Professional IQ Estimator; Judged Most Accurate IQ Processor by Serious Magazine, Smart People Network, and The Laughlin IQ Estimator Society (LIES); married.
James Talarico: “We have to protect good paying oil and gas jobs.”
Talarico introduced a bill in the Texas Legislature to try and eliminate the oil and gas industry in Texas.
Talarico is a fraud.
The rigging of the LA Mayoral primary is obvious. Outrage should be independent of party, and that’s not what I’m seeing. What’s wrong with you Blue Team people? Do you not understand what it means? Snap out of it and stand up for your neighbors, your country and the West!
It is ABSOLUTELY amazing that they tried to end Hegseth’s nomination over an overtly and socially acceptable Christian tattoo by calling it Nazi symbolism but actively pretend that an actual Nazi tattoo is nbd.
*Amazing but not surprising.
Bought a $1,742.80 camera online from BestBuy.
The FedEx delivery driver stole it. FedEx admitted it.
But BestBuy won’t give a refund. They said we need to “work with local law enforcement.”
Thought everyone should know if you buy from @BestBuy and a @FedEx driver steals what you paid for, your money is gone. Neither company will make it right.
I’ve spent over $30K at BestBuy and will never spend another penny there.
Five and a half years later—with new revelations related to what happened before and on January 6—the regime media absolutely refuses to consider that the Biden DOJ/Wray FBI abused their power to investigate, prosecute, and help convict more than 1,000 Americans for their participation in the protest that day.
Welker, like all other “journalists” and reporters of her ilk, actually think the unprecedented number of plea deals is the result of legitimate prosecutions rather than abuse of authority—particularly threats to turn misdemeanor cases into felonies—to extract plea deals.
They don’t entertain for a SECOND that perhaps something is off with a 100 PERCENT CONVICTION RATE before DC juries. Or question how the Biden DOJ got away with for years bringing the felony 1512c2 charge against 300+ J6ers (and the president) before SCOTUS determined the statute had been unlawfully applied.
The single minded focus on those charged/convicted of “assault” on police—when the 18 USC 111 statute also applies to “interfering” or “impeding” federal officers—allows the media to ignore the hundreds of other low level misdemeanor cases that nonetheless resulted in torturous investigations and prosecutions, rigged trials, and time in federal prison.
Corporate media is as responsible as the Biden DOJ, J6 committee, and federal judges in continuing to perpetuate lies about J6 and intentionally misleading the public about what happened in the largest criminal investigation in US history. Good for the president for pushing back and for his justified anger here:
So…
Judge McConnell who’s ordering the Trump Admin to restart asylum applications from 39 of the most dangerous countries on Earth has donated $700K to Dems.
Importing the dangerous to hunt Americans.
Another Dem Activist cosplaying as a Judged.
The Judiciary is compromised.
Comparing heavy metal to bluegrass is counterintuitive. But I’ve been noticing similarities. Yes, metal is quite loud, distorted, and electric, while bluegrass is clean, acoustic, and twangy. And there are much easier comparisons to make -- like metal to classical, and bluegrass to traditional Scottish and Irish music. But the thing that is causing me to think about this is the boom-and-bust popularity cycles of both metal and bluegrass. Both genres ride waves of mainstream attention, then retreat into dedicated subcultures, kind of secretly sustained by small festivals, passionate fans, and grassroots scenes. My hypothesis is that’s why metal and bluegrass won’t ever die -- unlike basic “rock and roll,” which is already dead. With metal and bluegrass, there are always ember-keepers in basements, garages, barns, and sheds.
Performance energy overlaps too. Live shows in both worlds are communal and insanely intense. Crowds at bluegrass festivals and metal fests are deeply engaged with strong participatory vibes. And lyrically, the two genres are also similar. Bluegrass has a long tradition of murder ballads. Metal repeats the themes of mortality (murder and death), afterlife, rebellion, and horror.
Maybe the craziest similarity is found in the fans of both genres. Both attract dedicated, maniac followers who know and love that they're part of something authentic, yet not mainstream. Outsider status. Both sets of fans usually have working-class roots and a rebellious streak. Both emphasize skill and tradition while allowing for innovation. See, e.g., progressive bluegrass, folk metal, or full-on genre blends like "metalgrass."
Back to my first point, the biggest similarity between the two might be resilience. Neither dominates pop charts consistently, but neither dies. They hide in the background, nurtured by small scenes and passionate communities (the aforementioned “ember-keepers”), then surge back when the culture needs something raw and real.
Right now, metal and bluegrass are my favs.
Just got a letter from the US Department of Justice, confirming the guy who swatted me the first three times, is now serving 4 years in prison.
FAFO - that’s two people now who have threatened me who are behind bars.
There are serious consequences now for these leftists who threaten our lives.