🇺🇸James in🍑SW🍑GA🇺🇸✝️🇮🇱✡️Go🏈Noles!🍢☯️🥋

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🇺🇸James in🍑SW🍑GA🇺🇸✝️🇮🇱✡️Go🏈Noles!🍢☯️🥋

🇺🇸James in🍑SW🍑GA🇺🇸✝️🇮🇱✡️Go🏈Noles!🍢☯️🥋

@JamesInSWGA

"If Liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they don't want to hear." George Orwell

SW🍑GA🍑 Tham gia Eylül 2022
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Brandi Love ®
Brandi Love ®@brandi_love·
@DavidJHarrisJr "Tell a lie long enough and it becomes the truth" This phenomenon is known in psychology as the "illusory truth effect," where familiarity overpowers rational judgment. It was an effective tactic often used & celebrated by Joseph Goebbels.
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QThestorm
QThestorm@17QStorm·
Jimmy Fallon says he "can't understand" how Greg Gutfeld gets twice his ratings in the same time slot. "This is the Tonight Show," said Fallon, "It seems a little odd that more people watch something on Fox News." Gutfeld's answer was simple and to the point: "You're not funny, Jimmy. Your jokes are outdated and your guests are leftist quacks." That pretty much sums it up. There's a reason Gutfeld is number one. Follow @17QStorm
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Scott Jennings
Scott Jennings@ScottJenningsKY·
There is no moral equivalence between the United States of America and the Iranian butchers who have terrorized the world for nearly 50 years. It's really easy (for sane people) to tell the good guys from the bad guys here.
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SaltyGoat
SaltyGoat@SaltyGoat17·
IRAN: "New Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is "unconscious and currently incapable of running the country." US: "We feel ya... TRUST ME!!!"
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0HOUR1
0HOUR1@0hour1·
The judge who helped an illegal immigrant escape was denied her appeal.
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Vince Langman
Vince Langman@LangmanVince·
Happy Power Plant and Bridge Day started early! 🍿🍿🍿
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Max Evans
Max Evans@_MaxQ_·
Carroll is looking down with a big smile right now. She's proud.
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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
Goldie and I are overjoyed to share the beautiful news of the birth of our first granddaughter, Willow Grace Russell. Little Willow entered our lives on March 2, filling our hearts with a kind of love that words can hardly describe and bringing a renewed sense of gratitude to our entire family. There is something truly special about welcoming a new generation—something that makes time feel both still and deeply meaningful. Holding her for the first time, we were reminded of how precious these moments are, how quickly life moves, and how important it is to cherish every second. We couldn’t be prouder of her parents, our son Wyatt and his wife, as they step into this incredible new chapter of their lives. Watching them embrace parenthood with so much care, strength, and love has been one of the most beautiful experiences we’ve ever known. It’s a joy beyond words to see the values of family, compassion, and resilience continue on through them. Willow has already brought so much light into our lives. Every tiny smile, every quiet moment spent holding her, feels like a gift we will carry forever. Our hearts are full, our home feels warmer, and our family feels even more complete. With all our love, By Kurt & Goldee Pramanik
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Brennan
Brennan@astroGriggs·
Dr. Young hearing the crew report seeing FOUR impact flashes during the eclipse so far. Love this for the entire science team.
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Fred Aaron is Pops Culture 🇺🇸✡🇮🇱
Bands That Count: One is for OneRepublic Welcome to a new series. This time, we are covering bands with numbers in their names. Today it is OneRepublic. I don't think I've ever written about or posted a song by the pop rock group OneRepublic. Formed in Colorado Springs in 2002, the band put out a string of hits, including today's song, Apologize. This song was written by OneRepublic lead singer and pianist Ryan Tedder, but originally recorded and released by Timbaland, with OneRepublic providing backup. Still, OneRepublic put out their version of the song as the band's debut single in 2006, and it served notice on the music world, becoming a major hit. In addition to songwriter Ryan Tedder on vocals and piano, it also has Zach Filkins on lead guitar and viola, Drew Brown on keyboards, rhythm guitar and glockenspiel (a big instrument in rock music), Eddie Fisher on drums, and Brent Kulzle on cello and bass. Apologize earned OneRepublic a Grammy nomination for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals. Not bad for a debut single and nothing to Apologize about.
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🇺🇸James in🍑SW🍑GA🇺🇸✝️🇮🇱✡️Go🏈Noles!🍢☯️🥋
If it's good enough to wake up @NASAArtemis II, ....... 🍑🎵🪇🎶🎸🎵🎧In a Daydream🎧🎵🥁🎶🎙️🎵🍑 🍑🎶🎷🎵🎤🎼🎶Freddy Jones Band🎶🎼🎺🎵🪈🎶🍑 ✍️Written by Marty Lloyd 🎧Produced by June 24, 1993 ⌛️Released Justin Niebank 🔗youtu.be/jYeVVcJXsmI?si… @Katie_likes_it @CaffMomREDACTED @GretchenInOK @MargaretAUGrad @MCCCANM @fredforthemets @L_van_Tweetoven @LAC08218357 @aussiegreek2 @RedSpicePixie2 @MWCMWCandy @ChadCyThe1st @Tapioca12 @Real_Okie @Arkypatriot @Drepardos
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The Curious Tales
The Curious Tales@thecurioustales·
🚨SHOCKING: Artemis II mission isn’t “going to the Moon.” It’s aiming for a precise point in space where the Moon will be. 252,706 miles away . The human brain cannot process what this actually means. Every space mission you’ve ever seen depicted gets this fundamentally wrong. Movies show rockets flying toward a destination like an airplane flying toward an airport. Point at target, fire engines, arrive. Reality operates under completely different physics. When NASA launched Artemis II on April 1, 2026 , the Moon was somewhere entirely different than where the spacecraft will intercept it on April 6 . The rocket launched toward empty space, betting everything on a mathematical prediction of where a target traveling 67,000 miles per hour would position itself five days  in the future. Space travel is not transportation. It’s temporal ballistics. The Moon orbits Earth every 27.3 days, covering roughly 1.5 million miles of distance. During the ten day journey of Artemis II  , the Moon moves approximately 370,000 miles along its orbital path. The spacecraft launched in a direction that looks completely wrong to every human instinct, following a free-return trajectory that intercepts the Moon’s future position  , not its current one. This requires predicting exactly where an object the size of a continent will be located, down to mile precision, five days before the meeting happens. Any error in orbital calculation, any miscalculation in the Moon’s gravitational influences from Earth and Sun, any slight deviation in spacecraft velocity, and the crew of Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen  sails past their target into the infinite void of space. NASA engineers call this a “free return trajectory,”   but the name obscures the cognitive breakthrough required to make it work. You cannot think about space travel the way you think about any form of transportation that exists on Earth. Destinations don’t exist in space. Only intercepts exist. You’re never going somewhere. You’re always going somewhen. The mathematics behind orbital rendezvous calculations treats time and space as completely integrated variables. The spacecraft’s translunar injection burn on April 2  lasted exactly six minutes. Miss that window by even minutes, and the geometric relationship between Earth’s rotation, the Moon’s orbital position, and the spacecraft’s trajectory becomes unsolvable. The destination literally disappears from the realm of possibility until celestial mechanics realign. The Artemis II crew spent five days flying through vacuum toward coordinates   that would contain nothing but empty space if they had launched 24 hours earlier or later. They bet their lives on humanity’s ability to predict the future position of celestial objects with mathematical precision that exceeds anything we do on Earth. Today, April 6, they’ll pass within 4,070 miles of the lunar surface , reaching their maximum distance from Earth. But they launched toward empty space and intercepted a moving target with pinpoint accuracy across a quarter million mile void. Space doesn’t contain destinations. It contains equations.
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The Curious Tales@thecurioustales

🚨SHOCKING: Artemis II mission isn’t “going to the Moon.” It’s aiming for a precise point in space where the Moon will be. 252,757 miles away. One miscalculation… and there’s nothing to land on.

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RedAlways
RedAlways@PATRIOT2117·
😂😂😂😂😂
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John
John@MagaGrunt1·
🇺🇸He’s not heavy, he’s my brother. We leave no man behind.🇺🇸
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Invisible Memes On X
Marco Rubio Wishing you happy National Beer day April 7 2026🤣🍻🍺
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Black Hole
Black Hole@konstructivizm·
:One of the first three humans to orbit the Moon. Commander of the ill-fated Apollo 13, whose calm leadership turned a potential disaster into one of NASA’s greatest triumphs. Four missions. 715 hours in space.That was Jim Lovell — a true legend of the Apollo era.He passed away on August 7, 2025, at the age of 97. But before he left us, Lovell recorded a secret message that even the Artemis II crew knew nothing about.NASA held onto it quietly. Then, on the sixth day of the mission — as the crew drew close to the Moon — they played it.“Hello, Artemis II. This is Apollo astronaut Jim Lovell. Welcome to my old neighborhood.”In warm, steady tones, he recalled Christmas Eve 1968, when he, Frank Borman, and Bill Anders became the first humans to orbit the Moon on Apollo 8. He spoke of that breathtaking view that captivated a billion people back on Earth. He expressed how proud he was to hand the torch to this new generation.He urged them to soak it all in — the stark beauty of the lunar surface, the fragile blue marble of home hanging in the void.And then, with perfect symmetry, he closed the message exactly as Apollo 8 had ended 58 years earlier:“Godspeed… from all of us here on the good Earth.”He addressed each of them by name — Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen — bridging six decades of exploration in a single, heartfelt transmission.Lovell never saw Artemis II lift off. He never watched them depart Earth. But his voice was waiting for them when they reached the Moon he once pioneered.A quiet, powerful passing of the flame. NASA
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