Texan2007
949 posts


Wishing all the moms out there a wonderful Mother’s Day!
To @MichelleObama, I’m grateful for all the ways you’ve shown up for our daughters and our family over the years. We love you.

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@iontecs_pemf @DashrD67 @WeShallRise144K @K4orce_77 @HeidiClacy @ninoboxer What is pure gum spirits used for?
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@HughJassRV @joeroganhq At least it's male and female.
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@KuwlShow @realDonaldTrump Absolutely, forever grateful to all who stood, sacrificed, and fought for our freedom. Your courage will never be forgotten. 🇺🇸. Rob, thank you for all you have taught us. "El maestro" love and gratitude ✨️
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Dear @realDonaldTrump,
We are forever grateful for your steadfast vision, courage, leadership and selfless sacrifices.
Eternally,
We the People

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@iamjilly153 @KuwlShow @realDonaldTrump @iamjilly153, I feel the same!
My personal life has much loss, however, I've never considered changing my mind about supporting Potus, trusting this incredible, mind-blowing intricately designed plan to save our country and the world! Truth shall truly set us free. Thank Q to all
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@KuwlShow @realDonaldTrump Yes! Amen! 🙏 If people could truly understand the magnitude of heroism behind President Trump and those who worked to save this country and God’s People they would be so humbled and grateful! Thank You for everything you have done to educate so many Rob! God Bless You too! 🙏
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@PPR_Mile @ColonelTowner Wow! Thanks for this video. Years ago at the beginning of my awakening, I saw/listened to a video about the Dulles brothers and how they had something to do with pushing through the 2nd Vatican Council.. cant remember where I got it or who complied it.. you know of any such video
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The entire Dulles Family Dynasty. All of them, especially Eleanor for her role in the Middle East.
Allen Welsh Dulles (Director of the CIA) and John Foster Dulles (Secretary of State) via the story of their sister, Eleanor Dulles, who obtained the blackmail information to get the extra votes in the United Nations to create the State of Israel.
The CIA was corrupt since inception and taken severely off course by the Dulles Family Dynasty (Uncle Robert Lansing and Grandfather John W. Foster - both former Secretary's of State) and later, Brothers (John Foster and Allen Welsh) who ended up taking over the Muslim Brotherhood Nazis post-WWII, via MI5's influence, that form the groups nowadays known as Al-Qaeda, Taliban, Mujahideen, Hamas, ISIS, Al-Nusra, KLA, etc.
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The CIA. If it has to be a person Allen Dulles.
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol
What’s the name of the person you believe did more damage to America than anyone else?
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We are EVER SO CLOSE my fellow Americans and Believers the World Over. Let’s Be KUWL!
And NEVER ever quit. We got this!
Humble. Seek. Heart. Mind. Soul.
@BoardOfPeace @America250
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@t52bella @BoardOfPeace @America250 This is a Rob lyric & AI mastered collaboration via Suno - So it's "kinda me", but trust me, you don't want me singing!!
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@KuwlShow @BibleOptics You've blessed me so many times... God is so good!
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@gorrell_liz @BibleOptics Be the truth. Live it in. Let him choose. You have it all!
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@CccPatriot @Juliedonuts @AwakenWithJP Colleen, can you send me a link to Dan's post.. can't find.
Dan is right, too.
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@Juliedonuts @AwakenWithJP Like many others, he sold his soul for the almighty dollar. Thats ok, Scavino posted the other day, they know who all of these traitors are
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@Willadeanwhy @SiriusBShaman Yes! I homeschooled for 24 years and my 4 adults had a classical education similar to yours and mine.
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I am 72. I learned cursive, the multiplication tables, recitation of the great authors and poets, 4 years of Latin by graduation, 2 years of Russian, life lessons from a rural education district. I never finished college, did not need to. Successful career as a manager, married and raised 4 children to achieve success on their own. Is that path still available today? You tell me.
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They did not take cursive from the schools because children no longer needed it. They took it because of what it was quietly building in them.
Consider what the exercise actually is. A child, six years old, is handed a pen and asked to draw a single unbroken line that becomes a word. The wrist must float. The fingers must hold a living pressure, never quite the same twice, always correcting. The eye must follow the ink forward and trust the hand to finish what it has begun. There is no lifting, no stopping, no starting over mid-word. The loop must close. The ascender must rise and return. The sentence must travel from one margin to the other as a single continuous gesture, and at the end of it the hand must still be steady.
Twelve years of this. Every day. Ten thousand small acts of sustained, self-correcting attention, carried out below the level of conscious thought, until the motion belongs to the body and the body belongs to the motion.
This is not penmanship. It is the slow construction of an interior form.
The hand that has learned to carry a line without breaking it is the hand of a mind that has learned to carry a thought without breaking it. The two are not metaphors for one another. They are the same faculty, trained in the same child, by the same daily discipline. Continuity of the stroke becomes continuity of the reasoning. The patience of the loop becomes the patience of the argument. The commitment to finish a word one has started becomes the commitment to finish a sentence, a paragraph, a life's idea, without reaching for the nearest distraction halfway through.
Print is a different creature entirely. Print lifts. Print stops. Print assembles a word out of separate, stamped, interchangeable pieces, each one beginning and ending in isolation. A mind raised only on print learns to think the way print is made, in discrete tokens, in replaceable units, in fragments that can be recombined by any outside hand without the owner noticing the substitution. It is precisely the shape of thought a language model produces. It is precisely the shape of thought a language model can steer.
Cursive is kata. This is the whole of it. A form repeated daily, for years, not for the sake of the form but for what the repetition lays down in the practitioner beneath the form. The swordsman does not train kata so that one day he may fight in kata. He trains it so that when the moment comes and there is no time to think, the movement is already inside him, older and deeper than thought, and it rises on its own. Cursive was the kata of the literate mind, the daily quiet drilling of continuity, of patience, of a line held steady under the long pressure of its own length. And the signature it produced at the end, that small flourished mark unique to a single human being on earth, was only the outward proof of an inward form no machine and no other hand could ever reproduce.
Take the kata away and the practitioner is left with vocabulary in place of faculty. He can recognise a whole thought when he encounters one. He cannot carry one himself. He can admire a finished argument. He cannot sustain one long enough to close its loop. He begins books he does not finish, sentences he does not end, ideas he abandons the moment the screen in his palm offers him a brighter one. And when the machine begins feeding him tokens in the exact shape his schooling taught him to receive, he meets it with no interior resistance at all, because no interior form was ever built in him to push back with.
They removed it quietly, across a generation, and they removed it in the last years before the machines arrived. Twelve years of daily practice in unbroken, embodied, self-authored thought, gone from the curriculum of almost every child in the Western world, just as the instruments designed to complete their sentences for them came online.
The hand forgets. The mind, having never been taught the kata, forgets a thing it never knew it had.
That is what cursive was. That is what was taken. And that is why the thought of anyone who still writes by hand, in long unlifted lines, remains, quietly, stubbornly, and without their ever needing to announce it, their own.
Now the question stands open. What else has been banned, phased out, quietly retired from the curriculum and from common life over these same decades, under the same soft excuses? Mental arithmetic. Memorisation of poetry. Latin. Logic as a formal subject. Map reading. Knot work. The keeping of a commonplace book. The reading aloud of long passages in class. Singing in parts.
What was each of those actually building in the child, beneath the surface of the lesson, and whose interest was served by its disappearance?
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I love this.
When my grandchildren moved 12 hours drive away in 2014 (that broke my ❤), our granddaughter was 5 and starting kindergarten and our grandson was 6-1/2 and starting grade 1.
I came up with this idea to stay connected - every two weeks my husband and I both wrote them a snail mail letter. I named it our TAM's which meant "Things About Me."
I based my idea on our three children bringing a notebook home from school when they were in grades 1, 2 and 3, that was called T.W.A.S. "This Week At School" and on the weekend we had to write back in their notebook in response to their "letter" to us. Our kids, now 41, 39 and 37 still have their T.W.A.S. notebooks.
Back to my little g-kids...
I also sent them each a scrapbook with pages of stickers. When they went to the mailbox with our son (a teacher) they got our TAMs and our son helped them with reading and then he helped them with writing us a TAM back. He took a picture of what they wrote to us and then both letters got attached with the stickers into their scrapbook, ours on the left side, with their reply on the right side.
As the kids got a couple years older, we began writing in cursive instead of printing and they were able to read our cursive with a little help. Soon our granddaughter began writing back in cursive all on her own, never having been taught it in school and our grandson did a half printing/half writing version.
Well they are now in grade 11 and 12 and their last scrapbook was completed at the end of 2025.
We still are writing this year.
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@iontecs_pemf @FortAwesome451 @BasedMikeLee Wow! Thanks, Doc!
I just bought a device on a lanyard called Vibe..
I was intimidated with the Spooky one and cant afford the Rife..
I'm going to look into the mattress.
Send any other ideas!
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@gorrell_liz @FortAwesome451 @BasedMikeLee PEMF has had millions of white paper reports & thousands of formal studies by now (ave cost $6m ea). You can search PEMF plus your issue on any engine & get detailed biophotonic signal recommendations now. How awesome is that?

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