Reminder that Chinese spy Christine Fang (Fang Fang) worked for Ro Khanna’s 2014 congressional campaign.
This is why Ro has never commented publicly on the matter and why he opposes the FBI releasing the entirety of the Fang Fang files. He’s all over them.
🚨INDIANS 🇮🇳TRASHING OUR COUNTRY‼️
An American man confronts Indians dumping garbage from their U-Haul on the side of the road🤬
These scumbags have no respect for our country. They want to make America look as polluted and filthy as India.
Send them all back!
They broke his bones, gouged his eyes out, cut out his tongue and castrated him. He died of a heart attack after being set on fire and dragged himself 50 meters across the floor.
Poster for the SAVE ACT, if ever there were one. A masked Antifa criminal stuffing a ballot box.
Who’s more of a traitor? This masked Democrat operative or Republican fraud John Thune for failing to stop the likes of her(him?)
@RobertKennedyJr life interrupted, course changed. Each chapter in a life well lived is testimony to the great input & love we experience through events & experiences.
So much change, so much strength and the passion mixed with clarity to make the world a better place-
legacy.
@lsferguson deconstruction of families-
deconstruction of women-
misogyny & violence directed at women
Women ignorant enough to believe violence is an answer
have a listen- and men please feel free to chime in.
https://t.co/SWUKRwBgrj
🚨Everybody is arguing about whether the store employee was right or wrong. Frankly, that’s not what caught my attention.
What caught my attention was the child standing there holding a stuffed animal while all of this was unfolding.
The employee asked for a receipt. Whether the request was justified or not isn’t even my point. My point is that a routine interaction immediately became a public confrontation, complete with profanity, hostility, and humiliation, and there was a child standing there watching every second of it.
As adults, we often forget that children are always learning. They don’t just listen to what we tell them. They watch what we do. They watch how we respond to stress. They watch how we treat strangers. They watch how we handle authority, frustration, embarrassment, and conflict.
What concerns me isn’t the argument itself.
It’s the lesson.
Psychologists have spent decades studying child development, attachment, and social learning. One of the most consistent findings is that children tend to normalize the behaviors they repeatedly observe. If respect, self-control, accountability, and emotional stability are modeled, those behaviors become familiar. If chaos, hostility, emotional volatility, and public confrontations are modeled, those become familiar too.
Now before anyone starts accusing me of predicting this child’s future, that’s not what I’m doing. Nobody can watch a short video and know what a child’s future will be.
What we can identify is risk.
Research has consistently shown that children who grow up around chronic conflict, emotional instability, inconsistent discipline, trauma, aggression, and poor emotional regulation face elevated risks for anxiety, depression, substance abuse, behavioral problems, academic difficulties, and troubled relationships later in life.
The reason is simple. Children build their understanding of the world from the examples around them. Even when around uncivilized savages.
In developmental psychology there are three questions children are constantly trying to answer. How do people treat each other? What am I worth? Can relationships be trusted?
The answers to those questions are rarely taught in a lecture. They’re demonstrated every day through behavior.
That’s why this video bothered me.
The employee will go home. The internet will move on to the next viral clip. Most people will forget this happened by next week.
The child probably won’t.
Because while everyone else was watching an argument, that child was receiving a lesson on what adulthood looks like.
Like @RepAlGreen did today with @SecMullinDHS
And that’s the part of this video that should concern us the most.
#SilentMajoritySpeaks #AStoneGroove
@atensnut Does a civic ordinance hold authority over free speech?
Under the provisions of constitutional law- most likely not.
Free speech cannot be controlled by an authoritarian ordinance- it violates constitutional provisions.
🚨Everybody is arguing about whether the store employee was right or wrong. Frankly, that’s not what caught my attention.
What caught my attention was the child standing there holding a stuffed animal while all of this was unfolding.
The employee asked for a receipt. Whether the request was justified or not isn’t even my point. My point is that a routine interaction immediately became a public confrontation, complete with profanity, hostility, and humiliation, and there was a child standing there watching every second of it.
As adults, we often forget that children are always learning. They don’t just listen to what we tell them. They watch what we do. They watch how we respond to stress. They watch how we treat strangers. They watch how we handle authority, frustration, embarrassment, and conflict.
What concerns me isn’t the argument itself.
It’s the lesson.
Psychologists have spent decades studying child development, attachment, and social learning. One of the most consistent findings is that children tend to normalize the behaviors they repeatedly observe. If respect, self-control, accountability, and emotional stability are modeled, those behaviors become familiar. If chaos, hostility, emotional volatility, and public confrontations are modeled, those become familiar too.
Now before anyone starts accusing me of predicting this child’s future, that’s not what I’m doing. Nobody can watch a short video and know what a child’s future will be.
What we can identify is risk.
Research has consistently shown that children who grow up around chronic conflict, emotional instability, inconsistent discipline, trauma, aggression, and poor emotional regulation face elevated risks for anxiety, depression, substance abuse, behavioral problems, academic difficulties, and troubled relationships later in life.
The reason is simple. Children build their understanding of the world from the examples around them. Even when around uncivilized savages.
In developmental psychology there are three questions children are constantly trying to answer. How do people treat each other? What am I worth? Can relationships be trusted?
The answers to those questions are rarely taught in a lecture. They’re demonstrated every day through behavior.
That’s why this video bothered me.
The employee will go home. The internet will move on to the next viral clip. Most people will forget this happened by next week.
The child probably won’t.
Because while everyone else was watching an argument, that child was receiving a lesson on what adulthood looks like.
Like @RepAlGreen did today with @SecMullinDHS
And that’s the part of this video that should concern us the most.
#SilentMajoritySpeaks #AStoneGroove
🚨Everybody is arguing about whether the store employee was right or wrong. Frankly, that’s not what caught my attention.
What caught my attention was the child standing there holding a stuffed animal while all of this was unfolding.
The employee asked for a receipt. Whether the request was justified or not isn’t even my point. My point is that a routine interaction immediately became a public confrontation, complete with profanity, hostility, and humiliation, and there was a child standing there watching every second of it.
As adults, we often forget that children are always learning. They don’t just listen to what we tell them. They watch what we do. They watch how we respond to stress. They watch how we treat strangers. They watch how we handle authority, frustration, embarrassment, and conflict.
What concerns me isn’t the argument itself.
It’s the lesson.
Psychologists have spent decades studying child development, attachment, and social learning. One of the most consistent findings is that children tend to normalize the behaviors they repeatedly observe. If respect, self-control, accountability, and emotional stability are modeled, those behaviors become familiar. If chaos, hostility, emotional volatility, and public confrontations are modeled, those become familiar too.
Now before anyone starts accusing me of predicting this child’s future, that’s not what I’m doing. Nobody can watch a short video and know what a child’s future will be.
What we can identify is risk.
Research has consistently shown that children who grow up around chronic conflict, emotional instability, inconsistent discipline, trauma, aggression, and poor emotional regulation face elevated risks for anxiety, depression, substance abuse, behavioral problems, academic difficulties, and troubled relationships later in life.
The reason is simple. Children build their understanding of the world from the examples around them. Even when around uncivilized savages.
In developmental psychology there are three questions children are constantly trying to answer. How do people treat each other? What am I worth? Can relationships be trusted?
The answers to those questions are rarely taught in a lecture. They’re demonstrated every day through behavior.
That’s why this video bothered me.
The employee will go home. The internet will move on to the next viral clip. Most people will forget this happened by next week.
The child probably won’t.
Because while everyone else was watching an argument, that child was receiving a lesson on what adulthood looks like.
Like @RepAlGreen did today with @SecMullinDHS
And that’s the part of this video that should concern us the most.
#SilentMajoritySpeaks #AStoneGroove
🚨Everybody is arguing about whether the store employee was right or wrong. Frankly, that’s not what caught my attention.
What caught my attention was the child standing there holding a stuffed animal while all of this was unfolding.
The employee asked for a receipt. Whether the request was justified or not isn’t even my point. My point is that a routine interaction immediately became a public confrontation, complete with profanity, hostility, and humiliation, and there was a child standing there watching every second of it.
As adults, we often forget that children are always learning. They don’t just listen to what we tell them. They watch what we do. They watch how we respond to stress. They watch how we treat strangers. They watch how we handle authority, frustration, embarrassment, and conflict.
What concerns me isn’t the argument itself.
It’s the lesson.
Psychologists have spent decades studying child development, attachment, and social learning. One of the most consistent findings is that children tend to normalize the behaviors they repeatedly observe. If respect, self-control, accountability, and emotional stability are modeled, those behaviors become familiar. If chaos, hostility, emotional volatility, and public confrontations are modeled, those become familiar too.
Now before anyone starts accusing me of predicting this child’s future, that’s not what I’m doing. Nobody can watch a short video and know what a child’s future will be.
What we can identify is risk.
Research has consistently shown that children who grow up around chronic conflict, emotional instability, inconsistent discipline, trauma, aggression, and poor emotional regulation face elevated risks for anxiety, depression, substance abuse, behavioral problems, academic difficulties, and troubled relationships later in life.
The reason is simple. Children build their understanding of the world from the examples around them. Even when around uncivilized savages.
In developmental psychology there are three questions children are constantly trying to answer. How do people treat each other? What am I worth? Can relationships be trusted?
The answers to those questions are rarely taught in a lecture. They’re demonstrated every day through behavior.
That’s why this video bothered me.
The employee will go home. The internet will move on to the next viral clip. Most people will forget this happened by next week.
The child probably won’t.
Because while everyone else was watching an argument, that child was receiving a lesson on what adulthood looks like.
Like @RepAlGreen did today with @SecMullinDHS
And that’s the part of this video that should concern us the most.
#SilentMajoritySpeaks #AStoneGroove
🚨Everybody is arguing about whether the store employee was right or wrong. Frankly, that’s not what caught my attention.
What caught my attention was the child standing there holding a stuffed animal while all of this was unfolding.
The employee asked for a receipt. Whether the request was justified or not isn’t even my point. My point is that a routine interaction immediately became a public confrontation, complete with profanity, hostility, and humiliation, and there was a child standing there watching every second of it.
As adults, we often forget that children are always learning. They don’t just listen to what we tell them. They watch what we do. They watch how we respond to stress. They watch how we treat strangers. They watch how we handle authority, frustration, embarrassment, and conflict.
What concerns me isn’t the argument itself.
It’s the lesson.
Psychologists have spent decades studying child development, attachment, and social learning. One of the most consistent findings is that children tend to normalize the behaviors they repeatedly observe. If respect, self-control, accountability, and emotional stability are modeled, those behaviors become familiar. If chaos, hostility, emotional volatility, and public confrontations are modeled, those become familiar too.
Now before anyone starts accusing me of predicting this child’s future, that’s not what I’m doing. Nobody can watch a short video and know what a child’s future will be.
What we can identify is risk.
Research has consistently shown that children who grow up around chronic conflict, emotional instability, inconsistent discipline, trauma, aggression, and poor emotional regulation face elevated risks for anxiety, depression, substance abuse, behavioral problems, academic difficulties, and troubled relationships later in life.
The reason is simple. Children build their understanding of the world from the examples around them. Even when around uncivilized savages.
In developmental psychology there are three questions children are constantly trying to answer. How do people treat each other? What am I worth? Can relationships be trusted?
The answers to those questions are rarely taught in a lecture. They’re demonstrated every day through behavior.
That’s why this video bothered me.
The employee will go home. The internet will move on to the next viral clip. Most people will forget this happened by next week.
The child probably won’t.
Because while everyone else was watching an argument, that child was receiving a lesson on what adulthood looks like.
Like @RepAlGreen did today with @SecMullinDHS
And that’s the part of this video that should concern us the most.
#SilentMajoritySpeaks #AStoneGroove
To illustrate how poorly maintained the Colorado voter roll, let me introduce you to a 2 bedroom unit on Parker Rd where, between July 2022 and October 2023, ninety-nine (99) individuals all with Middle Eastern names were newly added to the Colorado voter roll: 88% were women mostly aged in their 30s or 40s. None likely ever lived there and towards the end of whatever was going on, 31 new registrations were rushed through and added to the voter roll in October 2023 alone, usually in daily groups of 4, 5 or 6 scattered throughout the month.
No one noticed. No alarm bells went off.
As of now, all have an inactive status on the voter roll (everything election-related mailed to them has been returned undeliverable) BUT if there had been any basic checks and balances in place at the front end (does anyone else think it might be unusual that six people with different last names were added to the voter roll at a single residence the day after five other people were added there?) NONE ought to have EVER been added in the first place.
Sadly, they will all stay on the CO voter roll until after the 2026 federal election (3 until after 2028) . This means that although they won’t be mailed ballots, they (or someone using their name) could potentially still vote in person at any Colorado election till then.
It is nonetheless unlikely that this was fraudulent voter scheme because 5 individuals “accidentally” provided as a contact mailing address that of a secondary practice address for a National Insurance Provider. This tends to suggest a medicare / medicaid scheme where perhaps a service provider is billing Colorado taxpayers for a plethora of non-existent services provided to a plethora of non-existent individuals.
But even though evidence of potential fraud against Colorado taxpayers is hiding in plain sight on the CO voter roll, it is unlikely that the CO Secretary of State even noticed. Or cares.
What a joke the Colorado voter roll is!
@SenatorHick@SenatorBennet@GovofCO@JenaGriswold@pweiser
Indian students are now allowed to bring weapons to school in the Hopkinton Public School district. This is in MA.
Sikh kids are now allowed to carry a kirpan for religious reasons.
The man who murdered Henry Nowak carried the same weapon. Will they start to demand this in Texas as well?
🏛️🇺🇸 Deloitte, a multi-billion dollar U.S. government contractor, cut over 1,000 American jobs while getting 2,300 H-1B approvals.
U.S. Senators asked the government contractor to explain its job cuts and foreign hiring.
$CUTOFFS