🚨 This is what happens when the “stolen land” narrative gets hit with actual history.
Native guy starts in on white people being on “stolen” land…
Then this Native woman shuts it down with facts:
- Native Americans weren’t here “from the beginning.” Their ancestors crossed the Bering Land Bridge from Siberia 15,000–20,000 years ago.
- Once they got here, tribes conquered, displaced, and built empires over each other (Comanches pushed out the Apache and built the Comancheria — sound familiar?).
- Every single piece of land on earth has changed hands through conquest. That’s how human history works.
She nails it:
“What you call stolen, I call conquered.”
Then she drops the line that actually matters:
America 🇺🇸 and Canada 🇨🇦 took it, kept it, defended it, and built the greatest Countries the world has ever seen — with more freedom, opportunity, and prosperity than any of those tribal empires ever dreamed of.
On the 4th of July she’s celebrating 250 years of that progress… not raiding villages and scalping people.
This is the response every “land acknowledgment” warrior needs to hear.
Who’s sick of the selective history?!??
#StolenLandMyth #4thOfJuly #AmericanHistory #FactsOverFeelings #CanadaFirst
🚨 BOMBSHELL! Journalist Kim Iversen reveals dual citizenship was illegal until 1967.
The Supreme Court changed it solely to protect a man who moved to Israel and voted in their elections!
The establishment bent the Constitution to accommodate the Zionist regime.
I know public schools don't teach real history, but the first person killed in the American Revolution was Crispus Attucks - a free black man standing with the Sons of Liberty against the British. America then won the Revolution and prohibited slavery in 7 states when slavery had only been banned in 7 other countries in the entire world - including all of Africa - which had been capturing, enslaving, and selling its own people for thousands of years - including millions and millions of blacks to the Ottoman Empire long before the trans Atlantic slave trade was a thing. Then, America which had only been a country for a little over 80 years fought the deadliest war in American history to end slavery, and the Britain and the United States started a world wide campaign to abolish the institution of slavery globally - even though it had been the norm throughout all cultures for all of human history. They largely succeeded, although slavery is still alive and well in Africa and the Middle East today. But you don't know that because the people in charge of the modern day plantation have very effectively trained you to be the victim who hates your country - because that is how black people are controlled in the modern world. As Ye said, "slavery is a choice."
that 4chan post about how low IQ people can't understand conditional hypotheticals or second-order thinking seemed silly but so many people are unironically saying "this doesn't effect me so why does it matter"
no capacity for second-order thinking. they're genuinely this dumb!
There is an animated show on Netflix called ‘The Amazing Digital Circus’
It is rated TV- PG, so as a parent would think it would be safe for kids
Just this episode shows a character asking for sex, giving a gun to another character for suicide and another character shooting another character
You need to pay attention to this rating system, TV-PG stands for parental guidance recommend
Many parents would just see the PG and automatically assume it’s safe, especially considering it’s an animated show that looks like it’s for kids
UPDATE: Body-worn camera video shows our deputies responding to yesterday’s intentional brush fire along Highway 74. (2/2)
Deputies were first on scene and immediately used fire extinguishers to knock back the fire until crews could get there. The JCSO Wildland Fire Management Team responded shortly after and helped douse hot spots.
Their quick action helped slow the fire’s spread and protect the area during a fast-moving situation.
Glass is a true "permanent material"—it can be recycled indefinitely (100% closed-loop) without any loss in quality, purity, or performance. Unlike most materials, its chemical structure remains unchanged through repeated melting and reforming, allowing old bottles and jars to become brand-new high-quality containers forever.
This stands in stark contrast to plastic, which is far cheaper for companies to produce and transport (lighter weight means lower shipping costs, and raw material/energy inputs are generally lower). Yet this short-term savings comes at a steep environmental price: we're degrading ecosystems, landfills, and oceans to cut a few cents per unit.
Glass offers genuine sustainability advantages when recycled properly:
• Using cullet (recycled glass fragments) replaces virgin raw materials (sand, soda ash, limestone)—one tonne of cullet saves about 1.2 tonnes of new resources.
• It slashes energy use dramatically: every 10% increase in cullet reduces furnace energy needs by ~2.5–3%, and melting 100% cullet can cut energy by up to ~40% compared to virgin production.
• CO₂ emissions drop significantly—studies show ~580–670 kg saved per tonne of recycled glass (cradle-to-cradle), with up to 58–60% reduction when using high cullet percentages.
• Fewer raw material extractions mean less mining impact and habitat disruption.
The key to unlocking glass's full potential is clean, color-sorted collection. Mixed colors or contamination (from curbside debris, ceramics, or other recyclables) often downgrades glass to lower-value uses like fiberglass insulation or road aggregate instead of bottle-to-bottle recycling. Proper sorting—by color and purity—keeps it in the premium loop.
By improving recycling habits (rinsing containers, separating by color where possible, and supporting deposit-return systems), we can maximize glass's role in a true circular economy. It's one of the few packaging options that genuinely protects resources long-term—let's not sacrifice it for cheaper, disposable alternatives that harm the planet.