Veteran. Father. Christ follower. Analytics & digital transformation leader. Author. U-M alum. Warzone-tested. Purpose-driven. Common sense over chaos.
Michigan fans loved him. Heat fans embraced him. Now Pistons fans get to appreciate one of the greatest shooters to ever come through Ann Arbor. Welcome home, Duncan. 〽️🏀 #GoBlue#DetroitBasketball
Duncan Robinson appreciation post
Big Ten Sixth Man of the Year
Division III Rookie of the Year
Fourth-team Division III All-American
Second-team All-NESCAC
Michigan was undefeated when Duncan scored at least 6 points 👀
#GoBlue 〽️
Most fans see Seth Tillman and think: “4-star recruit.”
Michigan sees something much rarer.
A 300-pound defensive lineman with the size to anchor a defense, the athleticism to disrupt a backfield, and the upside to play on Sundays.
Here’s the stat:
More than 1 million high school football players compete each year.
Fewer than 2% will play Division I football.
An even smaller percentage are legitimate 300-pound defensive linemen that programs like Georgia, Clemson, and Michigan all want.
Quarterbacks sell tickets.
Defensive linemen win championships.
That’s why Seth Tillman matters.
#GoBlue
Everyone keeps talking about Apple’s foldable iPhone, liquid metal, and what’s next.
Meanwhile, the real story is happening right now.
The iPhone 17 lineup has become the most popular in Apple’s history.
Think about that.
Not the original iPhone.
Not the iPhone 6.
Not the iPhone X.
The iPhone 17.
Apple didn’t win by reinventing the phone.
They won by making the ecosystem impossible to leave. 🍎
That’s the leak nobody is talking about.
I find it so incredibly offensive that some musicians don’t even want to celebrate the 250 year birthday of the greatest country on earth. A lot of these people truly haven’t a clue what has been sacrificed for this country or how many Americans gave everything so they could live the lives they do today.
This nation was built and defended by generations willing to fight, bleed, and die for freedom, opportunity, and the ability to speak openly including the freedom to complain about America while benefiting from everything it provides.
Celebrating 250 years should not even be controversial. It’s about honoring the people who built this country, defended it, and kept it standing through every challenge thrown at it.
Loving your country is not a bad thing, no matter how hard some people try to manipulate and convince you otherwise. Pride in your nation, its people, and its sacrifices is something to be proud of and worth standing up for. Screw anyone trying to shame people for loving America.
If even HALF of this is true, it’s one of the greatest betrayals of the American taxpayer in modern history.
Americans don’t mind helping their neighbor. They DO mind being lied to, exploited, and robbed by a bloated bureaucracy that treats taxpayer dollars like monopoly money.
Every dollar stolen through fraud is a dollar taken from working families, veterans, seniors, and future generations drowning in debt.
🚨 Stephen Miller says the scale of welfare fraud is SO MASSIVE that eliminating it alone could balance the ENTIRE federal budget
"The amount that has been fleeced from us is in the HUNDREDS OF BILLIONS of dollars."
"We could balance the federal budget if the only dollars that went out of the treasury went to individuals who were properly, lawfully, correctly eligible to receive them."
This should infuriate EVERY taxpayer.
Michigan.
Dusty May’s system is built for versatile wings who can defend multiple spots, run in transition, and create matchup problems. Mousa fits that mold perfectly.
Houston gives you toughness and defense. Michigan gives you NBA-style spacing, tempo, NIL, national brand exposure, and the chance to become a star in one of college basketball’s biggest spotlights.
Also… Michigan basketball feels “back.” Crisler is alive again, the portal momentum is real, and players notice that energy.
If Mousa wants pure development + Final Four culture → Houston.
If he wants a breakout national season with freedom offensively → Michigan.
My prediction: Michigan by July.
#GoBlue #MichiganBasketball #TransferPortal
Michigan didn’t permanently embrace night games at the Big House until 2011. For decades, the tradition was strictly Saturday afternoons because legendary coach Bo Schembechler believed football should be played in the daylight.
The first official night game in Michigan Stadium history was Sept. 10, 2011 vs. Notre Dame: a 35-31 instant classic under the lights with over 114,000 fans watching Denard Robinson lead a last-second comeback.
Now “Big House at Night” has become one of college football’s premier atmospheres. Go Blue.
#Michigan #GoBlue #BigHouse
In this powerful segment, Ron White, creator of the Afghanistan Memorial Wall and a Navy veteran who served in Afghanistan, solemnly recites the names of the American service members killed in action during the war. Known for memorizing and publicly honoring the fallen from memory, White delivers a moving tribute that reminds viewers these men and women are far more than statistics. Each name represents a life, a family, and a sacrifice that will never be forgotten. https://t.co/UGgBItnrwA
Golden Tempo just exposed something most people miss…
Dead last into the final turn.
Then passed the entire field.
That’s not luck.
That’s patience + timing + elite closing speed.
Passing that many horses in the stretch means threading gaps at 35–40 mph.
One bad move and it’s over.
That wasn’t chaos… it was execution. 🐎🔥
Elon Musk just described the most sophisticated theft operation in American history.
Not a heist. A system.
Your tax dollars leave Washington.
They enter a non-governmental organization. The government. With different letterhead.
Musk: “Obviously if it’s a government-funded non-governmental organization, it’s just the government.”
They cross a border.
American law stops following them.
They pass through three more entities in three more countries.
They come home.
Different pocket. Clean hands. Perfect crime.
Musk: “The government can send money to an NGO that is then no longer governed by the laws of the United States.”
Now run the math.
Congressional salary. $200,000.
Average net worth of a longtime member of Congress. North of $20 million.
Musk: “There are a lot of strangely wealthy members of Congress. I just can’t connect the dots of how they got $20 million earning $200,000 a year. Nobody can explain that.”
Nobody is supposed to.
This machine ran untouched for decades for one reason. Human limitation.
A forensic team cannot trace ten thousand wire transfers across fifty global jurisdictions at once.
The corruption does not hide in darkness.
It hides in volume.
They built a labyrinth so deliberately complex that the sheer weight of it collapses every investigation before it starts.
Paper buries paper. Bureaucracy absorbs inquiry.
The entire architecture was engineered to exhaust you.
Then artificial intelligence arrived.
AI does not get tired.
It cannot be bought.
It does not lose the thread at wire transfer 4,000.
You give it the entire global ledger. It maps every node, every transfer, every shell entity, every offshore NGO across every jurisdiction. Not in weeks. In hours.
It finds the signal inside the noise.
It flags the pattern.
It traces a dollar from a D.C. appropriation to a Cayman shell to a congressional portfolio in the time it takes a human auditor to find his parking spot.
The labyrinth was built to defeat human eyes.
It is defenseless against a machine that reads the entire maze at once.
This is why the establishment is not just annoyed by DOGE.
They are terrified.
Musk: “We’re going to try to figure it out and stop it.”
He did not arrive in Washington to trim budgets.
He arrived with supercomputing, AI audit systems, and a mandate to map the full financial architecture of the federal government.
For the first time in history, the complexity that protected the corruption is the very thing that will expose it.
Every shell entity is a signature.
Every routing pattern is a fingerprint.
Every congressman who walked in earning $200,000 and walked out worth $20 million is now a variable in an equation that will be solved.
The swamp was never impenetrable.
It was just too big for human hands.
It was never built for this.
@Gentleman_Ways You’re not wrong, but I’d add this: 18–26 can shape a life, not seal it. Discipline, character, and sacrifice matter then, but so does grace for the people who had to learn later. A man can waste years and still rebuild, if he decides to.