@WuppyLuvr@WinnieSchola @Morbidful The highest rate of gun deaths are in states that have the least gun laws...and that's a fact. https://t.co/2tQySCgaxp
@meowbarkchirp@humandataincome Or perhaps we'll define "work" differently. Work needn't be sitting at a call desk for 8 hours or pushing a wheelbarrow.
@elonmusk Well, I haven't been on X for almost a year now and from the responses I'm reading, Elon has transformed this media into an extremist, bigoted, uninformed social bog. He should stick to manufacturing, something he's good at. Not that anyone cares, but I'm gone forever.
@al3jandro_r3y @EdKrassen@AOC @RepMattGaetz Yes, and both sides treated one another respectfully. How's that for a change. (Well, Rep. Foxx was the only one who took a shot at the other side.)
NBC has a quick online article about the meeting but ends its article by discrediting the astounding news with an old Kirkpatrick statement. So sad. https://t.co/oLpshZx1Tw via @nbcnews
@I_D_Official Does anyone in Congress or the White House outside of the DoD or military contractors have security access to the alien evidence for oversight duties?
@etufodisclosure @rosscoulthart Because they know that the UAP are hundreds if not 1000s of years ahead of us. They haven't hurt us yet and have no reason to. They're not primitives like humans.
@Munook There is no evidence that the aliens intend us harm. If they had, they have advanced technologies that we would be powerless to defend against. So, if they want to visit us at night...hello, just don't wake me.
@pattonoswalt "The highest rates of gun deaths are not Maryland, Michigan and Illinois. They are Mississippi, Louisiana, Wyoming, Missouri and Alabama. The places with the weaker gun laws have higher rates of death."โgun researcher
@c_hay11@kdiehGG7348@irishrygirl@laurenboebert One step at a time, first get rid of the guns, then figure out how to heal mental illness. We can do the first easily if we wanted, the second one is much more difficult.
@toiletpaper363@emd75@laurenboebert Huh? Every year, 7,957 children and teens are shot in the United States. Among those, 1839 children and teens die from gun violence. 3000 seems insignificant compared to decade after decade of gun violence.