roddy willis
2.5K posts

roddy willis
@ICKAYS
Kim Green the real boss- great boys Zack and Ben
เข้าร่วม Nisan 2012
612 กำลังติดตาม377 ผู้ติดตาม

@DHTheWeatherNut Your killing me - trying to get to the Carolina’s from Pei - system every second day !!
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Winter of 2025-26 with more gas in the tank, including what could become, for some, the Blizzard of 2026 (not whatever stupid name The Marketing Dept. has assigned to Monday's storm). So there's Sunday/Monday, followed by Wednesday and Friday potential wintry systems. #StayTuned



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How I feel going into my CRA account
The Figen@TheFigen_
The greatest 2 step verification of all time. 😂😂
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roddy willis รีทวีตแล้ว

Norway consistently wins the most medals at the Winter Olympic Games, with a population of just 5.6 million people.
A big part of their success is how they treat youth sports—and it’s the opposite of what we do in the US. Here’s what we can learn from Norway:
1. Scorekeeping:
In the US: Youth sports tend to be hyper competitive even at early ages. Leagues almost always keep score.
In Norway: Scorekeeping isn’t even allowed until age 13.
Removing winners and losers keeps the focus on the process not outcomes. It keeps kids engaged longer because it minimizes pressure (and tears) and maximizes fun, learning, and growth. The goal isn’t to win a third grade championship. It’s to love sport and keep playing.
2. Trophies:
In the US: If you give everyone a trophy, you’re creating snowflakes who will never gain a competitive edge.
In Norway: Whenever trophies are awarded, they are handed out to everyone.
If getting a trophy makes young kids feel good, we should give them trophies. Maybe they’ll come back and play again next year!!
As for the creation of snowflakes with no competitive edge—Norway’s athletes are tough as nails and all they do is win.
3. Prioritizing Fun:
In the US: Far too often, the goal is to win.
In Norway: The national philosophy is “joy of sport.”
Youth sports in the US are driven by adults, ego, and money. Youth sports in Norway are driven by fun.
Only half of kids in the US participate in sports. The number one reason they drop out: because they aren’t having fun anymore. In Norway, 93% of kids participate in youth sports. Fun is the foremost goal.
4. Playing Multiple Sports:
In the US: There’s pressure to specialize early and play your best sport year round.
In Norway: Try as many sports as you can before specializing as late as college.
Norway encourages kids to try all types of sport. This reduces injury and burnout and increases all-around athleticism. It also helps promotes match quality, or finding the sport you are best suited for as your body develops, which is impossible if you commit to a single sport too early.
5. Affordability
In the US: There is increasingly a pay-to-play model with high fees for leagues, equipment, and travel. This excludes many kids from playing.
In Norway: It’s a national priority to keep youth sports affordable and therefore accessible for all.
Kids aren’t priced out, which creates opportunities for everyone to participate (and develop into athletes), regardless of their parents’ income level.
We could learn a lot from Norway:
In the US, 70% of kids drop out of youth sports by age 13. This not only diminishes an elite-athlete pipeline, but it also destroys an opportunity for healthy habits and all the character lessons kids can learn from sport.
In Norway, lifelong participation in sport is the norm. The goal isn’t to have the best 9U team. It’s to develop the best athletes. Those are two very different things. And Norway has the gold medals to prove it.

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Guessing this riding has a lot of public service employees
Bruce Fanjoy 🍁@brucefanjoy
Please see my statement regarding the Government’s updated Return-to-Office policy.
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Another day Brett - most would just love the experience !!
Brett Gallant@bpgallant
Wasn’t meant to be for us this week, but we are so thankful for all of your cheers and support. It means a lot to @jpete93 and I. One more to come tomorrow. 🇨🇦
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Wow - again - so disconnected from the average worker
PSAC-AFPC@psac_afpc
$6 billion. That’s what remote work could save taxpayers. Carney’s government knows it. Their own research shows it. So why force workers back into overcrowded offices? Stop the waste. Join the fight to protect remote work. ForYouCanada.ca
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roddy willis รีทวีตแล้ว

🚨BREAKING: 6 cancer cure claims suddenly went viral after the U.S. left the WHO.
Feb 1-4, 2026: Pancreatic Cancer 🇪🇸
Feb 3-5, 2026: Colon Cancer🇰🇷
Feb 3-7, 2026: Colorectal / Lung Metastases 🇨🇳
Feb 6-7, 2026: HPV (Related Cancers)🇲🇽
Feb 7-8, 2026: Blood Cancer / Leukemia🇻🇳
Feb 4-8, 2026: Russia Cancer Vaccine (Various Types)🇷🇺


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roddy willis รีทวีตแล้ว
roddy willis รีทวีตแล้ว
roddy willis รีทวีตแล้ว
roddy willis รีทวีตแล้ว

You’d need 2,328 years to finish this money if you spend 1m dollars of it daily
Remarks@remarks
JUST IN: Elon Musk becomes the first person in history to reach a $850 billion net worth.
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roddy willis รีทวีตแล้ว

Great News @lpga ,The Ford Motor Company expanding its presence with us!! Speaking first hand as an F150 driver! Nothing better. The Power Her Drive Program is going to be a great support for the newest @lpga players with adjusting to Tour life Thank’s Ford!
#BuiltFordtough
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i really cannot express enough how completely fucking baffled i am that people choose to live in places where there's a winter. you just have fucking *months* of the year where it's a freezing hell to go outside, where your skin dries and cracks and bleeds, where you have to constantly shovel snow and de-ice roads, where all the trees die and the animals hide, where the sun disappears and you're trapped inside in darkness again and again. and you just *live with it*
YOU CAN MOVE!!! NOT EVERYWHERE IS LIKE THIS!!! THIS IS NOT A FUNDAMENTAL FEATURE OF THE PLANET!!!!! THERE IS PLENTY OF SPACE!!!!! IF YOU LEAVE NOW YOUR CHILDREN WON'T BE TRAPPED INTO ACCEPTING AND NORMALIZING THE HELLSCAPE YOU RAISED THEM IN!!!!
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roddy willis รีทวีตแล้ว

I own a small bakery. Business has been slow. Rent is up. I was thinking about closing.
Last Friday, a teenager came in. He looked nervous. He counted out change for a cookie. He was short 50 cents.
"It's okay," I said. "Take it."
He ate it at a table, looking at his math homework. He looked stuck.
I used to be a math tutor.
I walked over. "Quadratic equations?"
He nodded. "I don't get it."
I sat down and helped him for 20 minutes. He got it. He left smiling.
The next day, he came back with two friends. They bought cookies.
The day after that, five kids came.
Apparently, he told the school, "The lady at the bakery helps with homework."
Now, my bakery is the after-school hang-out spot. It's loud. It's messy. There are backpacks everywhere.
Yesterday, I found a note in the tip jar. It was wrapped around a $20 bill.
"Thanks for helping my son pass math. A Mom."
I'm not closing the bakery.
I think I finally found my purpose.
It's not cookies. It's community.
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