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@marrtw

West Virginia, USA Entrou em Aralık 2007
269 Seguindo319 Seguidores
Ambar
Ambar@Ambar_SIFF_MRA·
>Lorna Hajdini, 37 >JPMorgan Executive >Used her power to abuse junior men >Forced married man into non-consensual sex acts >Allegedly drugged him with Rohypnol and erectile dysfunction pills >Forced non-consensual oral s*x while he cried and mocked him during the act >Engaged in facesitting, toe sucking and other acts >Used racial slurs calling him her "little brown boy" and made derogatory remarks about his wife >Threatened to destroy his career saying "I f**king own you" >Victim faced retaliation from JPMorgan after reporting the abuse >This is what feminist women do when they get power. >Imagine the outrage if the genders were reversed.
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Full Name@marrtw·
@benonwine And yet, Morrisons probably can't understand why they have a shoplifting problem. I remember a time when those who did the right thing were rewarded, and those who did wrong were punished. Now, it's the other way round.
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Benonwine
Benonwine@benonwine·
30 years of loyalty. Three decades of turning up, doing her job, serving her community. Jane Pilborough saw a teenager stuffing food into his pockets and did what most people would do she stepped in. No security. No help. Just instinct. She stepped in. She ended up on the floor, injured… The thief ran off… And Morrisons sacked her. Not the shoplifter. Not the system that failed her but her. Morrisons said she put the company’s “reputation” at risk. Another Morrisons worker punished for trying to stop theft. This is how loyalty is repaid, what’s the point anymore especially when you have your whole life destroyed. What kind of message does that send to every honest worker out there?
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@elonmusk Imagine the kind of country we could have if we just put competent people in charge.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
🇺🇸🇺🇸
Rapid Response 47@RapidResponse47

.@NASAAdmin: "The next step is go out further, it's to return to the moon. It's to pick up where Apollo 17 left off... President Trump said we are going back to stay, to build a moon base. That’s going to be a massive American outpost." 🚀🌕

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Paul A. Szypula 🇺🇸
Paul A. Szypula 🇺🇸@Bubblebathgirl·
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) was asked today about funding DHS in light of Saturday’s assassination attempt on President Trump. Waters bizarrely answered, “I’m focused and I can’t respond to you now. I’m thinking about something we have to do.” WTH?! 😂
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Full Name@marrtw·
@WallStreetMav Universities, especially the ones with huge endowments, should be on the hook for these student loans, and no one else. If they can't provide a degree that someone can use to get a well-paying job, then it's their fault, not our fault.
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Wall Street Mav
Wall Street Mav@WallStreetMav·
If your degree can’t beat a high school salary in 4 years, no more tax money. Same if your grad degree can’t beat a BA. That would wipe out half of majors. And if universities can’t fix it, 80% go bankrupt.
Peter St Onge, Ph.D.@profstonge

Trump wants to end student loans for junk degrees. Taxpayers spend at least $60 billion a year on the 57% of degrees that lose money. And with AI coming, young people can't coast on a zero-skill sheepskin.

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U.S. Senator John Fetterman
U.S. Senator John Fetterman@SenFettermanPA·
SNAP to include HOT ROTISSERIE CHICKEN. 384-35! Doesn’t only include my crew’s favorite + affordable $4.99 Costco rotisserie 😜 — but ANY hot rotisserie. Feeding families: a (rotisserie) chicken in every pot. 🇺🇸
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Full Name@marrtw·
@avidseries This is extremely sad because it makes people avoid black doctors. They never know if they're qualified or not. Of course, no one talks about this...or admits it.
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Full Name@marrtw·
@micah_erfan Lol. You're a little bit late to the table dude, as those states have been heavily gerrymandered for Democrats for years.
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@amyklobuchar She dissents on everything that is common sense... 100% of the time. Therefore, very few people care what she says anymore. She's lost all credibility, along with the other two leftist robots.
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Amy Klobuchar
Amy Klobuchar@amyklobuchar·
Justice Kagan says it best
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@JudiciaryDems Look at the replies. You’ll never win this argument because you’re more guilty of gerrymandering than anyone else. I’m surprised you even bring it up, since it just gives people a chance to point out the massive Democratic gerrymanders. But hey, keep at it.
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FreeStateColorado
FreeStateColorado@FreeStateColor1·
BREAKING: After 3 Hours of debate, HB26-1281 narrowly passes the House on third reading.. This bill lowers the penalty for murder in cases of "extreme indifference" with some exceptions... Before this bill takes effect, a person can be charged with first degree murder "when an individual knowingly engages in conduct with an attitude of universal malice manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life generally that creates a grave risk of death to a person or persons, and which conduct causes the death of another person." For example, someone shoots into a crowd or randomly kills someone by acting in "extreme indifference" to human life. After this bill takes effect, to be found guilty of First Degree Murder caused by "extreme indifference," a criminal would have to kill "more than one person, a child under 12, a first responder," or kill "one person and also cause serious bodily injury to two of more persons by means of a deadly weapon." Otherwise, just killing one person with "extreme indifference" will only result in Second Degree Murder... That's right, literal murderers will have lower penalties thanks to Colorado House Democrats...
Do Better Denver@dobetterdnvr

HB26-1281 is a total joke. This genius bill downgrades “extreme indifference” murders like spraying bullets into crowds, drive-bys, or reckless shootings that still only kill one person from first degree murder (life without parole) to second degree (24 to 48 years, parole possible). Denver’s streets are already a war zone, but sure, let’s tell criminals “eh, only one body? No big deal.” Nothing says “we care about victims” like making cold blooded killers eligible for early release. Brilliant. Reject this nonsense.

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Owen Gregorian
Owen Gregorian@OwenGregorian·
Inventor creates ingeniously simple device to end LA’s copper wire theft. The city immediately shot it down | Jamie Paige, New York Post Los Angeles has rejected an entrepreneur’s cheap and simple fix to stop the city’s crippling copper wire theft crisis. End Metal Theft spokesman Mark James revealed to the California Post it had created a hardened cover that secures streetlights and would stop neighborhoods being plunged into darkness. The device, which fastens over the lid to the wires, would make it harder, louder and far riskier for criminals to try to gain access. They would cost about $300 to install, are easily maintained and would save the tens of thousands of dollars it costs to repair vandalized streetlamps. But James revealed City Hall chiefs shot it down, instead wanting to focus on converting to solar lamps that will cost up to $6,000 each. He told The Post: “The most cost-effective theft deterrent isn’t replacing what thieves are after, it’s making it not worth their time to try.” He continued: “A locking cover does that for a fraction of what any alternative infrastructure decision costs.” Copper wire theft has sparked havoc across the city and left neighborhoods in darkness while a backlog of repairs are carried out. Meanwhile Los Angeles started sending ballots out to residents to try to get them to stack up the funds to pay for ones outside their homes. James said: “A lot of these thefts happen in plain sight, guys in vests, middle of the day, looking like they belong there. “What changes things is when they walk up and see it’s not an easy target anymore. That visual alone is usually enough. They move on.” The company presented the idea to the city for the first time during the planning for the $600 million Sixth Street Bridge in 2022. But leaders moved ahead without it and soon after the site was finished the copper wire thefts began. End Metal Theft claims its simple device has proven to stop criminals. James said: “In Glendale, contractors repulled wire and within 48 hours it was stolen again, taxpayers paid twice for the same repair. “After installing locking covers, theft at that park stopped. What’s telling is copper wire theft started showing up in nearby unprotected areas. They’re choosing the easiest target.” Despite this, LA is weighing bringing in solar streetlights that will not need the wiring that will cost between $3,000 and $6,000 per unit and more for maintenance and battery replacements. Last week The Post revealed the city was planning to slug homeowners with hundreds of dollars to fix streetlights in their neighborhood. Ballots have started popping up in the mailboxes of Angelenos who benefit from streetlights illuminating their property — asking them to sign off on an initiative to fork over hundreds of dollars in property fees each year to replace 200,000 streetlights across the city. The plan, aimed at repairing streetlights continuously damaged by vandals and copper thieves, would increase the current budget from $45 million to $125 million. Wire theft is currently costing LA more than $20 million a year. The ballot is expected to be sent to 600,000 property owners. The Democrat-dominated LA City Council voted overwhelmingly in favor of the measure last month — with only one “no” vote — arguing more money is needed to cover permanent fixes to lighting infrastructure while copper-wire bandits have run rampant pillaging streetlights. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has voiced strong support for the initiative. “As long as voters support the street lighting assessment, we’ll be able to replace all 200,000 lights across the city,” she said. Calling the repairs “something long overdue.” The initiative comes from the same LA City Council that spent $300 million on hotel rooms for homeless people — only to see 40% of those people return to the streets. Woodland Hills resident Richie Varga was shocked to see the “bonehead ballot” sitting in his mailbox on Monday. “When I opened it up I said, is this a joke?” he told The California Post of the proposed $200-plus fee he’s now staring down. “It’s legit.” The ballot, pushed out by LA City Council, asks residents if they’re in favor of or opposed to paying the amount — which for Varga would equal $205.91 more per year for his two-bedroom duplex. “Vote no — it’s a hard no with a middle finger, a hell no,” he said. “Who’s going to vote yes?” “Properties are considered to receive a special benefit from the lighting if the portion of roadway and sidewalk adjacent to the property is receiving significant illumination from the lighting,” the bureau said, claiming the fee is “not a tax” but rather “a levy or charge for a special benefit.” The amount Angelenos would pay varies based on factors like their property type and lot size, but estimates show many single-family homeowners would pay roughly $120 to $175 per year. Apartment buildings with hundreds of units would have to pay a maximum of about $4,700 per year, while commercial properties would need to fork over as much as $8,200, according to review of various addresses. Monica Rodriguez — the lone city councilmember to vote against the plan to charge property owners — told The Post that “it’s unreasonable to ask them to shoulder yet another cost.” “You can’t ask people to pay more when you haven’t even done the work to rein in the expenses you’ve already passed on to them,” she said. “Before moving forward with any fee increase, the city should present a clear, up-to-date plan for maintaining and protecting this infrastructure.” Residents in the Pacific Palisades who lost everything, and can’t even live in their homes would also be on the hook for the extra hundreds of dollars if passed. Jessica Rogers, president of the Pacific Palisades Residents Association, called the proposal “yet another sign the City of Los Angeles is failing its residents.” “Instead of addressing the root causes of these failures, the city continues to rely on short-term fixes and Band-Aid solutions,” she told The Post. “We’re not going to improve infrastructure if the default answer is always to raise taxes.” The ballots sent to property owners — which must be returned by June 2 — will be weighted to favor property owners with higher proposed fees. Varga, who also owns “a few modest rental properties,” said he would need to pass the cost of any new fees for those units on to his renters. “I try to be cool, but people’s rents are gonna get raised by other landlords,” he said. The push comes as copper-wire theft has remained a scourge across Los Angeles as the value of the metal creeps upward. Most of the stolen wire turns up found in scrap markets as thieves try to sell it for profit. Some heartless crooks have even stooped to stealing copper wire from Little League fields. The crime spree has left neighborhoods in Los Angeles without power and have had thieves strike repeatedly. Varga says people who work hard are now being asked to clean up the city’s crime mess. “A third of LA’s City Council are democratic socialists of America. They don’t care about crime.” he said. nypost.com/2026/04/29/us-…
Owen Gregorian tweet mediaOwen Gregorian tweet media
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@its_The_Dr This is what a cult looks like. In case you didn't know.
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Johnny Midnight ⚡️
Johnny Midnight ⚡️@its_The_Dr·
As much as I liked the Avengers, they are woke. The entire Avengers cast is a bunch of woke morons - disappointing.
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Visegrád 24
Visegrád 24@visegrad24·
Keir Starmer completed the process of removing all hereditary peers from the House of Lords yesterday It was the end of the 700-year-old tradition It was initially thought the office of the Lord Great Chamberlain would be spared as it dates back to 1138, but it also disappeared
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Corey A. DeAngelis, school choice evangelist
BREAKING: Connecticut House passed a bill to require parents to prove their innocence before allowing them to homeschool. The vote was 96–53. It's on the Senate calendar. Connecticut may be the first state to go backwards on homeschool freedom in the last 50 years.
Corey A. DeAngelis, school choice evangelist tweet media
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@SonofManwithus Because most of them have mental health issues. That should be obvious by now.
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🎯Nick🎯
🎯Nick🎯@SonofManwithus·
I can't for the life of me understand why liberal women are sympathetic to Islam but despise Christianity?
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@MatrixMysteries Why? What kind of people only fly economy that makes her fearful? Also, this is perhaps the most stupid excuse I've ever heard in my life.
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MatrixMysteries
MatrixMysteries@MatrixMysteries·
"It’s unsafe for me as a black women to RISK flying economy." New Orleans Mayor spent $30,000 in TAXPAYER funds on first class flights to France and Switzerland. City policy requires the lowest available airfare, with upgrades paid personally—yet she refuses to pay it back.
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