@neiltyson I'd ask them if their planet was populated with self-aggrandizing asshats who inject politics into science and publicly display their hubris and desperation for validation. If they answer in the affirmative, I'll give them your address so they can come collect you.
🚨 WATCHLIST: Our undercover team caught @BlairWarnher performing in a schoolgirl outfit and black corset while collecting dollar bills from kids.
The "Night of the Living Bimbos" star has built a brand around hyper-sexualized "bimbo" stunts and all-ages events.
FULL REPORT ⬇️
Where are the facts that back up your claim of 600,000 deaths?
If you were being truthful, you would admit that virtually none or almost none of the aid paid in tax dollars to the NGOs reached the people in need. Instead the money-funded paybacks and was routed back to the Democrat party to help create more of the funding for USAID. It's my opinion the agency was deliberately named USAID to encourage taxpayers to think that this money was helping people in need.
Omar Phoenix does a great job with the story of his political evolution from 2015 to the day Charlie Kirk was murdered.
More of this please.
Check out OMAR 𖤍 PHOENIX's video! #TikTok https://t.co/mS6o4vB34C
USA. Driving at night through open country, I saw a pink light solve a problem my ancestors never solved.
VACANCY.
A motel, alone on the dark highway, announcing to the night: there is room. You, stranger, out there in the dark — a bed exists here, and this sign burns all night so you will know it from a mile away.
And when the rooms fill, two more letters ignite: NO VACANCY. The same sign. The same honesty. Updated.
I need you to understand what this means to a man from an old country, America. For most of history, a traveler arriving at midnight gambled everything — knocking on inn doors, waking keepers, being turned away into the cold, door by door, paying for information in humiliations.
You took that entire ordeal and put it in PINK LIGHT, readable at seventy miles an hour.
I stopped, though I had lodging ahead. One does not pass a lighthouse without meeting its keeper.
He was an older man with a small dog, both watching baseball behind the desk. I asked my question directly: does the sign ever lie? Vacancy, with no vacancy?
He looked at me the way men look when you have asked whether THEY lie.
"Sign's right," he said. "Sign's always right. I flip it myself."
I FLIP IT MYSELF.
There is a man on your dark highways, America, whose evening duty is making the night honest for strangers he will never meet. The dog supervises. The pink light tells the truth over the empty rooms, or tells the truth about the full ones, and tired people a mile away steer their lives accordingly.
In Japan, our inns achieve this with phone calls and politeness. Yours achieves it with NEON AND ONE MAN'S WORD, and I am not certain which is the greater engineering.
A sign does not beg to be believed. It is flipped by an honest hand, and that is enough.
I took a room. Obviously. You do not interview a lighthouse keeper and refuse his harbor. The room was clean. The baseball was audible through the wall, which I have decided is a feature. The dog escorted me to door six personally.
By morning: NO VACANCY. I had been the last room.
The sign had waited for me, told the truth the moment I was safe inside, and burned on.
Be the sign, America. That is the whole sermon. Be the sign.
Vote in November as if your life in Oregon depends upon it, because it does. Leftists are out to destroy ranching, farming, hunting, horse and dog breeding, anything to do with animals. Don't let them fool you, this is not an animal cruelty issue whatsoever. It is about destroying Oregon forever.
Check out DDRanch's video! #TikTok https://t.co/uqieFg2brI
If you want to understand why John Sipher’s New York Times attack on Bill Pulte landed the way it did, start with what the paper chose not to tell you.
Sipher left the CIA in 2014. In 2017 he publicly defended the Steele dossier’s collusion framework as generally credible. In 2019 he argued it was entirely plausible that the sitting president had been compromised by Russian intelligence. In October 2020 he signed the letter from former officials claiming the Hunter Biden laptop carried the hallmarks of Russian disinformation ... a letter later tied by investigators to outreach from Antony Blinken to Michael Morell for the purpose of giving the Biden campaign debate material. This spring he wrote in The Bulwark that the current administration was doing structural damage to American intelligence. In May he attacked Tulsi Gabbard’s leadership at ODNI and called Richard Grenell an unserious loyalist.
Then, this week, the New York Times introduced him to readers as a 28-year CIA veteran and former station chief offering sober analysis of a Trump nominee.
His advisory roles with the Lincoln Project and National Security Leaders for Biden did not appear. His history of opposing every previous Trump intelligence appointee did not appear. The laptop letter did not appear.
Sipher is free to hold and express whatever views he wants. That is not the issue. The issue is that the Times presented a decade-long record of partisan engagement as if it were the detached perspective of a recently retired professional. Readers were given only the credential that flatters the argument and denied the context that would let them judge it honestly.
That is not an oversight. It is a choice about what the audience is permitted to know before being asked to trust the opinion.
(article below)