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Tyler

@tyturn4

Katılım Ağustos 2009
185 Takip Edilen180 Takipçiler
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RandyGoat 🐐
RandyGoat 🐐@RandyGoat·
Thomas Massie just got immunity for glyphosphate manufacturers removed from the farm bill but you'll still say he sucks because Trump told you so.
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Clint Russell
Clint Russell@LibertyLockPod·
Someone pumped serious money to flip the betting markets and now they are paying to advertise the latest odds This is a high level, heavily funded Miriam Adelson and AIPAC op. Clear as day.
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Ricky Logan
Ricky Logan@ItsRickyLogan·
Terry Francona watching TJ Friedl, Tyler Stephenson, Matt McLain and Ke’Bryan Hayes go a combined 2-16 on a nightly basis
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Ohio State Football
Ohio State Football@OhioStateFB·
THE Best Uniform in College Football 😌
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Stephen Means
Stephen Means@Stephen_Means·
Ohio State lives in a world where it has a home-and-home series with three SEC teams right now and everyone knows the games in Columbus will be at noon and all the road games will be at night
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Josh Pate
Josh Pate@JoshPateCFB·
Americans just spent $38b on ONE Mother’s Day…surely we expand to 12 or 24 Mother’s Days
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Anthony DiGiorgio, DO, MHA
This is the ultimate midwit healthcare take. No, 32 countries have not “figured out” universal healthcare. The UK has “free” healthcare, and roughly 1 in 3 cancer patients in England still fail to start treatment within 62 days of urgent referral. Canada has “free” healthcare, and the median wait for neurosurgical treatment is around a year. Australia has “free” healthcare, and over half the country still buys private insurance despite paying for a public universal system with their taxes. Switzerland has universal coverage, because residents are required to buy private insurance. There is no government system where benevolent bureaucrats tuck you in at night with a warm blanket and an MRI appointment. The actual lesson from other wealthy countries is not “they figured it out.” America’s system has huge problems. Our prices are insane, insurance markets are distorted, and hospital systems are cartelized. Our regulations make care more expensive than it needs to be. Yet we still guarantee access to even the 8% who don’t have coverage. We give easy routes to qualify for medicaid for those with disabilities. Pretending the rest of the world solved healthcare because they slapped the word “universal” on a rationing scheme is not analysis. It is bumper sticker policy for people who think access means having a card in your wallet while you wait a year to see the doctor you need.
daz@MetamateDaz

Free Universal Healthcare is so complicated and expensive that only 32 of the 33 wealthiest countries in the world have figured it out.

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Brittany Hughes
Brittany Hughes@RealBrittHughes·
This sounds cool. But wait. 400 diapers will last a family with a newborn approximately five weeks. The program will cost the state approx. $12.4 million this year alone. That money will be funneled through a company called Baby2Baby, which will then provide their branded diapers to 400 participating in hospitals (California has over 500 hospitals in total.) Meaning that instead of lowering taxes and letting families keep their own money to buy essentials like diapers, California takes their money, pumps it through a “nonprofit” that has overhead and whose CEO made $240,000 in 2024, to provide a “free” service available only in certain locations, and that you could have bought yourself for much cheaper.
FactPost@factpostnews

Gov. Gavin Newsom has announced California will be the first state in the nation to provide free diapers to newborns. Families will receive 400 diapers when discharged from the hospital.

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Mason
Mason@webdevMason·
This youtube budgeting show is manufacturing fiscal conservatives more efficiently than anything Republican party strategists could cook up in their wildest dreams
Rexha 🐸@RexhaRexhaRexha

Caleb Hammer’s audit guest, who was a cook in the Army, reveals he has an 80% disability rating and receives a disability check of $2,100-$4,000 per month, despite being discharged for selling vapes. “Well, I got honorably discharged because I never got caught.”

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ATBBTTR
ATBBTTR@ATBBTTR·
The Reds for the past six games
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Josh Wood
Josh Wood@J_K_Wood·
Euphemism Translator: Beanie Feldstein is pregnant because a man was paid to masturbate into a cup so a child could be conceived via IVF and raised in a home with two mothers and zero fathers — by design, by contract, before he was even born. “First baby with wife” is biologically impossible; two women cannot make a child. A father made this child. He was paid to disappear. Fatherlessness is treated as a national crisis everywhere else: in poverty data, incarceration data, school outcomes, every sociology textbook… except with lesbians, where it’s the celebrated goal.
New York Post@nypost

Beanie Feldstein pregnant, expecting first baby with wife Bonnie-Chance Roberts trib.al/KRsoLBu

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Buckeye Politics
Buckeye Politics@BuckeyePolitic1·
Vivek Ramaswamy has called Americans lazy, supports renaming Lake Erie, closing Ohios public universities, expanding H1B programs, building more AI data centers, and gutting social services But Amy Acton is a democrat. This isn’t a hard choice. Vivek 2026
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Winston Churchill fought his depression with bricks. He'd lay them for hours at his country home in Kent. He joined the bricklayers' union. And in 1921 he wrote about why it worked. It took psychology another 75 years to catch up. He called his depression the "Black Dog." It followed him for decades. His method for fighting it back was as basic as it sounds: laying brick after brick, hour after hour. Churchill spelled out his theory in a long essay for The Strand Magazine. People who think for a living, he wrote, can't fix a tired brain just by resting it. They have to use a different part of themselves. The part that moves the eyes and the hands. Woodworking, chemistry, bookbinding, bricklaying, painting. Anything that drags the body into a problem the mind can't solve by itself. Modern psychology now calls this behavioral activation. It's one of the most-studied depression treatments out there. Depression sets a behavior trap. You feel bad, so you stop doing things, and doing less means less to feel good about. Feeling worse makes you do even less. The loop tightens until you can't breathe inside it. Behavioral activation breaks the loop from the action side. You schedule the activity first, even when every part of you doesn't want to. Doing it produces small rewards: a wall gets straighter, a painting fills in, a messy room gets clean. Those small rewards slowly rewire the brain. Action comes first, and the feeling follows. Researchers at the University of Washington put this to the test in 2006. They studied 241 adults with major depression and compared three treatments: behavioral activation, regular talk therapy, and antidepressants. For the people who were most severely depressed, behavioral activation matched the drugs. It beat the talk therapy. A 2014 review of more than 1,500 patients across 26 trials backed up the result. Physical work like bricklaying does something extra on top of this. It crowds out rumination, the looping bad thoughts that grind people down during the worst stretches of depression. Bricklaying needs both hands and gives feedback brick by brick: each one is straight or crooked. After an hour you can see exactly how much wall you built. No room left for the mental chewing. The line George Mack used in his post, "depression hates a moving target," is good poetry. The science behind it is sharper. Depression hates a brain that has somewhere else to be.
George Mack@george__mack

Winston Churchill used to lay 200 bricks per day to keep his mind busy when feeling down. Depression hates a moving target.

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Bana Market Burner
Bana Market Burner@EllyDeAiCruz·
Gotta love the “This is Reds Baseball” ad after my 35 year old - 15 million dollar closer tore his entire leg
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Joel Berry
Joel Berry@JoelWBerry·
This white, Christian, “heritage American” Republican facilitated unprecedented 3rd-world migration to Ohio.
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