is absolutely zero pretense there: submission to the U.S.’s will is the only variable that matters. Never before in its entire history has the U.S. been so nakedly… bad. This might sound almost trivial. “So what if they admit they’re bad, at least they’re not hypocritical about it anymore,” you might tell yourself. Some might even find that refreshing in its honesty. Quite the contrary. The story a nation tells itself is not trivial - it is everything. We, human beings, for better or worse, are structured by mythology and self-deception. Think about yourself, what drives your own behavior? You have, doubtlessly, ideals you want to live up to. If you have kids you have ideals of what a good parent ought to be. If you have a spouse you have ideals of what fidelity and partnership mean. If you have a job you have some conception of integrity. You probably fall short - we all do - but the ideals still structure your behavior. They give you something to reach for, they provide the terms in which you can be criticized - including by your own internal dialogue. They make it possible for you to do better tomorrow. The hypocrisy - the gap between ideal and reality - is not the problem. It's the proof that the ideal still has a hold on you, that you can still be called back to it. As the saying goes, hypocrisy is the tribute vice pays to virtue. Now imagine you renounce all this. Imagine you stop being a hypocrite in the sense that you abandon your ideals entirely, that you start owning up to your worst self and become comfortable with your vices. You cheat on your spouse and stop pretending it bothers you. You neglect your children and make peace with it. Have you thus become “refreshingly honest”? Maybe. But you’ve also died inside. You’ve become something deeply broken - beyond shame, beyond appeal. You’ve lost the internal architecture that makes moral life possible. The little light that said “this is not who I want to be” is extinguished. That is what the United States just did. The consequences of this are, frankly, terrifying. What happens when a nation stops telling itself it should be good? This is precisely what I try to answer in my latest article: open.substack.com/pub/arnaudbert…

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Suki Iyer
Suki Iyer@suk1927·
@NormOrnstein The next administration should follow due process and if violated, Kristi Noem should be sent to Uganda
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Heartland Signal
Heartland Signal@HeartlandSignal·
CBS NEWS REPORTER: "You know that Republicans in the state, Republicans out of the state, look at what you guys are doing and thinking you're running away from the fight..." TEXAS STATE REP. ANN JOHNSON (D-HOUSTON): "Yeah, no, abandoning your job is going to Cancun in the middle of a deadly freeze, right? Abandoning your job is cutting health care when people need access. Abandoning your job is cutting public education when we already have one of the worst education systems in the nation" "When Donald Trump called Georgia Republicans and said, 'I just need you to find me 11,000 votes,' they said, 'No, sir, that's a step too far.' But when he called Texas Republicans and said, 'I need you to steal me five seats,' they said, 'Does July work for you?'"
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Suki Iyer
Suki Iyer@suk1927·
@JonahDispatch The current season is great. It does stress me watching all of them shout at each other.
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