An 80-year-old ballot chaser on our team was riding his bike wearing a MAGA hat today - he was ran off the road by a deranged driver screaming “F*%# YOU, F%#* TRUMP” - the driver left him there on the road.
… All because he was wearing a Trump hat.
And as sad as the photos were and the moment of shock I had wondering how someone could be so cruel to this sweet old man, I was reminded that our boss was murdered for supporting the President while disgusting people celebrate and mock his death.
Meanwhile, the media will continue to gaslight the public into believing “MAGA” is responsible for the political violence in this country.
Things that triggered the left this week:
- a clean reflecting pool
- a name on a building
- a murderer getting convicted of murder
- a sporting event at the White House
- a successful IPO
- welders and janitors becoming millionaires
Grok’s analysis:
Group 2 (the red Southern bloc, marked #2) would most likely come out on top in a prolonged hypothetical conflict. Here’s a breakdown of why, based on geography, resources, military realities, demographics, and logistics.
Group Breakdown (from the map)
• Group 1 (Blue West, #1): Pacific states + Mountain West (CA, OR, WA, NV, AZ, NM, CO, UT, ID, MT, WY). Tech-heavy, coastal, resource-rich but spread out.
• Group 2 (Red South, #2): Deep South + Texas/Florida (TX, OK, AR, LA, MS, AL, GA, TN, KY, WV, NC, SC, FL). High population density in key areas, agricultural heartland, energy powerhouse.
• Group 3 (Gray North/Midwest, #3): Northeast, Upper Midwest, Great Plains remnants (everything else — NY, PA, IL, MI, OH, WI, MN, etc.). Industrial legacy, dense urban centers, but fragmented.
Key Advantages for Group 2
1. Manpower and Firepower Culture The South has a massive population advantage (~130-140+ million in those states). High rates of gun ownership, veteran density, rural self-reliance, and martial tradition give it superior militia/reserve mobilization potential. Texas and Florida alone bring huge National Guard forces and a culture geared toward armed defense. @i @i
2. Military Assets and Bases
• Massive concentration of U.S. military infrastructure: Fort Liberty (NC), Fort Cavazos (TX), Eglin AFB (FL), multiple Navy bases, Army posts, and Air Force assets across the region.
• Texas is a logistics and training giant. Southern states host a disproportionate share of active-duty personnel and domestic production (e.g., defense contractors).
• Easier internal lines of communication and defensible terrain (Appalachians, Mississippi River, Gulf Coast).
3. Energy and Food Independence
• Dominates U.S. oil/gas production (Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Gulf of Mexico).
• Agricultural powerhouse: Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, etc., for grains, livestock, cotton. Can feed itself and export.
• Group 1 relies on imported energy; Group 3 has some but faces winter vulnerabilities and supply line issues.
4. Geography and Defensibility The South has natural barriers (mountains, rivers, coasts) and shorter, more compact supply lines compared to the sprawling West (Group 1) or the urban-corridor Northeast (Group 3). Controlling the Mississippi and Gulf ports would strangle trade for opponents.
Weaknesses of the Other Groups
• Group 1 (West): Tech/economic strength (Silicon Valley, Hollywood, ports) but vulnerable long supply lines, water scarcity in the Southwest, and internal divisions (rural conservative areas vs. blue cities). Mountain states add space but little population density. Hard to project power eastward.
• Group 3 (North/Midwest): Industrial base, financial centers (NY), and population clusters, but colder climate, reliance on external energy/food, and highly urbanized areas that are logistically fragile in sustained conflict. Historical “North wins” analogies don’t fully apply here due to the three-way split and modern realities.
Likely Dynamics
• Early Phase: Group 2 seizes southern bases quickly and consolidates the Sun Belt. Group 1 might hold the West Coast but struggles with overextension. Group 3 fights defensive urban battles.
• Prolonged War: Attrition favors the side with energy, food, guns, and motivated manpower. Group 2 could ally pragmatically with parts of Group 1 (e.g., resource-rich Mountain states) or exploit divisions. Modern civil wars are messy — expect insurgencies, cyber attacks, supply disruptions, and defections — but Group 2’s self-sufficiency edges it out.
• Wild Cards: Nuclear sites, Navy fleets (who controls the oceans?), foreign intervention (China/Russia might back different sides for chaos), leadership competence, and willingness to escalate.
This is all speculative fun — real civil wars are horrific, economically devastating, and rarely have clean “winners.”
If Iran laid down its weapons tomorrow, there would be peace.
If Israel laid down its weapons tomorrow, there would be no Israel.
That's the difference.
Resurfaced 2023 Clip: California Sheriff Exposes Election Fraud – Pakistanis Voting from Outside the Country!
Your vote in California is being stolen by non-citizens on an “honor system” where anyone worldwide can register with a click – no real checks.
@SecretaryBurgum@POTUS It is a worthy goal, but I’m afraid as long as Warsaw, Poland resists being overrun by those who mean to destroy their culture, faith and traditions, they’ll be hard to beat. I hope we do though. We’re off to a good start. 🇺🇸
America’s 100th birthday (the Centennial) in 1876 was celebrated primarily through the Centennial International Exhibition (also called the Centennial Exposition), the first official world’s fair held in the United States. https://t.co/C1cZMGeS0F https://t.co/C1cZMGeS0F
It took place in Philadelphia’s Fairmount Park from May 10 to November 10, 1876—exactly 100 years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence in that same city. The event was a massive showcase of American industrial progress, innovation, and national pride after the Civil War and Reconstruction, drawing nearly 10 million visitors (when the U.S. population was about 46 million). https://t.co/WSIwdmzZGy https://t.co/vOFGfUmKML
Key Highlights of the Celebration
• Opening Ceremony (May 10): President Ulysses S. Grant officially opened the fair, joined by Emperor Dom Pedro II of Brazil and his wife. The event featured speeches, music (including a march by Richard Wagner), and the dramatic start of the giant Corliss Steam Engine in Machinery Hall, which powered many of the exhibits and symbolized American industrial might. https://t.co/C1cZMGeS0F
• Scale and Exhibits: The fair spanned 285 acres with over 250 buildings and pavilions from 37 nations and many U.S. states. Major structures included the Main Exhibition Building, Machinery Hall, Agricultural Hall, Horticultural Hall, and Memorial Hall (an art gallery that still stands today as the Please Touch Museum). https://t.co/WSIwdmzZGy
• It highlighted U.S. inventions and products like Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone (demonstrated there), the Remington typewriter, improved sewing machines, Thomas Edison’s automatic telegraph, and the Corliss engine.
• Consumer novelties introduced or popularized included root beer, popcorn, and bananas. https://t.co/xuHSVLK7u6
• There were also cultural displays, a Women’s Pavilion showcasing women’s achievements, and international exhibits—though some displays reflected the era’s racial stereotypes. https://t.co/xuHSVLK7u6
• July 4, 1876 (Pennsylvania Day): Special celebrations included speeches, receptions, and fireworks to mark the exact anniversary. https://t.co/C1cZMGeS0F
• Broader Nationwide Spirit: While Philadelphia hosted the centerpiece event, communities across the U.S. joined in with local parades, picnics, and patriotic observances. Commemorative items like medals, stamps, and souvenirs were widespread. https://t.co/vz8WLFcOTk
The Exposition was seen as a declaration that the young republic had come of age as an industrial and innovative power. It boosted national morale and left lasting cultural impacts, with some structures and neighborhoods in Philadelphia tracing their origins to the fairgrounds. https://t.co/uexdOdsXNt
The @Freedom250 events will be remembered as long as we remain a nation. No one will remember the cowardly entertainers that did not perform, but history will cite the performers, the speakers and the festivities. I am grateful that the cowards will not be cited for future generations to read about. The military has plenty of talented singers and bands that can perform. @realDonaldTrump@SecWar@SusieWiles47