The Indiana hate is so forced and frankly makes us look bad.
I’ve got no issues with Indiana, I’ve never had any issues with Indiana, and I’d much rather see Indiana do well than the same old programs that have dominated CFB.
They didn’t cheat, they didn’t run from a rivalry, they aren’t Ohioans screaming at children, they didn’t cover up Sandusky crimes (to my knowledge), and they didn’t pay players illegally for decades while chanting their conference name as if they somehow won anything.
Let’s not lose sight of who the bad guys are in this sport.
Multiple thoughts here that I know everyone wants to hear:
1: @tbhorka is good at his job.
2: Notre Dame fans have yet to get over Cignetti’s trash talk before getting stomped in ND stadium 2 years ago.
3: Notre Dame’s infatuation with Indiana lives on.
4: Indiana winning a title before ND’s next one is, and will continue to be, inconceivable to Irish fans. So they continue to downplay it. Don’t blame them really but it’s funny to read online.
NEW: Curt Cignetti tells @Clowfb he was "pissed at the hopelessness, the prevailing attitude" on his first day at Indiana:
"By the time I got to that basketball game, later that night, I was f****** livid. We'd won conference championships and been to playoffs my whole career as a head coach, and you had these two worlds collide. I wasn’t going to sacrifice the standard. I wasn’t going to settle. I had to find out if the fans were dead or just on life support. I had to get them riled up."
https://t.co/V3HEHabs3p
Again, you may not like the UFC thing at the White House, but the moment you hung a giant pride flag from the columns and had half-naked “trans” activists exposing themselves on the lawn, you lost all right to complain about desecration.
History's first trillionaire is a guy who catches rockets out of the sky with chopsticks and beams internet to every dead zone on the planet.
Same guy ships cars that drive themselves, humanoid robots for the factory floor, brain chips that let paralyzed people move a cursor with pure thought, and an AI running on a supercomputer his team stood up in months instead of years.
And the people crashing out about his net worth are doing it on the app he owns. The same app governments spent years trying to censor.
You cannot legislate a rocket into orbit.
@elonmusk “What multiculturalism boils down to is that you can praise any culture in the world except Western culture. And you cannot blame any culture in the world except Western culture.”
— Thomas Sowell
Karmelo Anthony is yet another young black male who threw his life away — and more importantly took away an innocent person’s life — for no reason. It’s time for the black community to stop rallying around and defending these sociopath thugs and instead work on raising children who won’t make these kinds of insane, self-destructive choices in the first place.
Keep in mind, if Karmelo had plead guilty early on, it would have cut the fundraiser short. His parents chose to send him to trial so they could keep raking in the cash. They don’t love or care about him. Awful people who inevitably raised an awful son. My only regret is that they can’t be thrown in a prison cell along with him.
It's the phones.
It's the phones for a hundred reasons. Here are a few:
1) Male consumption of porn reduces marriage (for like 10 reasons)
2) Because of time-wasting college kids and 20-somethings just socialize less, reducing marriage.
3) The dating apps ruin dating (for 10 reasons)
4) Social media gives us a false anthropology, which makes us too individualistic and too averse to connection and commitment.
5) The phones make us sad and make us hate ourselves. If we hate ourselves we don't want more of us.
A lot of people assume that Americans today are capable of something like the D-Day landing.
I don’t see how we can know that. Those men were the product of a uniquely American culture, language, and way of life.
It grew out of generations of “Americanness” that we have spent the last 70 years hollowing out.
We should aspire to grow today the same kind of grit, resilience, and selflessness that those men exhibited.
Never forget the heroes of Normandy, not only because they saved our civilization, but because their lives and their sacrifices exemplify the American culture we must reclaim.
@Strandjunker On this 82nd anniversary of D-Day, remember the way we wonder how the Germans could become so anti-Semitic that they looked the other way at genocide is exactly how the world looks at today’s Democratic Party.
The deadliest place on D Day on this longest of days, where the sacrifice has been greatest: Dog Green Sector, Omaha Beach, where 19 Bedford Boys have died, where more than half of their infantry company has been slaughtered, and where the opening scenes of Saving Private Ryan are set.
82 years ago nearly all of the men on the first few boats that landed on the beach in Normandy were dead before days end.
Sit here with that for a while.
Look at them.
Really look at them.
Look into their eyes.
Many of them are boys, they are someone’s son, someone’s brother, someone’s sweetheart someone’s father.
They never came home.
And every privilege, every convenience, every freedom and every little thing that you want to bitch about you have because of them and they paid the ultimate price for you to have those freedoms. #dday #FreedomIsNeverFree
D-Day is underway. Some would argue that what's happening right now is the most daring and ultimately successful operation in the history of military Alliances.
Note: the majority of troops are friends of the US from eight countries. Eisenhower has been told that three-quarters of the 23,400 airborne troops will be lost. He's hoping that the prediction will be wrong.
Indiana remains on fire on the recruiting trail, now with its second four-star commitment in a matter of hours.
Talley-Rhodes is the 11th commit in #iufb’s class of 2027, and adds a valuable piece for the future in the backfield.
Throwback: this was the moment any person capable of thinking for themselves realized the Fauci Covid cult was a scam that would gleefully sacrifice all of us at the altar of Saint George Floyd.