SAMUEL WITTIMORE
1.8K posts


@MichaelRCaputo @FeserEdward I cannot stress how disappointed and disillusioned I’ve been since they canceled mass during the pandemic and the migration bull is outright Marxism
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@MichaelRCaputo @FeserEdward Every time we have a politically active Pope on the world stage, millions of people end up dead. In some sick way, the Vatican makes a lot of money off this massive death. It’s historical. Coming from a Catholic.
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@FeserEdward Unless, of course, father attacks a guy first on a topic that is not his business, while leaving a genocidal adversary unscathed. There’s that. Of course.
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@Cookie_BigRick @JamesSpillaneNH The meds make them feel beautiful 😂
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Massachusetts is doing it's best to raise all the taxes so high that people leave.
We need to build a wall fast.
New York Post@nypost
Massachusetts town at war over proposed 50% property tax hike: 'Absolutely devastating' trib.al/masPsR3
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@StephenSny96661 @Awake702 @Sadie_NC @Therealrobx Even better. Take the section abutting the park where she legally was and make an egress for about 30 vehicles. Neighbors should have just kept their mouths shut.
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@Awake702 @Sadie_NC @Therealrobx She is not a karen. She broke no rules. The actual karens are who called the cops
If there was something verifiably suspicious about her behavior, I could see it, but d bags who just don’t like cars on the street have no standing. They can F off imo
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A woman legally parks her car on a public residential street right at the start of a conservation trail in Hanover, MA.
She takes her dog for a walk and returns to angry neighbors surrounding her car, a note on the window. They call the cops. Multiple police cruisers roll up. Officers get out, ask her to move even though there are zero no-parking signs or laws against it.
She stands her ground, calmly recording everything: “It’s a public road.” The cops admit she’s not breaking any rules but still pressure her to leave to “keep the peace.”
Classic public street vs. “this is our neighborhood” drama. Would YOU move the car or stay put as she did?
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@theripsnorter Maine looks at Assachusetts and says, hold my imported Canadian Lobster rolls that we sell to Flatlanders for $75.00. 🦞
Maine is the bitch of New England.
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@PierreVLeBrun Just tell everyone President Donald J. Trump likes the current format. There, problem solved.
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One more day to vote here, hockey fans. But I think it's clear where you're leaning !
Pierre LeBrun@PierreVLeBrun
Hockey fans, let your feelings known in this poll regarding the NHL format for the Stanley Cup playoffs:
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@PierreVLeBrun Just tell everyone, President Donald J. Trump likes the current format. Problem solved.
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@Savsays Most likely financed with parental approval and assistance. If you can confirm this Savanah, it’s conspiratorial. This may be the way to cut the head off the snake, nationally. Hope you’re okay.
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@pre2000hockey I was at that one. No one saw the # switch coming. Was so excited to see Espo , I locked my keys in the car with the engine running, trying to get to my seat. No hidden key either. What a night !
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@EchoesofWarYT What type of lever action does the man on the right have ?
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In April 1913, two unidentified men stood rigid on either side of a lifeless body, facing the camera as if to certify that something unbelievable had finally come to an end.
Between them lay John Tornow — a man the newspapers had transformed into a monster, a myth, a cautionary tale whispered to children once the sun went down.
For more than a year, he had terrorized Washington’s Olympic Peninsula.
Before the fear, before the headlines, Tornow was simply a solitary figure living deep in the wilderness of the Wynoochee Valley in southern Grays Harbor County. He kept away from towns and avoided human contact, surviving among towering evergreens and mist-filled ravines. Some who knew of him called him a hermit. Others described him as quiet. Odd. Harmless.
Then everything shifted.
In late 1911, two teenage boys entered the forest and never returned alive. Their deaths shattered any illusion of harmless isolation. Tornow disappeared further into the wild, retreating into dense timber where even seasoned loggers hesitated to go and lawmen feared to follow.
That was when the legend took shape.
Newspapers gave him names that blurred the line between man and nightmare: “The Cougar Man.”
“A Mad Daniel Boone.”
“The Wild Man of the Wynoochee.”
Loggers swore they saw him watching from the trees. Parents warned children he would take them if they strayed too far. Armed posses searched relentlessly, but Tornow knew the land in a way no outsider could. Rain washed away his tracks. Moss swallowed his footprints. For months, he existed only as a rumor moving through the forest.
No one — not even his own family — could explain what had broken inside him. He had once been confined to a mental institution, but surviving records offered no clear answers. Was it illness? Prolonged isolation? Or something darker awakened by endless silence?
By the spring of 1913, fear had reached its breaking point.
A heavily armed group finally cornered Tornow in the wilderness he had claimed as home. What followed was not an arrest, but a gunfight — shots ripping through branches, echoes rolling through the valley. When it was over, Tornow lay dead, his body torn by bullets.
The newspapers declared justice served.
The photograph that followed was meant to end the story. Two men standing stiffly beside the corpse. Proof that the nightmare was over. Yet the image did something else entirely.
It preserved a question that time has never answered.
Was John Tornow always a monster — or was he a man consumed by isolation, fear, and a world that no longer knew how to deal with him?
The forest never answered.
And even now, the Wynoochee Valley feels just a little quieter — as if it still remembers the man who vanished into its shadows.

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@JenniferJJacobs @VP @CBSNews Considering they were supposed to begin in the morning, Pakistan time, with a nine hour difference, shouldn’t we be blowing sh!t up by now ?
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Good morning to everyone in Massachusetts who’s tired of Beacon Hill using “protect the children” as an excuse to hand Big Tech our biometric data.
The House just passed a bill to ban social media for kids under 14 and require parental consent for 14- and 15-year-olds. Sounds reasonable on the surface. But to enforce it, they’re forcing every social media platform to implement age verification systems using “the best technology available.”
That means every single user in Massachusetts, adults included, could be required to upload government IDs, facial scans, or other biometric information just to log into X, Instagram, Facebook, or whatever else you use.
This isn’t kid protection. It’s a backdoor surveillance scheme that kills online anonymity for all of us and lets Big Tech hoard even more of our personal data forever. Privacy groups are already sounding the alarm about inevitable breaches and the massive privacy invasion.
Beacon Hill keeps finding new ways to erode our freedoms while pretending it’s for our own good.
Massachusetts, are you okay handing over your face scan or ID just to use social media? Or is this government overreach that goes way too far?

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@kirillstedt Only time 88 spends in the defensive zone, is during warmups. Someone needs to sprinkle Miracle Grow back there.
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@Osint613 Something out of Monty Python,
“It’s just a scratch”.
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@JamaicaJane53 @TheMaineWire Thank you for the acknowledgment of my intelligence. So, she is responsible for the Homeland Security disaster at our southern border since its creation after 9-11. She’s worse than I thought. Sadly she’s the pinnacle of my registered political party in this state. Pathetic.
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@SWittimore @TheMaineWire Maybe you should look ar her experience in Homeland Security, genius.
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