@SenWarren Just look at how much your net worth went up while you were Senator....Please!
We do not need any more new taxes, we need an audit of the people over spending our money on things citizens did NOT want in the first place!
Discrimination against Christians, collecting unsuspecting baseball goers Google data, pushing communism...do these people have to currupt everything?
https://t.co/dv3AclWMe8
@islantstudio She wants to enact statewide rent control making harder for landlords to keep up with rising costs of living in MA while at the same time trying to bypass/remove Proposition 2 1/2 which will inevitably triple the amount of taxes in a short amount of time. She has to go!!!!
🇺🇸🏳️🌈 The House passed an anti-gender ideology bill, stripping federal funding from K-12 schools that change a student's name, pronouns, or gender without parental consent.
The vote was 217-198, almost entirely along party lines, per usual.
Bottom line: schools should have no right to rename or “regender” your kids without talking to you first…
Common sense!!!!
Source: Bloomberg
Kamala won Massachusetts by 25 points
Trump won Tennessee by 30 points
Tennessee is more red than Massachusetts is blue
Yet Republicans have ZERO representation in MA while Democrats get a seat in TN.
How is this fair?
After the SC ruling yesterday, @GovBillLee should redraw the maps immediately.
Let’s go!
Microplastics have been found in human brains, blood, placentas, and testes across 1,300 species. An 18-year-old in Virginia just built a filter in her garage that removes 95.5% of them. The physics of how it works is worth understanding.
Traditional water filters use solid membranes. Water passes through, particles get caught. The problem: microplastics range from 5mm down to 1 micrometer. Filters fine enough to catch the smallest particles clog constantly and need replacing. The maintenance cost makes them impractical for household use.
Mia Heller built exactly this, over and over, after water tests in Warrenton, Virginia showed PFAS and microplastic contamination. Government agencies said no public funds were coming. Residents were on their own.
Heller took a completely different approach. Her system uses ferrofluid, a liquid containing magnetic nanoparticles suspended in oil. The key insight is polarity. Microplastics and water have different polarities. Microplastics are more attracted to the oily ferrofluid than they are to water. So when ferrofluid enters contaminated water, the microplastics migrate toward it on their own.
Then you apply a magnetic field. The ferrofluid is magnetic. The magnet pulls the ferrofluid out of the water, and all the attached microplastics come with it. The ferrofluid is recovered and reused at an 87.15% recycling rate.
No membrane. No clogging. No constant filter replacements.
She went through five prototypes before getting it working. The system filters about a liter at a time and fits under a kitchen sink. She also built her own turbidity sensor to verify the removal rate, rather than relying on visual inspection.
Municipal drinking water plants achieve 70 to 97% microplastic removal depending on technology. Her garage prototype hits 95.52%. She won a $500 prize at the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair for it.
The constraint she already sees: ferrofluid is expensive to produce at scale. She designed the system for individual households, not treatment plants. But the mechanism, polarity and magnetism replacing physical filtration, is the kind of first-principles reasoning that makes the best engineering.
Five prototypes. One garage. $500.
Nobody thought it was possible.
But on May 25, 1986, something happened in America that has never happened anywhere in the world before or since.
At exactly 3:00 in the afternoon, five million people stepped outside — out of their homes, their routines, and their differences — and reached for the hand of a stranger.
From the southern tip of Manhattan, where a six-year-old homeless girl named Amy Sherwood started the chain, all the way to the sun-drenched shores of Long Beach, California — an unimaginable line of human beings stretched 4,125 miles across the continent. Through 16 states. Across the Mississippi River. Through the shadow of the Gateway Arch. Past the Lincoln Memorial. Right through the gates of the White House, where even the President and First Lady stepped outside to join hands.
This was Hands Across America.
It was imperfect. In the desert Southwest, the line had gaps — filled in by ribbons and ropes and sheer stubbornness. It raised $15 million for food banks and shelters, far less than the $100 million organizers had dreamed of. By every spreadsheet measure, it fell short.
But no spreadsheet could measure what really happened that day.
A farmer in Kansas stood next to a teacher from Chicago. Divers held hands underwater in Maryland. A child who had never met a celebrity found herself beside Lionel Richie. An elderly woman who had lived through the Great Depression stood tall in the sunshine and said, without words, I still believe in this country.
For fifteen minutes, ordinary people — not governments, not corporations, not algorithms — physically held this nation together.
The chain may have had gaps. But the feeling didn't.
Nearly four decades later, in a world that sometimes feels like it is coming apart at the seams, that Sunday afternoon in May still whispers something important:
We have done this before.
We reached out.
We held on.
And the hand we grabbed? It was warm.
It was real.
It was human.
We can do it again.
During a Framingham City Council meeting last week, the 72% voter approved audit of the legislator came up and Democrat State Rep. Danielle Gregoire (Framingham and Marlborough) insinuated that voters aren't smart enough to know what they vote for.
She stated, "I guarantee you that if you asked 10 people out on the street right now what they voted for when they vote for that ballot initiative, zero of them would get it correctly. I’d also like to say that just because 72% of people vote for something that doesn’t make it magically legal or constitutional."
people assume that every time you eat steak you're killing a cow....
but even if you ate 1lb of steak every single day, you wouldn't even kill one whole cow...
one cow produces over 500 lbs of meat...and it does this from GRASS which is inedible to humans...
cows are basically divine machines that convert inedible food into steak, milk, leather and so much more.
yet people continue to say "cow farts are destroying the planet"
the cow is the most sustainable and vegan thing you can eat
God bless the cow
A student asked me a question about gender after a lecture I gave, and one of the many public prosecutors that is obsessed with me, wants to convict me for hate speech because of my reply.
This is a transcription of what I said:
"I believe that in reality, in nature, there is no such thing as gender. Gender doesn't exist. We have two sexes and zero genders, let alone that we would have 72 genders.
Gender is a word invented by dr John Money who was a pedophile. He had children genitally mutilated and sexually abused to brainwash them so he could prove that there is a thing called 'gender' and that it exists separately from sex, but his 'research' was one big lie that was sadly used as the basis for the creation of genderideology."
Everything I said is public knowledge and even leftist Wikipedia confirms it to be true. Go look up dr John Money, the man who coined the term 'gender' as we know it today and founded genderideology.
Yet, according to public prosecutor Veerle Devos, these two paragraphs are hatespeech punishable by prison. The sun is out today and my work is piling up, but here I am, once again, preparing my defence in one of my many lawfare court cases. Sharing my story is the best way to support me. Public pressure works.
MAMDANI'S ID REQUIREMENT: New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is seeking snow shovelers before a blizzard slams the area, but will require job applicants submit multiple forms of identification — contrasting the city's election policy for most voters.
Unlike the strict legal emergency worker guidelines, the New York City Board of Elections does not require most registered voters to bring an ID.
@GrahamAllen People talk crap about Candace all the time! This performance acting like you're the only one is ridiculous. This bashing of Candace grift is just to get views. I forsee you posting another pic of you and Cash Patel very soon.
Leaders should unite communities, not cheer division & exclusion.
This is truly sad to see that White people are being used as scapegoats and political pawns for Democrat shortcomings & agendas.
People are waking up to this more & more everyday 🙏