Hi, my name is @Skipblu75, and I’m a $MEME (@Memecoin) farmerat @Memeland.
On my honor, I promise that I will do my best to do my duty to my own bag, and to farm #MEMEPOINTS at all times.
It ain’t much, but it’s honest work. 🧑🌾
To address extreme levels of language enthusiasm, we've applied the following temporary limits:
-Writers, Lyricists, and other Professional Wordsmiths: 6000 definition lookups/day
-Thoughtful Readers and Crossword Puzzlers: 600/day
-Everyday English Speakers: 300/day
BREAKING: Because Elon Musk banned Tribel’s Twitter account, here is Tribel’s official statement on Musk limiting how many tweets users can read per day. Tribel is a “woke” new Twitter competitor I created. Here’s Tribel’s statement:
“Elon Musk proved once again today that he is totally out of his depth. He might be good at buying tech companies with inherited money, but he has no clue how to run a social network. In just seven months, he has single-handedly turned the internet’s premier intellectual app into a buggy, unrecognizable MAGA hellscape that tries to milk its users for every penny possible in a desperate attempt to turn a far-right billionaire’s vanity project profitable. Now, users have to pay Musk just read other’s Tweets. Even worse, even paying users are limited from reading other’s tweets. It’s no wonder that Tribel’s 5-star rated app is quickly positioning itself as the only viable Twitter competitor that can go blow-for-blow with Twitter. Thanks to Musk’s disastrous reign as Twitter owner, our user base is growing like wildfire — and even worse for Musk, our technology is improving by leaps and bounds with every passing day. Elon Musk better be ready for a dog-fight, because the entire world is looking for a new, viable, and better Twitter competitor — and Tribel is leading that charge.”
Please retweet and ❤️ if you think that Elon Musk is ruining Twitter — and click here to join Tribel: https://t.co/0c9FDbB14A
“Writing for the majority, Justice Brett Kavanaugh said that an 1868 treaty with the Navajo Nation did not require the U.S. government to take active steps to secure water access.”
The first time in history that the U.S. actually HONORS an Indigenous treaty.
It’d be ironic if it weren’t so incredibly tragic.