Tim Jankowski

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Tim Jankowski

Tim Jankowski

@TimJankowski4

Proud American, Retired Baseball Coach, Pro 2nd, M&P.45/9mm/AR-15 Infidel! #Trump2024 #MAGA, Love God, Country, Family/Friends, My Doggo Oliver T & my Ram 2500

Michigan, USA Entrou em Mayıs 2013
3.3K Seguindo907 Seguidores
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Oilfield Rando
Oilfield Rando@Oilfield_Rando·
IT WORKED. With UAC's added, @Morse_Research is now tracking 1.6 MILLION foreigners resettled into the US with our tax dollars. Unfortunately, the feds don't disclose nationalities of unaccompanied minors they parole into your state. They are mostly Central American. Now. Onto building a recipient-specific dashboard, then cleaning visa data.
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Oilfield Rando@Oilfield_Rando

About to try updating the @Morse_Research Refugee data platform with headcount for unaccompanied illegal alien minors released into each state. Middle of the afternoon. Who cares. Let’s see if it crashes everything.

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AAGHarmeetDhillon
AAGHarmeetDhillon@AAGDhillon·
Thank you for drawing our attention to these issues. We have reached many settlements in these cases in the last year under our Protect US Workers initiative. @CivilRights is already looking into some you posted earlier today! Proud of our team led by DAAG Eric Sell!
Jobs.Now@JobsNowPR

We have Apple PERM jobs live on the site today! Every one of these jobs links directly to the Apple job board (no email application or paper mail to the immigration department here) This is what DOJ litigation can accomplish across the tech industry - no more hiding jobs!

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Steven Crowder
Steven Crowder@scrowder·
Let's be clear: I think Trump has made missteps. I think he's imperfect. But I genuinely believe he is one of the most important strongholds holding back a Marxist communist revolution that almost happened.
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Green Beret Nap Time
Well, @ShawnRyan762, I know my comparing you to @maddow seems like a joke to some, but I can assure you that it is not. As a former SEAL that has sat in briefing rooms in theater, run ops against jihadist networks, and built a platform interviewing many sharp people in both operations and intelligence, you of all people should understand how strategic warfare actually works. Despite all of that, you are sitting here and pushing posts like a cable news commentator with rimmed glasses on a communist news network, framing decisive pressure against the world's leading state sponsor of militant jihadist terrorism as "chaos" and "loss." Let's cut through this selective timeline you laid out: Trump issued a brutal, unmistakable warning over the Strait of Hormuz, the chokepoint Iran's regime was weaponizing to strangle global energy and fund its proxies. That wasn't just some bluster for fun, it was quite literally combatant messaging 101 in asymmetric conflict against an enemy that only respects raw and credible power. Jihadist Islamists like the IRGC, Hezbollah, Hamas, Houthis, and their ilk don't negotiate in good faith or respond to polite diplomacy, and you absolutely know this. They only respond to negotiations from positions of strength. If you do not negotiate that way, they will probe weaknesses, exploit hesitation, and interpret restraint as invitations to push attacks. History from the Beirut barracks to the USS Cole to Benghazi and to decades of proxy attacks has proven that. You've had guests that have spoken about these things, yet you act ignorant of them now? This apocalyptic rhetoric is the only language these people understand, and you know it. Iran blinked because of that rhetoric, floated a ceasefire tied to reopening the strait, and the administration secured a pause to lock in gains. That is not "lighting the world on fire then calling the fire department," you two bit propagandist, that is literally the way war has always worked. It is coercion through strength: downgrade the enemy's capacity, signal willingness to escalate decisively, then offer the off ramp on your terms. It's wild that you are ignorant about this. And then you cry about Israel hitting Beirut like the soft lefty you have turned into... Beirut is in Lebanon, mind you, which is a completely different country than Iran. Perhaps you need a geography lesson as well as a lesson on strategic level warfare? So yeah, that is not Trump chaos, that is Israel finishing the job against an Iranian proxy that has quite literally fired thousands of rockets and embedded itself among civilians in Lebanon for decades. And Lebanon was explicitly carved out of the US and Iran ceasefire for a reason, so even bringing it up here is silly and meant to distract. Also, Iran quickly "closed" the Strait back up because they are purveyors of taqiyya style negotiations, just like jihadists always are. But let's talk about how they "closed" the Strait, because everyone is being dishonest about that as well. They didn't actually close anything, they are just signaling that they will attack ships that cross through it. All it takes is one drone or one missile hitting one tanker and 20% of the world's oil shipping halts until insurance companies feel confident that the crazy Islamic terrorist regime in Iran won't sink any more hundred million dollar tankers. You also conveniently leave out the real reason for this war from the get go, which is curtailing China and China's Belt and Road Initiative and re-establishing the world order firmly behind the United States. I miss the days just months ago when you weren't a fully captured op... seeing what you and guys like Kent have become is truly disheartening. I hope the money is worth it.
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Nick shirley
Nick shirley@nickshirleyy·
Welcome to a $19.8 million Adult Daycare in California - No adults - No info how to enroll my “grandma” - Phone number to nowhere - New BMW parked outside Prime example of fraud, waste and abuse END THE FRAUD.
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
T Mobile opened a new tech hub in India. They then laid off Americans, spent $81.5M on H-1B Visa salaries and got a new Indian CEO The even sent Americans over to India to train the new Indian workers to replace them “T-Mobile USA could have easily opened up this technology hub in the United States of America, and they could have ran it out of one of the two Frisco offices on Warren Parkway. On top of that, T-Mobile spent $81.5 million on salaries for H-one B employees in the United States in 2025, all salaries that could have went to Americans.”
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MaggieWise ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Britain’s Worst Nightmare: Three Nuclear Powers Meet In Moscow
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Tech Layoff Tracker
Tech Layoff Tracker@TechLayoffLover·
**DELL JUST BURNED 11,000 WORKERS FOR $569 MILLION IN SEVERANCE COSTS WHILE MICHAEL DELL'S NET WORTH HIT $72 BILLION** CEO Michael Dell spent more on firing people than most companies spend on R&D $569 MILLION in severance payments. Know what Dell spent on worker retraining? $0. The company just posted $88.9 BILLION in annual revenue. UP 9% from last year. Dell Technologies stock jumped 18% the day they announced the bloodbath I'm hearing the layoffs weren't performance-based. They literally used an algorithm to pick who lives and who dies based on "AI optimization models" Sources saying Dell's internal AI deployment roadmap shows 40% workforce reduction by end of 2026. This was just phase one. The fucking CEO told shareholders that "AI will fundamentally reshape our labor requirements" while pocketing $47 million in total compensation Workers found out through automated Workday notifications. No meetings. No explanations. Just digital execution notices. Dell is simultaneously hiring 2,400 "AI specialists" in Bangalore and Hyderabad at 1/6th the cost of American engineers The company's "Future of Work" initiative literally maps every role for AI replacement potential. If your score is above 7/10, you're already dead. Michael Dell just proved you can spend half a billion dollars firing Americans and Wall Street will throw you a fucking parade If you work at any enterprise hardware company, check your Workday portal tonight. This playbook is spreading faster than COVID.
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History with Waffles
History with Waffles@CwNewbie11·
We’re going to deep dive on a little round top controversy soon.
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Tech Layoff Tracker
Tech Layoff Tracker@TechLayoffLover·
**AMAZON JUST EXECUTED 16,000 HUMANS WHILE FILING 21,696 H-1B PETITIONS FOR CHEAPER FOREIGN REPLACEMENTS** 30,000 total jobs eliminated in 4 months while Andy Jassy literally imports an entire workforce to undercut American wages $14.3 BILLION in quarterly operating income. UP 33% year over year. The same fucking executives who said "we're optimizing for efficiency" just filed paperwork to bring in 22,000 foreign workers at half the salary I'm hearing from inside sources that the H-1B filings spiked DURING the layoff announcements. Same departments getting gutted and restaffed simultaneously. Word is they're targeting anyone making over $180k for "redundancy elimination" then immediately posting the same roles for H-1B candidates at $90k AWS engineers with 8 years experience getting walked out while recruiters in Bangalore get job reqs for "Senior Cloud Architect - H1B Preferred" The math is fucking diabolical: Cut 30,000 Americans making $165k average. Import 22,000 visa holders at $85k average. Save $2.4 billion in labor costs. Jassy pocketed $31 million in total comp last year while orchestrating the largest workforce replacement scheme in corporate history Sources saying the RTO mandate was specifically designed to make senior engineers quit so they wouldn't have to pay severance during the H-1B transition If you're at Amazon and making more than $150k, they're already interviewing your replacement in Hyderabad The American tech worker is being systematically liquidated and replaced in real time by the richest company on fucking earth
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Cernovich
Cernovich@Cernovich·
Republicans in Virginia got mad at Trump (no one can even remember why), threw a tantrum, stayed home. After all, they said, Democrats ran a "moderate." Immediately there were laws to ban guns, raise taxes, and steal Republican Congressional seats.
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@LarrySchweikart
@LarrySchweikart@LarrySchweikart·
1) MOTHER of all threads. I told you I'd have one for you when I returned. 2) Politics first, then war, then the economy, then culture. 3) I agree with @RealSKeshel that HISTORY says Rs will lose the House in Nov.
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Chief Patrol Agent - Yuma Sector
Upon completion of all planned projects, the entire border in Yuma Sector will be secured with a smart border wall system which includes access roads, lighting, cameras, detection technology, and a secondary physical barrier. #BorderPatrol #CBP #DHS #BorderSecurity
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Promethean Action
Promethean Action@PrometheanActn·
RFK Jr. just said his father and uncle would support what Trump is doing on Iran and the economy. He's right — and the empire knows it. Chatham House is writing its own obituary while sovereign nations broker peace without NATO in the room. Full breakdown:
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The Redheaded libertarian
The Redheaded libertarian@TRHLofficial·
Changes I would make during an Article V Convention of States: 1. Cap the Supreme Court at 9. 2. Only Citizens can vote. States can refine further. 3. Term limits 4. Repeal the 16th 5. Repeal the 17th 6. Repeal the 19th (mutes post) 7. Ban congressional stock trading 8. Ban lobbying/pacs 9. Ban foreign money 10. Write the second amendment so that a 2 year old may understand it 11. Ban dual citizens from holding office. 12. No reelection for Congressmen without a balanced budget 13. Abolish the Patriot Act 14. Fire all Bureaucrats 15. President Washington’s cabinet was 5 people: Treasury, State, War, VP, and AG. Cap it there. Abolish everything else 16. No foreign aid while we are in debt 17. Return to the gold standard and subsidize it with other precious metals. 18. National Ron Paul Day of Celebration 19. Single issue bills only. 20. all congressmen who vote in favor of war must send their first born son 21. Abolish the tax code. 21. No pay for Congress during a shutdown. 22. Cut spending by 7% a year 23. Make the Declaration of Independence the Law of the Land. 24. Abolish birthright citizenship 25. Reinstate the 1948 Smith-Mundt Act’s domestic dissemination ban on propaganda. 26. Fix the food— the soil, the GMOs, the dyes, the chemicals. Make food food again 27. Ban communism. 28. Ban transing kids 29. Death penalty for pedophiles 30. Reinstate duels This is just a start. I reserve the right to add to this list.
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DataRepublican (small r)
DataRepublican (small r)@DataRepublican·
🇪🇺🔥 HOW MASS MIGRATION HAPPENED, A TIMELINE: The EU's Crisis Didn't Start in Brussels; It Started in Washington I first meant this as a reply to @DeputySecState, but decided it warrants its own post. Today on X, there is plenty of criticism of the EU's lack of accountability. What gets ignored is that the same mentality operates at the UN level and, in many ways, originates in the United States. I'll refer to this shared ideology as "democracy" -- air quotes intentional, because that's the vocabulary they use. Take mass migration as a case study. George W. Bush's Freedom Agenda tried to impose democracy on the Middle East by force. The "democracy" camp embraced that project enthusiastically. When the effort unraveled between 2004 and 2006, "democracy" didn't reassess its premises. Instead, it blamed Bush. The corrective, in their view, was to intensify multilateralism and purge anything that resembled national / American loyalty. More money flowed into NGOs almost immediately. Then came the Arab Spring. The "democracy" believers proclaimed a new era for the Middle East. When the revolutions collapsed, they didn't question their framework. They concluded instead that they lacked sufficient control over events on the ground: authoritarian leaders had too much leverage over local NGOs. This realization didn't stop them from funding those NGOs. They continued pouring public money into the region despite knowing that strongmen would divert large portions of it. That is how U.S. taxpayers end up financing the Taliban: all in the name of "democracy." So what follows if you believe the Middle East must be democratized but you can't achieve it within its borders? You change the borders. The surge in mass migration after the Arab Spring’s collapse is not a coincidence. The think-tank world began a new chorus... "migration is democratizing." Importing populations from the region became the next iteration of the same project. Here's, step-by-step, how it happened - keep in mind that United States finances many of those NGOs mentioned: 🔹 2010: First Global Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD) convenes. The forum is a “voluntary, non-binding consultative” bringing together representatives of more than 150 countries plus NGOs “for frank and productive conversations and sharing of best practices for improving the impact of migration on development.” 🔹 2010: Open Society Foundations launches International Migration Initiative. Open Society Foundation and MacArthur Foundation at this point are described as “the only private foundations willing to invest in shaping migration discussions at the global level.” 🔹 2011-2012: Landmark European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) rulings. All 46 Council of Europe member states are bound to ECHR obligations. - In M.S.S. v. Belgium & Greece, ECHR “ruled that a state always has the responsibility to verify the conditions, treatment and legal safeguards to which an asylum seeker will be subjected if he is transferred, even when that transfer is from one EU member state to another,” making inter-state transfers significantly more difficult.“ - In Hirsi Jamaa v. Italy, ECHR bans collective expulsion of migrants "without any examination of each individual situation.” 🔹 2012: EU and International Organization for Migration (IOM) establish a strategic framework. The framework is described as being built “on a shared interest in bringing the benefits of well managed international migration to migrants and society.” The framework “also serves as a basis for exchange, development and structuring of the relationship between the EU and IOM.” (Note: the International Republican Institute gives large grants to IOM. Mass migration is indeed an Uniparty effort.) 🔹 2013: UN adopts declaration of high-level dialogue on international migration and development. The resolution calls on member states to “[r]ecognize that international migration is a multidimensional reality of major relevance for the development of countries of origin, transit and destination, and in this regard recognize that international migration is a cross-cutting phenomenon that should be addressed in a coherent, comprehensive and balanced manner, integrating development with due regard for social, economic and environmental dimensions and respecting human rights.” 🔹 2014: U.S. establishes Central American Minors (CAM) Program. The U.S. government creates a legal pathway for eligible children in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras to apply for refugee or parole status from within their home countries, rather than making the dangerous journey north. 🔹 2015: UN adopts 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The resolution establishes 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and 100+ targets. Target 10.7 commits states to “‘facilitate orderly, safe, regular, and responsible migration and mobility of people, including through the implementation of planned and well-managed migration policies.” 🔹 2016: The UN General Assembly approved the International Organization for Migration (IOM) as a related organization of the UN. The move formally integrates global migration management into the UN system for the first time. 🔹 2016: Freedom House’s Nations in Transit report links migration management to the quality of democratic governance. The report warned that the refugee crisis and governments’ responses to it were testing rule of law, tolerance, and institutional cohesion across Europe, marking a shift toward incorporating migration into democracy assessments. (The importance of this cannot be understated. Freedom House is an American institution which is the premier measure of how democratic a country is. This change means that a country is democratic if and only if it allows unfettered migration. Safety + crime have nothing to do with it.) 🔹 2018: The United Nations adopts the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration. The Global Compact for Migration (GCM) is first ever inter-governmental agreement to cover all dimensions of international migration. In its Preamble, it declares that migration is “a source of prosperity, innovation and sustainable development” and states that its objectives can be “optimized by improving migration governance.” 🔹 2021: The Biden administration starts participating in GCM.
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