Sunny Lohmann

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Sunny Lohmann

Sunny Lohmann

@sunnylohmann

Minnesota born, living it up in California. Mom. Wife. American Patriot. 🇺🇸

Laguna Beach, CA Katılım Mart 2012
1.9K Takip Edilen2.3K Takipçiler
Sunny Lohmann
Sunny Lohmann@sunnylohmann·
I think Mike should be the governor. He’s a proven manager, he’s a proven America First patriot, and he’s a proven fighter. What the hell else could you ever ask for? His competition is more milquetoast Minnesota Nice. I have nothing against people like that personally, but we have to understand the era we are in.
Mike Lindell@realMikeLindell

🚨 Breaking News: Mike Lindell Leads in Race for Minnesota Governor! 🇺🇸 New polling shows Mike Lindell leading the Republican field just days before the MN GOP Convention and with a President Trump endorsement, his lead grows to a commanding 22 points. Support Mike's Campaign Now at LindellGov.com

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Sunny Lohmann
Sunny Lohmann@sunnylohmann·
They stole an election. Rampant fraud and abuse of the system. Blatant in many cases. Steal by a thousand cuts. Then they set up American patriots who noticed and refused to accept their lies, set them up to disrupt the hearing on the fraud so they could cancel it and prevent evidence from getting out. Remember their propaganda mantra at the time? “NO EVIDENCE!” Many fell for it. Many on the right, even. Then they arrested them all, threw them in jail, overcharged and over sentenced them and destroyed their lives. Those are our leaders. No one has been held accountable.
Julie Kelly 🇺🇸@julie_kelly2

Reposting my April 2022 article noting how Mitch McConnell told a reporter late that evening that he was "exhilarated" by the events of January 6. Why? Because he got his way. And McConnell's security chief, along with Pelosi's. had repeatedly ignored pleas by @ChiefSund for authorization to deploy the National Guard. "A dirty little secret about January 6—one of many—is that Democrats and establishment Republicans, not Trump supporters, wanted to shut down the official proceedings of that day. Just as the first wave of protesters breached the building shortly after 2 p.m., congressional Republicans were poised to present evidence of rampant voting fraud in the 2020 presidential election. Ten incumbent and four newly-elected Republican senators planned to work with their House colleagues to demand the formation of an audit commission to investigate election 'irregularities' in the 2020 election. Absent an audit, the group of senators, including Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) pledged to reject the Electoral College results from the disputed states. The Hail Mary effort was doomed to fail; yet the American people would have heard hours of debate related to provable election fraud over the course of the day. And no one opposed the effort more than ex-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). During a conference call on December 31, 2020, McConnell urged his Republican Senate colleagues to abandon plans to object to the certification, insisting his vote to certify the 2020 election results would be 'the most consequential I have ever cast' in his 36-year Senate career. From the Senate floor on the afternoon of January 6, McConnell gave a dramatic speech warning of the dire consequences to the country should Republicans succeed in delaying the vote. He downplayed examples of voting fraud and even mocked the fact that Trump-appointed judges rejected election lawsuits. 'The voters, the courts, and the States have all spoken,' McConnell insisted. 'If we overrule them, it would damage our Republic forever. If this election were overturned by mere allegations from the losing side, our democracy would enter a death spiral.' Roughly six hours later, McConnell got his way. Cowed by the crowd of largely peaceful Americans allowed into the building by Capitol police, most Republican senators backed off the audit proposal. McConnell, echoing hyperbolic talking points about an 'insurrection' seeded earlier in the day by Democratic lawmakers and the news media, gloated. 'They tried to disrupt our democracy,' he declared on the Senate floor after Congress reconvened around 8 p.m. 'This failed attempt to obstruct Congress, this failed insurrection, only underscores how crucial the task before us is for our Republic.' Congress officially certified the Electoral College results early the next day. While he projected a sober tone to the American public, McConnell privately was ecstatic, a new book about the 2020 election reveals. 'I feel exhilarated by the fact that this fellow finally, totally discredited himself,' McConnell told New York Times reporter Jonathan Martin late on January 6, 2021 about Trump. Martin is the co-author of This Will Not Pass, of which excerpts were published in the Washington Post this week. Martin in the book recounts his midnight conversation with McConnell. Trump, McConnell claimed, 'put a gun to his head and pulled the trigger,' Martin writes. He then asked the reporter what he had heard about members plotting to invoke the 25th Amendment. Calling Trump a 'despicable person,' McConnell reportedly bragged how he 'crushed the sons of bitches' on January 6 and promised to do the same to them in the 2022 primaries. Now, that seems like an oddly celebratory demeanor for someone who just survived an 'attack on our democracy' and an alleged attempt to 'overthrow' the seat of government power, doesn’t it? And why was McConnell so certain the four-hour disturbance would spell the end for Donald Trump? Further—and more importantly—why did McConnell’s office fail to protect the Capitol on January 6? His Sergeant at Arms at the time served on the U.S. Capitol police board, a four-man body that manages security at the sprawling Capitol complex. McConnell appointed Michael Stenger in 2018 to serve in that role; Stenger, in addition to his House counterpart, Paul Irving, rejected multiple requests by the Capitol Police chief for extra help in advance of January 6. Steven Sund, a Capitol Police captain, said he spoke with Stenger on January 4, 2021 to ask for National Guardsmen. 'Instead of approving the use of the National Guard, however, Mr. Stenger suggested I ask them how quickly we could get support if needed and to ‘lean forward’ in case we had to request assistance on January 6.' He spoke with Stenger again on January 5; the board still refused to advance his plan for extra guardsmen. As the chaos unfolded right as the joint session of Congress convened on January 6, Sund said he 'notified the two Sergeant at Arms by 1:09 p.m. that I urgently needed support and asked them to declare a State of Emergency and authorize the National Guard.' Stenger and Irving, who were together that afternoon, said he was waiting for 'authorization' by congressional leadership. That approval came an hour later, but with a caveat: Sund also needed the Pentagon’s authorization. 'Almost two hours later, we had still not received authorization from the Pentagon to activate the National Guard,' Sund testified in February 2021. 'Mr. Stenger offered to have Senator McConnell call the Secretary of the Army to expedite the request. I agreed that this would be a good idea. I followed up approximately 20 minutes later to check on the call and express the need for leadership to call to assist in expediting the request.' Guardsmen did not arrive until 5:40 p.m., four-and-a-half hours after Sund’s first dispatch and after the protest had ended. McConnell, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), and D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser—the three leaders responsible for protecting the Capitol on January 6—still have not explained their failure to do so. Not only did McConnell’s top law enforcement officials purportedly overlook the potential for violence on January 6, he denied requests for more officers days before and delayed sending guardsmen to Capitol Hill that afternoon. And it will be nearly impossible to find out why: Stegner, along with Irving and Sund, all resigned on January 7, 2021. So, perhaps there is a darker explanation for McConnell’s  giddiness on January 6. What unfolded that day on McConnell’s watch ended Republican demands for an election audit; criminalized criticism of the 2020 election, which McConnell still describes as 'fair' and legitimate; vilified Republican lawmakers; and prompted Trump’s second impeachment. McConnell also believed the protest would spell the end of the Trump movement, something the Beltway crony long attempted to quash. Like the Biden regime, congressional Democrats, and the national news media, the aftermath of the Capitol protest achieved all sorts of political ends for Mitch McConnell.

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Katy Talento
Katy Talento@KatyTalento·
Marty Makary used to ambush a Virginia courthouse every other Friday. That was the day the local tax-exempt hospital reserved the docket to sue its poorest patients. Marty would show up at the door with a lawyer and intercept them on the way in. They were working-class people in job uniforms, embarrassed, grim-faced, expecting to lose. He reviewed the bills on the spot, for free, as a medical expert. Pointing out fraud, upcoding, inappropriate care, contradictions to the court. Then his counterpart, a young lawyer named Joey Kirchgessner, argued until the hospital cried uncle. They won A LOT. I drove down one Friday to watch. I was working in the Trump White House at the time. I was so proud of him I could barely stand it. That's the man the WSJ op-ed page wants you to believe is the problem. Read or listen to the full story here: katytalento.com/p/the-most-dan…
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FischerKing
FischerKing@FischerKing64·
Has anyone actually read the ‘uplifting message’ on the Obama Presidential library? The first few lines are ‘you are America unconstrained…’ - carved into a building that looks like a giant prison.
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Sunny Lohmann
Sunny Lohmann@sunnylohmann·
@jlippincott I’ve had this same idea with regard to teachers. End licensing, open teaching up to anyone and bypass the Commie Education Departments.
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Gregory K Bovino
Gregory K Bovino@GregoryKBovino·
Rep. Chip Roy is 100% right! Freeze ALL immigration and start mass deportations of the millions of ILLEGAL ALIENS who shouldn’t be here, PERIOD. Since every single issue we face including wages, housing, crime, schools, hospitals, welfare, and national security is downstream of uncontrolled immigration ( legal and illegal), it’s absolutely baffling that most Republicans still aren’t fully in line. The winning message is? Full stop. Everything else sells out our country and royally screws our own people. Voters already get it, but many politicians ( RINOs like Tillis, for example) and liberals don’t. Time to lead or get out of the way. 🇺🇸
Rep. Chip Roy Press Office@RepChipRoy

Rep. Roy: "We need to freeze all immigration, and we need to engage in mass deportations of lots of people who have been mistakenly allowed into our country over the last several decades." @SaraGonzalesTX

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Smitty
Smitty@Smithwicky1990·
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Josiah Lippincott
Josiah Lippincott@jlippincott·
The federal government gives out $120 billion in student aid every year to subsidize American universities. $120 billion. Cash. That's more money than the entire GDP of Cuba every year flowing straight to the epicenter of left wing power. That doesn't even count the additional $65 billion in research grants. "Havana institutes" are nothing compared to the literal taxpayer-funded leftist educational institutions in America. Our biggest problems are right here at home.
Dandalf@DanTalks1

Its not well known how big of a problem Cuba is. Communist training and infiltration for decades have come through the Havana institutes. Our ideological enemies use it as an ideological farming system for their soldiers. Removing them is going to be a massive blow to the left.

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Owen Benjamin 🐻
Owen Benjamin 🐻@OwenBenjamin·
Tuckers response is amazingly funny. It’s obviously true what I’m saying, but to respond with such sincerity to the line “not gonna come out of a guys ass” is a highlight in podcasting history.
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Sunny Lohmann
Sunny Lohmann@sunnylohmann·
@TheBrancaShow I supported Massie but no way can we ever go back there. It’s going to be much much worse.
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Andrew Branca Show
Andrew Branca Show@TheBrancaShow·
Every American should read this, and think about what all the Massie supporters now swearing to allow the Democrats to resieze power actually threaten us with.
Pat Stedman | Dating & Relationship Coach for Men@Pat_Stedman

On January 6th I followed the crowd into the Capitol and shouted. Police stood by the whole time, hanging out with us and sometimes directing us places. At one point near the House Chambers I was walking downstairs when a trio of some special section, secret service looking men started pointing guns in my direction. Confused and annoyed, I walked the other way and when I saw a normal police officer asked him why they were doing that. He informed me a protestor (Ashli Babbit) had been killed, and advised me to leave the building. I walked towards the exit and after a short rest on the bench I left. I harmed nobody and damaged no property that day and complied with all police orders. What I received for that was a pre-dawn raid at my parents house, where my 1 month post-partum wife and I were staying, on Biden's first day in office. His DOJ had signed the order to arrest me 3 hours after his inauguration. In the subsequent weeks I received death threats online and harassing phone calls, something that would be ongoing for the next few years. I was banned from Meta and Paypal. My wife and I were both debanked by PNC and banned from Airbnb. My wife was detained at the airport for hours with our newborn daughter. I was charged with 4 misdemeanors and the 1512 unconstitutional felony. The government offered to drop the misdemeanors if I pled to the felony. The felony was a lie, so I refused and went to trial. At trial the prosecution for 2 days straight was allowed to show footage to the jury of things that occurred around the Capitol I wasn't present for "for context." When we asked to put forward footage that contradicted the prosecution's "context" we were not allowed. They could show what they wanted, we could not. Police officers were then put on the stand for the next 2 days who cried about their experiences. I had no idea who they were. They admitted they never saw me or interacted with me. Nevertheless like every other J6er, I lost, and was sentenced to 4 years and $22k in fines and restitution. Yet even after the Supreme Court overturned the felony, the judge would not let me out until my misdemeanor sentences of a year were maxed out. Because she can't count she actually kept me in longer - to the extent she intervened at the last minute to make the prison release me on a Sunday, something that is against BOP rules. My family sat outside the prison gates the Friday before practically the whole day waiting in vain because of this pettiness. But the government wasn't satisfied with their pound of flesh: after my release they took me back in for resentencing, to attempt to have me resentenced after the fact to my misdemeanors consecutively, so I'd be taken from my family again and have another 1.5 years behind bars. This time I won, as they had no legal precedent and it skirted on violating double jeopardy since I had served my full prison time. Even still, it cast a cloud over the holidays and cost me another 20k my family couldn't afford. People ask whether prison was bad, and yeah of course prison sucked. It was a hard and violent place. I was present for a stabbing, and was lucky to avoid two fights and a race war. But dealing with Biden's DOJ and the DC Judiciary was the real trauma - they would grind down your spirit by weaponizing the legal system and use the endless procedure to bankrupt you. I had nightmares for months after release that I had somehow been hit with new charges. By the time I was pardoned by President Trump, I had spent literally every single day of Biden's presidency either in prison or under some form of supervision. I had incurred over $300k in legal fees and over $1 million in lost business. It was a reign of terror, and yet it was a mere foreshadowing of what they had planned for anyone else who opposed them under Kamala. The country should never forget it.

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Alpha News
Alpha News@AlphaNews·
Feeding Our Future ringleader Aimee Bock sentenced to 41 years in federal prison Judge Nancy Brasel concluded that "a sentence of less than 500 months would not do justice to the people of Minnesota, who in a very real sense were the victims of this fraud." Judge Brasel also found that Bock committed perjury when she testified during her trial and ordered her to pay $242 million in restitution. "Feeding Our Future was feeding virtually no kids at all. Instead, it was feeding bank accounts of fraudsters exploiting a national emergency," Assistant U.S. Attorney Rebecca Kline commented, saying "not $1 of this fraud would have been possible" without Bock.
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Sunny Lohmann
Sunny Lohmann@sunnylohmann·
@KevinGajda However there are probably other more powerful people. Her life could be in danger.
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Glenn Greenwald
Glenn Greenwald@ggreenwald·
The second Trump administration is basically a series of immigrant and diaspora groups using the US military and US treasury as their toy to go interfere in and "fix" what they regard as their country of origin. Marco Rubio's family is from Cuba so that becomes his priority.
Secretary Marco Rubio@SecRubio

🇺🇸🇨🇺

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