As you can see I got rid of my blue check sometime back. I would like to see how many people actually see this post. I know what it was with the verification. I lost a couple of thousand followers over time. So let’s see who sees this😊
@nytimes@TheAthletic WNBA is nothing but trash. They’ve shown their true colors with what they’ve allowed to happen to Caitlin Clark. Whoever owns a stake in the WNBA should be embarrassed. Trash
BUC-EE'S GAS EXPOSED. 😳
Creator Madmaxcx7 ran a fuel quality test on Buc-ee’s gas, and the receipts are brutal.
While competitors like Circle K and RaceTrac tested clean and clear, Buc-ee’s sample came back completely foggy at the bottom, showing an ethanol level pushing E14 to E15.
It proves they are heavily cutting their fuel to keep pumps cheap. Absolute engine killer.
Hoosier Enquirer Statement: We Are DONE Covering the WNBA
Effective immediately, Hoosier Enquirer is dropping all WNBA coverage.
The league’s pathetic, weak-kneed response — and outright tolerance — of the targeting, cheap shots, and resentment aimed at Caitlin Clark has crossed a line. Clark is the single biggest reason anyone pays attention to the WNBA, yet she’s been met with silence, excuses, and soft defenses while the league cashes her checks. Enough.
Flip the script: If this hostility, rhetoric, and physical nonsense were directed at a Black star player, we all know exactly what would happen. Cities would burn. Businesses would be looted. Murders and chaos would once again be excused as “mostly peaceful” protests.
That’s the toxic double standard staring us in the face. Blanket words and selective outrage do have consequences — they destroy credibility, fuel division, and prove the game was never about fairness.
Hoosier Enquirer refuses to play along. We’ll keep covering real Indiana stories with honesty and accountability. The WNBA can chase its declining relevance without us. We stand with Caitlin Clark.
-Hoosier Enquirer Team
Texas has become the number 1 state for fastest growing amount of new Muslim Mosques.
In 2025 alone, Texas directed about $13 million in taxpayer funds to 18 Islamic organizations.
Texas is becoming the next Dearborn.