Goodnight, check the community note https://t.co/U8PtpPbk2M
— Steve Deace (@SteveDeaceShow) July 29, 2023
GET NUTRITION FROM FARM-DIRECT, CHEMICAL-FREE, UNPROCESSED ANIMAL PROTEIN. SUPPLEMENT WITH VITAMINS. TAKE EXTRA WHEN NECESSARY
Saturday, July 29, 2023
ON OPTICS ALONE, HOW CAN ANYONE THINK BIDEN IS A VIABLE OPTION FOR THE FUTURE OF THE UNITED STATES?
OWEN BENJAMIN: A LUCKY MAN. AND A GOOD MAN
2019 was a great year. They all are.
— Owen Benjamin π» (@OwenBenjamin) July 30, 2023
Nothing is new under the sun but there are infinite possibilities.
As the world called me “insane” this was my home life that I wasn’t allowed to show because I was “canceled”
It’s all nonsense illusion.
I’m very grateful for my blessings.… pic.twitter.com/OF7LVOrPYZ
A father calls the pharmacy after his son was taken by his mom to get injected with the #Covid #Vaccine and was then diagnosed with myocarditis π³
Click on the image.
π¨π¨π¨ One of the most chilling conversations you could ever hear π₯Άπ‘
— Erin Elizabeth Health Nut News π (@unhealthytruth) July 29, 2023
A father calls the pharmacy after his son was taken by his mom to get injected with the #Covid #Vaccine and was then diagnosed with myocarditis π³
Warning: swearwords thanks bamkbk pic.twitter.com/eVBi4vxS1L
This was the high point of reconciliation in the United States, and McKinley thought that such a monument would, as Lincoln said in his second inaugural address, "bind up the nation's wounds."
our duty and our privilege to be like the country we represent. And speaking no word of malice and no word of criticism even stand shoulder to shoulder to lift the burdens of mankind in the future and show the paths of the freedom to all the worldTo these men and to that generation of Americans, the monument represented the best of America, a spirit of reconciliation, democracy, and freedom, of heroism, and patriotism. And like William McKinley, many of them had been targets of actual Confederate bullets. If these men can bury the hatchet, what changed decades later? Not the history of the period nor the meaning of the monument, but the political ideology. In short, America became a much less tolerant place. Historians like Ty Seidule argue that the monument displays an incorrect view of the past by sanitizing and glorifying slavery. The ioage of an enslaved woman holding the baby of a Confederate soldier going off to war while tears stream down her face has been criticized by modernists historians as a distortion of Southern slavery. But is it? Booker T. Washington's autobiography, Up From Slavery, had only recently been published when Ezekiel was designing the monument. Washington was arguably the most respected African American in the United States in 1906. Washington recounts in Up From Slavery, 1900, that
in order to defend and protect the women and children who are left on the plantations when the white males went off to war, the slaves would have laid down their lives. The slave was who was selected to sleep in the big house during the absence of the males was considered to have the place of honor. Anyone attempting to harm young mistress or old mistress during the night, would have had to cross the dead body of the slave to do so.
[Roll, Jordan, Roll: The World the Slaves Made, Eugene D. Genovese, 1976] Until recently, historians studying this often arrived at the same conclusions. The same can be said for the image of the black Southerner marching off to war with white Confederate soldiers. For years, Southerners recognized the contribution of blacks, both free and slave, to the war effort. Many received pensions when the war was over and while the Confederate government did not legally recognize these men as soldiers that did not authorize arming slaves as return for their freedom until 1865, thousands wire Confederate uniforms, provided manual labor, shouldered a rifle, shot at Union soldiers, and even died in Northern prisons and on the battlefield. That made them black Confederates. Of course, historians like high school history teacher, Kevin M. Levin and his Searching for Black Confederates argued that none of these men could qualify as soldiers because they were not legally recognized as such. This is mere semantics. Black Confederates existed regardless of whether history deniers wished to acknowledge their contributions to the Southern cause for Independence. This history does not square with the "Take it down" agenda but with the spirit of reconciliation. Henry Louis Gates, the Harvard professor who sat down with Barack Obama for the famous Beer Summit in 2009 argues black Confederates existed.
MCCONNELL GETS HANDLED
This is not that hard to do. Have a man surrounded by the same group of people with familiar talk, familiar jokes, and familiar voices for years, and you've got your handlers. The longer you're around someone, the easier it is for this to occur. And people get away with the worst kind of psychopathic bullshit. Agree with McConnell or not, this is abuse. So much of government is ritualistic: set procedures, set presentations, set speeches. It's dull. And because there is rarely any repercussions for anyone's actions, there are no consequences. Continuity of government means don't make a stink about anything.
This is a US Patent for ‘remote viewing’
— Dr ChrisC (@chriscowpland) July 29, 2023
The introduction describes hypnosis, how it works and the ‘triggers’. Interesting read. May or may not be applicable to this situation.https://t.co/51Y8GfSG3J pic.twitter.com/IxQOqoybyB