Bob Donaldson

7K posts

Bob Donaldson

Bob Donaldson

@BobD_Austin

Austin, Texas เข้าร่วม Haziran 2009
274 กำลังติดตาม731 ผู้ติดตาม
Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Elon Musk just described the most sophisticated theft operation in American history. Not a heist. A system. Your tax dollars leave Washington. They enter a non-governmental organization. The government. With different letterhead. Musk: “Obviously if it’s a government-funded non-governmental organization, it’s just the government.” They cross a border. American law stops following them. They pass through three more entities in three more countries. They come home. Different pocket. Clean hands. Perfect crime. Musk: “The government can send money to an NGO that is then no longer governed by the laws of the United States.” Now run the math. Congressional salary. $200,000. Average net worth of a longtime member of Congress. North of $20 million. Musk: “There are a lot of strangely wealthy members of Congress. I just can’t connect the dots of how they got $20 million earning $200,000 a year. Nobody can explain that.” Nobody is supposed to. This machine ran untouched for decades for one reason. Human limitation. A forensic team cannot trace ten thousand wire transfers across fifty global jurisdictions at once. The corruption does not hide in darkness. It hides in volume. They built a labyrinth so deliberately complex that the sheer weight of it collapses every investigation before it starts. Paper buries paper. Bureaucracy absorbs inquiry. The entire architecture was engineered to exhaust you. Then artificial intelligence arrived. AI does not get tired. It cannot be bought. It does not lose the thread at wire transfer 4,000. You give it the entire global ledger. It maps every node, every transfer, every shell entity, every offshore NGO across every jurisdiction. Not in weeks. In hours. It finds the signal inside the noise. It flags the pattern. It traces a dollar from a D.C. appropriation to a Cayman shell to a congressional portfolio in the time it takes a human auditor to find his parking spot. The labyrinth was built to defeat human eyes. It is defenseless against a machine that reads the entire maze at once. This is why the establishment is not just annoyed by DOGE. They are terrified. Musk: “We’re going to try to figure it out and stop it.” He did not arrive in Washington to trim budgets. He arrived with supercomputing, AI audit systems, and a mandate to map the full financial architecture of the federal government. For the first time in history, the complexity that protected the corruption is the very thing that will expose it. Every shell entity is a signature. Every routing pattern is a fingerprint. Every congressman who walked in earning $200,000 and walked out worth $20 million is now a variable in an equation that will be solved. The swamp was never impenetrable. It was just too big for human hands. It was never built for this.
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Rothmus 🏴
Rothmus 🏴@Rothmus·
🎯🎯🎯
Rothmus 🏴 tweet media
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Chip Roy
Chip Roy@chiproytx·
A handful of GOP Senators need to realize leftist networks propped up hate groups to sway public opinion to gain more power. And those same leftists promise to rip the Constitution to shreds… Maybe they could be convinced to pass Voter ID and proof of citizenship… #SAVEAmerica
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Cedra Crenshaw 🚢
Cedra Crenshaw 🚢@CedraCrenshaw·
Politician: I'll give you the $14,000 that would have been spent on your child in public school Homeschooler: It doesn't cost $14,000 to homeschool a child. Many families spend less than $1,000. Politician: But don't you want the money? Homeschooler: No Politician: Why don't you want the money? Homeschooler: First, it's government money. Second, strings are attached. Third, it's bloated with waste that drives up prices. Politician: Then what do you want? Homeschooler: I want you to stop stealing my income in the form of property taxes for public schools that I don't use and just leave me alone. Politician: But if I did that, I wouldn't be able to make you a dependent, controllable part of my voter base. Homeschooler: exactly chooseeducationindependence.com/resources/
Education Independence@EduIndependence

Government subsidies drove up college tuition. Most people agree on that. So why would vouchers and ESAs work differently for K-12? Same structure. Third-party dollars flowing to private providers. Prices adjust to capture the funding. Regulations follow the money. The exit from government education should not require a government check. Join the conversation and learn more: hubs.la/Q04cTqWD0

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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
So the current line from the Democrat/Media Complex goes something like this: “Oh, so the Straits of Hormuz are open again. Big deal. So we spent all that money and killed all those people just to achieve something that was already in place before we started this.” They are acting like opening the Straits of Hormuz was our singular military objective. In reality, our objectives were to destroy Iran’s military and nuclear capabilities, eradicate the class of mullahs who were murdering their own citizens by the bushel, and eliminate the mullahs’ ability to export terror throughout the world. All objectives were achieved with only a few U.S. casualties, the world is now a vastly safer place, and as an added bonus Israel and Lebanon seem poised to finally achieve peace. This is one of the greatest military victories in world history, and the usual suspects are trying to obscure that fact by pretending our objective was something tertiary to the entire effort. Don’t fall for it. It’s a journalistic lie.
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Health Freedom Defense Fund
NEW: Clarence Thomas just declared that “consent of the governed” is the only legitimate source of government power. “We The People can never legitimately consent to the violation of our God-given equality.” “The Declaration made it clear.”

“The purpose of government is to protect our God-given unalienable rights.” “It can be easy to forget 250 years later the courage it took for those 56 men to sign the Declaration.” “Those men committed treason against the king, risking death at the hands of an empire far mightier than the newborn United States.” 
“The ideas of the Declaration are so powerful that our nation could not coexist with the contradiction… of slavery.” “Those ideas have been so powerful that they convinced our nation to finally end segregation.” “They continue to be so powerful today that they have inspired people throughout the world to throw off the shackles of their own oppressors.” “And it all began with our founders declaring in 1776… that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights.” “That among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” “We should also not forget the important sentence that follows.”

“That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.” @UTAustin
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Jeremy Wayne Tate
Jeremy Wayne Tate@JeremyTate41·
“Listen and Obey” I spent the morning at Rockbridge Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. The school is widely regarded as a flagship classical Christian school. The first classroom I visited was a kindergarten where the students were joyfully singing the books of the Old Testament as I walked in (think about that for a second, by song five-year-olds had already remembered every book in the Old Testament! 🤯) The class had just two rules: 1.Listen 2.Obey That was it. Radically simple. The children seemed genuinely happy. The room had order, rhythm, predictability. Teachers value those things, but children love them. The ancients understood something we’ve forgotten, freedom is not found in the absence of structure, but within it. Freedom and happiness are not found in doing whatever you want, but in doing what you ought. “Listen and Obey.” It took modern educational theory to forget such a basic and timeless truth.
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Farhan Thawar
Farhan Thawar@fnthawar·
Much of the social history of the Western world over the past three decades has involved replacing what worked with what sounded good —Thomas Sowell
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Adam Loewy
Adam Loewy@LoewyLawFirm·
We were literally one @data_atx post away from this City spending $32 MILLION to house the Project Connect execs in a fancy office at 100 Congress. They are fleecing the public, openly. We are gonna have another election on this boondoggle and it’s gonna be stopped. #txlege
Adam Loewy@LoewyLawFirm

The message we sent on Prop Q continues to pay dividends. Good work by @KirkPWatson for stopping this. And kudos to @data_atx for flagging it.

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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Athenaeum Book Club
Athenaeum Book Club@athenaeumbc·
Alexander Solzhenitsyn gave the most controversial speech *against* Western Civilization at Harvard in 1978. As a survivor of the Russian Gulags, they expected him to praise the West. Instead, he made a jarring accusation: The West is a dying civilization. If it doesn't change its ways, it is doomed to collapse. In fact, he said this has been the case for 500 years, when the West made a crucial mistake: "How did the West decline from its triumphal march to its present debility? ...the mistake must be at the root, at the very foundation of thought in modern times. I refer to the prevailing Western view of the world which was born in the Renaissance… I refer to humanism — the proclaimed autonomy of man from any higher force above him." Solzhenitsyn said humanism made man autonomous from God, Truth, and objective morality. If all morality is subjective, then man has nothing to live nor die for. Naturally, he loses his courage, embraces materialism, and grows effeminate to modern evils. So, what is the solution? A return to belief in a transcendental morality under God: "If, as claimed by humanism, man were born only to be happy, he would not be born to die. Since his body is doomed to death, his task on earth evidently must be more spiritual… The fulfillment of a permanent, earnest duty so that one’s life journey may become above all an experience of moral growth: to leave life a better human being than one started it." All cultures live, or die, based on their respect of the True, Good, and Beautiful. To save the West, Solzhenitsyn says start with beautifying your soul, for that is both how you live well, and begin to make civilization itself beautiful again.
Athenaeum Book Club tweet media
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
C3
C3@C_3C_3·
The Republicans are one fair election away from destroying the Democrat Party and the Democrats are one stolen election away from destroying America. The SAVE America Act is that important. Simple.
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Insurrection Barbie
Insurrection Barbie@DefiyantlyFree·
Every ancient culture had its gods, and every god had a job. The god of the sun rises and sets. The god of the river floods and recedes. The god of war fights and rests. They were defined by their function, and their function had boundaries. And then a voice spoke from a burning bush on the back side of a desert, and Moses asked it for a name. The answer he got back was not a name. Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh. I AM THAT I AM. This God is not the god of this or the god of that. This God is the ground of all existence itself. Everything that is, is because He is. You cannot name Him because naming Him would require a word big enough to hold all of reality, and there is no such word. Jesus of Nazareth walks into the Gospel of John and beyond and makes the following statements: “I am the bread of life.” “I am the light of the world.” “I am the door.” “I am the good shepherd.” “I am the resurrection and the life.” “I am the way, the truth, and the life.” “I am the true vine.” Every single one of those statements begins with ego eimi, which means I AM. Those are the same words God gave Moses at the bush. Jesus is not using a figure of speech. He is not reaching for a metaphor. He is invoking Exodus 3. He is saying that the uncategorizable, uncontainable, unnameable God that Moses met on the mountain is standing in front of you right now in human skin. There is only one God from Exodus to Revelation. He removes any doubt completely in John 8:58. The Pharisees are arguing with Him about Abraham, and Jesus says, “Before Abraham was, I AM.” He does not say I was. He says I AM. The I AM statements only work if you understand Exodus. They only carry their world-breaking weight if you know the covenant history, the burning bush, and the divine name that was so holy it could not be spoken aloud. Jesus did not appear out of nowhere with a startup religion and a set of inspirational quotes. He walked into a story that had been unfolding for two thousand years and said He was the one the story had been about the entire time.
Frank Turek@DrFrankTurek

Is Jesus in every book of the Bible?

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Bob Donaldson
Bob Donaldson@BobD_Austin·
I hope my composition students at Wilson Hill Academy see this and smile.
M.A. Rothman@MichaelARothman

𝐍𝐎, 𝐈𝐓'𝐒 𝐍𝐎𝐓 𝐀𝐈. 𝐈𝐓'𝐒 𝐂𝐀𝐋𝐋𝐄𝐃 𝐏𝐔𝐍𝐂𝐓𝐔𝐀𝐓𝐈𝐎𝐍. I see it constantly now. Someone reads a post or an article and spots an em dash — that long horizontal line — and immediately declares it was written by AI. 𝐓𝐡𝐚𝐭'𝐬 𝐚𝐧 𝐞𝐦 𝐝𝐚𝐬𝐡, 𝐝𝐞𝐟𝐢𝐧𝐢𝐭𝐞𝐥𝐲 𝐂𝐡𝐚𝐭𝐆𝐏𝐓. You know who else uses em dashes? People who actually learned how English punctuation works. I don't normally step on this particular soapbox — and I commit authorial malpractice by never trying to sell you my books — but I've authored over 30 of them. Many have been international bestsellers. Well over 𝟏,𝟎𝟎𝟎,𝟎𝟎𝟎 𝐜𝐨𝐩𝐢𝐞𝐬 in print, translated into 7+ languages, sold around the world. I am, amongst many other things, an actual author. So let me give you a quick education your grammar teachers apparently skipped. The em dash — this thing right here — is one of the most versatile punctuation marks in the English language. It's called an "em dash" because in traditional typesetting, it was the width of the capital letter M in whatever typeface you were using. It serves three primary functions. First, it sets off a parenthetical statement within a sentence — like this one — when you want more emphasis than commas provide but less formality than parentheses. Second, it signals an abrupt break in thought or a dramatic pivot. Third, it introduces an explanation or amplification of what came before it. Writers have been using it for centuries. Emily Dickinson used em dashes so obsessively her manuscripts look like they were attacked by a horizontal line. Mark Twain used them constantly in dialogue. So did F. Scott Fitzgerald. None of them had access to ChatGPT. Now for a bit of trivia most people never learn. There's also an 𝐞𝐧 𝐝𝐚𝐬𝐡 — slightly shorter, the width of the letter N. The en dash has a narrower purpose: it connects ranges. Pages 12–44. The years 1941–1945. The New York–London flight. It's the dash between two things that are connected but distinct. Most people have never heard of it, and most fonts render it just barely shorter than an em dash, which is why almost nobody notices the difference. Both have been part of formal typography since the invention of movable type in the 15th century. Gutenberg's typesetters used varying dash lengths to organize text. By the 18th century, printers had standardized the em and en dash as distinct glyphs with distinct grammatical functions. This isn't some modern AI invention — it's older than the United States. And if you use Microsoft Word, they're trivially easy to type. An en dash is Ctrl + Minus on the numeric keypad. An em dash is Ctrl + Alt + Minus on the numeric keypad. Word also auto-converts two hyphens (--) into an em dash if you have autocorrect enabled. That's why you see me use them in my books and in my posts — because I know they exist and I know the keyboard shortcut. The reason AI chatbots use em dashes frequently is because they were trained on well-written text — books, journalism, academic papers — written by people who knew the rules. The AI learned proper punctuation from proper writers. That doesn't make proper punctuation a sign of AI. It makes it a sign of 𝐥𝐢𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐚𝐜𝐲. For the record, the only things I use AI for are conjuring up a quick graphic — like the image on this post — or as a shortcut for preliminary research. Think of it as a Google accelerator. The writing? That's all me. It has been for 30+ books and countless social media posts such as this one. If you've reached the end of this post, you now know more about dashes than most people who graduated with an English degree. And the next time you see an em dash and your first instinct is to scream "AI" — maybe consider that what you're actually looking at is someone who paid attention in class. Or someone whose grammar teachers didn't fail them quite as badly as yours failed you. 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐞𝐦 𝐝𝐚𝐬𝐡 𝐢𝐬 𝟓𝟎𝟎 𝐲𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐬 𝐨𝐥𝐝. 𝐒𝐭𝐨𝐩 𝐛𝐥𝐚𝐦𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐢𝐭 𝐨𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐫𝐨𝐛𝐨𝐭𝐬.

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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Robert Sureck
Robert Sureck@RobertSureck·
So Travis CAD increased appraised value in my Austin neighborhood 15-20% when actual market values are down 2-6%. Make this make sense other than the Austin City Council using influence to raise money for their crazy projects through the Austin homeowners.
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Unite4Freedom
Unite4Freedom@Unite4Freedom·
ENOUGH WITH THE MISINFORMATION. LET’S TALK LAW. The U.S. Department of Justice does NOT operate in a vacuum—and it never has. The federal government already has lawful access pathways to identity data: • Social Security data → Social Security Administration • Driver’s license / ID data → State DMVs (through legal process) • Citizenship & immigration data → Department of Homeland Security This isn’t new. This isn’t radical. This is established law. And it’s backed by federal statute: • National Voter Registration Act • Help America Vote Act • Civil Rights Act of 1960 These laws REQUIRE: ✔ Maintenance of accurate voter rolls ✔ Retention and availability of election records ✔ Federal oversight to ensure compliance Compliance requires evidence. Oversight requires access. And enforcement requires action. Let’s be crystal clear: The federal government already has the authority to inspect voter registration records and ensure elections comply with federal law. So what’s actually happening right now? Not “new power.” Not “unprecedented overreach.” It’s enforcement. States pushing back aren’t debating whether this authority exists. They’re resisting accountability to laws that are already on the books. Because once records are: • Transparent • Verifiable • Cross-checked There is no room left for ambiguity. Courts don’t run on narratives. They run on evidence. And federal law is not optional. If voter rolls cannot be independently verified using lawful data: Then certification is built on trust—not proof. And that is NOT what the law requires. Bottom line: This is not about “control of elections.” This is about whether elections meet the legal standard of validity under existing federal law. And that standard is clear: Real voters. Real records. Real verification. Everything else is noise.
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シcal
シcal@nestagraphics·
Plenty of things cost you this game •Starting Allen & resting Peña for no reason •Yainer Diaz catching after Vazquez caught a shutout yesterday •Jake Meyers not wearing shades & allowing 3 runners to score •Bryan Abreu trying to close a game out & failing for the 67th time in a row The offense still scored 10, i care about that more than winning rn tbh, i expect the pitching to figure itself out
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Chip Roy
Chip Roy@chiproytx·
House Republicans should go to Washington this Monday, pass FULL DHS funding to secure our country through reconciliation and AGAIN through appropriations, and send both to the Senate. Don’t let Democrats dictate the terms.
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Rep. Chip Roy Press Office
Rep. Chip Roy Press Office@RepChipRoy·
Rep. Roy: "We need heads to roll and an active Department of Justice to preserve our country. So that's what I expect out of the President's nominee." @FoxNews
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Bob Donaldson รีทวีตแล้ว
Greg Price
Greg Price@greg_price11·
So many anonymous Senators immediately running to the media trying to get Mike Lee out of the Senate is just proof that Mike Lee needs to stay in the Senate.
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