Bossa nova nag-retweet
Bossa nova
2K posts



@j0ker937 Remove half shafts > Remove lower trans mount > remove bolts driveshaft > remove bolts for PTU > use prybar and push powertrain forward > PTU will come out
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Millennials realizing they’re about to be drafted
Disclose.tv@disclosetv
JUST IN - Effective April 20, 2026, the U.S. Army is increasing the maximum enlistment age from 34 to 42 and eliminating waiver requirements for a single conviction of possession of marijuana.
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The chickens are coming home to roost
GIF
First Squawk@FirstSquawk
RECORD US DEBT WALL AHEAD $10 TRILLION OF US GOVERNMENT DEBT WILL MATURE IN THE NEXT 12 MONTHS — HIGHEST EVER
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@TheQuartering Tried to PM you but I’m not allowed.
There’s plenty of consumable information online on how to mount it.
Honestly it just takes practice
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Okay Gun X I got it. Whose coming over to help set it up.

TheQuartering@TheQuartering
Sight in day tomorrow!!
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@merlinscapital 82nd is getting deployed
Spoke with an individual who, is indirectly “in the know”
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Bossa nova nag-retweet

The Most Dangerous Grave in America — The Man Buried in a Nuclear Coffin...
In 1961, deep in the Idaho desert, a U.S. Army nuclear reactor exploded. Three men died instantly, their bodies soaked in radiation, hotter than anything man had ever touched.
One of them was Richard Leroy McKinley. His remains were so radioactive that scientists couldn’t cremate or wash them. They couldn’t even touch them without risking death.
At Arlington National Cemetery, engineers built a grave like no other — a lead-lined metal coffin, vacuum-sealed, nested inside layers of steel and shielding, then buried deep beneath the ground. A coffin built not to preserve, but to contain.
Even after six decades, Richard’s body still hums faintly with radiation — a silent reminder of mankind’s dance with the atom.
There are no flowers on his grave. No visitors.
© Reddit
#archaeohistories

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@iAKsSaviour we live in a world where this is considered consumable brain rot and a luxury at the same time.
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