Mini Dee

105.3K posts

Mini Dee

Mini Dee

@MiniDee18

Oklahoma City, OK شامل ہوئے Temmuz 2023
2K فالونگ989 فالوورز
پن کیا گیا ٹویٹ
Mini Dee
Mini Dee@MiniDee18·
America
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GrapefruitBasil
GrapefruitBasil@GrapefruitBasil·
@OfAthenry Yet, most Canucks succumbed to their leader Trudeau for a decade and elected him twice. What a clown show.
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👣ℙ𝕖𝕕𝕣𝕠'𝕤 𝕄𝕦𝕤𝕥𝕒𝕔𝕙𝕖🇺🇲
If we wanted Canada's opinion on anything we'll ask England for it. You aren't a country, you're a protectorate. You don't have a nation, you don't have laws, you don't have a culture when the King can technically say "nah" to anything you decide. You're children playing in a treehouse with a "NØ PARENTS ALLOWED" sign at the top of the ladder.
Alleria 🇨🇦 Content Creator@alleria_eh

Canada doesn't boo the US flag and anthem because we hate america. We boo it because we hate trump and all that he represents. We hate being attacked and threatened. Never the 51 state

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👣ℙ𝕖𝕕𝕣𝕠'𝕤 𝕄𝕦𝕤𝕥𝕒𝕔𝕙𝕖🇺🇲
We got Thunderbirds/Blue Angels flyovers, we got a crowd full of service members, we got the USMC band playing walkout songs on harps & shit, we got world class athletes getting escorted to the ring by 1st responders & MOH recipients. The left has Bette Midler doing slam poetry.
👣ℙ𝕖𝕕𝕣𝕠'𝕤 𝕄𝕦𝕤𝕥𝕒𝕔𝕙𝕖🇺🇲 tweet media
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Echoes of War
Echoes of War@EchoesofWarYT·
Everyone knows John Hancock for his giant signature. Almost nobody knows the actual man, and his real life was wilder than the legend. He was an orphan. His father died when he was 7, and he was taken in by his uncle Thomas, the richest merchant in Boston. John was groomed to run the family shipping empire, inherited the whole thing in 1764, and became one of the wealthiest men in all of America before most people his age owned anything at all. He was also, by the crown's definition, a criminal. In 1768 the British seized his ship Liberty for smuggling, and Boston rioted in his defense. The man we now put on patriotic posters was, to London, a wealthy smuggler dodging customs. He didn't just resent the crown quietly. He bankrolled resistance and became such a thorn that the British wanted him gone. On the night of April 18, 1775, when Paul Revere made his famous ride, the warning was not vague. He rode to Lexington specifically to warn two men that the British were coming to arrest them: Samuel Adams and John Hancock. The opening night of the Revolutionary War was, in part, a manhunt for Hancock. Weeks later, General Gage offered a pardon to every rebel in Massachusetts who would lay down arms, with exactly two exceptions: Samuel Adams and John Hancock. Being left off that list was essentially a public death warrant. Here is the part nobody tells you. As president of the Continental Congress, Hancock actually wanted to be named commander of the army himself. He sat in the chair and watched as the Adams cousins instead rose to nominate George Washington. He was reportedly stung by it. Then he did the thing most people never manage. He swallowed his pride, signed Washington's commission, and spent the next eight years pouring his personal fortune into the war he could not lead. So when Hancock signed the Declaration of Independence first, big and bold across the top, it was not a cute flourish. He was already a hunted man with a price on his head, putting his name, his fortune, and his neck on the line before anyone else dared lift a pen. And that famous line about signing large "so King George can read it without his spectacles"? He almost certainly never said it. It is a myth stitched onto him generations later. The real story is better. He just signed first, as president, knowing exactly what it could cost him. The flamboyance was real, though. He lived in princely splendor in a granite mansion on Beacon Hill overlooking the harbor, with imported mahogany furniture and apricot trees shipped from Spain. In 1775 he married Dorothy Quincy, and the two became one of Massachusetts' first political celebrity couples, famous for endless lavish dinners that slowly drained his fortune. He went on to become the first Governor of Massachusetts, serving roughly eleven years, and died in office in 1793. His funeral was one of the grandest ever given to an American up to that point. Samuel Adams declared the day a state holiday. The orphaned smuggler with a target on his back had become the face of American defiance. That is why, 250 years later, we still say "put your John Hancock right here."
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The Tartan Scarf 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
🇺🇸 Ok America, it's with a heavy heart that my World Cup adventure has come to an end. USA / Boston - you've been incredible hosts, opening your hearts to the Tartan Army. Tartan Army - carry the dream and for the love of God stay hydrated in Miami. It's been a dream 🫡
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Javier Milei Quotes (Fan)
“The state creates nothing. The state only destroys wealth and steals it from others to distribute it among friends.” — Javier Milei
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Howard Lutnick
Howard Lutnick@howardlutnick·
Happy Birthday to my friend and leader, President Donald J. Trump. It has been the greatest privilege of my life to know and serve you in this historic administration. Thank you for your leadership, your courage, and your tireless commitment to the American people. It is an honor to help advance your vision as we restore American greatness and usher in the Golden Age of America. Wishing you a wonderful birthday and another year of historic success for our nation.
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Calvin
Calvin@RealCalvin1·
America is not an employment program for India. End H-1B.
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TONY™
TONY™@TONYxTWO·
Happy Flag Day, America! 🇺🇸
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Jesus is Christ
Jesus is Christ@JesusisChristX·
Never seen anything like this 😲 Footballers all around the world are coming out boldly to proclaim the Lord Jesus Christ ✝️
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Justin Peters
Justin Peters@JustinPetersMin·
"If you want to hate America, watch the news. If you want to love America, drive across it." foxnews.com/lifestyle/worl…
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Nate Geraci
Nate Geraci@NateGeraci·
World Cup is exactly what this country needed… Foreigners mostly in awe of the American experience. Basically showing everyone that our politicians are just here to divide & conquer by telling you how bad things are. So refreshing to see some genuine positivity & optimism.
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Libs of TikTok
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktok·
I don’t want to hear a word from Democrats about “Trump is defiling the WH”
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Auron MacIntyre
Auron MacIntyre@AuronMacintyre·
Smart pivot from the admin UFC, motocross, rodeos Make 250 an event for red state patriots, don’t ape modern progressive tastes
Freedom 250@Freedom250

Freedom 250 is proud to announce Rodeo 250 — The Evolution of the American Cowboy, a signature attraction of the Great American State Fair on the National Mall in Washington, DC. Visitors will journey through the evolution of the American cowboy. From Spanish vaquero traditions to cattle drives, Wild West performances, charros, trick riding, Roman riding, trick roping, and the emergence of modern professional rodeo. All brought to life by the legendary @CerviRodeo. DATES: June 25–July 10, 2026 TIMES: Sun–Wed at 4 PM; Thu–Sat at 7 PM; special July 4 show at 3 PM LOCATION: American Heartland Arena, National Mall, Washington, DC 🎟️ RSVP now for FREE tickets

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Echoes of War
Echoes of War@EchoesofWarYT·
On this day in 1777, the United States chose its flag in one sentence, and the men who voted on it had no idea what they had just done. The timing could not have been worse. The country was barely a year removed from declaring independence and it was losing. The British had taken New York. Washington's army was battered and short on everything. Congress was drowning in crises: no money, restless officers, a war that might collapse at any moment. Survival, not symbolism, was the daily business. Yet on June 14, 1777, in the middle of all that, the Marine Committee tucked a brief resolution into the day's work. The full text was almost absurdly simple. "Resolved, that the flag of the thirteen United States be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white, that the union be thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation." That was the entire thing. No record of debate. No designer credited. The popular story that Betsy Ross sewed the first one is a charming legend that appeared a full century later, told by her grandson, with no solid evidence behind it. The resolution did not even specify how the stars should be arranged, which is why early American flags came in wild variety, stars in circles, rows, and scattered patterns, each maker improvising. These exhausted men, fighting for their lives, voting between a dozen other emergencies, accidentally created one of the most recognized symbols on the planet. That flag would go on to survive a civil war, fly through two world wars, get planted on the summit of Mount Everest, and be driven into the gray dust of the moon, where it still stands today. 249 years ago it was a single afterthought in the minutes of a desperate Congress. That sentence is why we celebrate Flag Day. Happy Flag Day.
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USA NEWS 🇺🇸
USA NEWS 🇺🇸@usanewshq·
They just played this at UFC America 250 and it is one of the greatest things I have ever seen 🇺🇸 God bless America
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RodeoProfessor
RodeoProfessor@RodeoProfessor·
Basically what they don’t tell you about birds of prey especially eagles is that they imprint so quickly on people who rescue them, they get obsessed with their rescuer. This eagle was one of those. Also fun fact Dolly Parton paid for this eagle’s salvation.
UFC on Paramount+@UFConParamount

WE HAVE A BALD EAGLE MAKING AN ENTRANCE AT THE UFC FREEDOM 250 WEIGH INS [ #UFCWhiteHouse | SUNDAY, JUNE 14 | 8PM ET LIVE on @ParamountPlus ]

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The Conservative Alternative
The Conservative Alternative@OldeWorldOrder·
GEORGE WASHINGTON: "Real men despise battle, but will never run from it."
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