Not Quite General Lee – Telegram
Not Quite General Lee
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Humor, frustration, conservative perspective
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You mean Basement Biden had a psychotic break. The term is Psychotic Break. It's what happens with advancing dementia.
Here is your good news story for the day.
Russia and Ukraine keep upping the drone game.
Forwarded from Charlie Kirk
DC politicians just voted to spend $60 billion more we don’t have, to defend a border that isn’t ours, fighting a war that very likely can’t be won. They celebrated by waiving a foreign nation’s flag, a nation which will now send even more of its sons to be slaughtered. Truly vile what our “leaders” have just done.
This mountain he is talking about (Sinai) is in Saudi Arabia, not the actual “Mount Sinai” on the Sinai peninsula. https://news.1rj.ru/str/Working_Men/1598
Forwarded from Working Men Memes (Volpone)
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Folkirk Wheel, a ship elevator in Scotland
Forwarded from Resist the Mainstream
Truth is treason in the empire of lies.

― Ron Paul
1
Allegedly posted on the same day
"The real blow, however, to my adoration of education came from the book that changed my life, completing my slow, two-and-a-half decade-long creep from Liberal to Conservative: School of Darkness by Bella Dodd.

"I have written about my experience with School of Darkness at length here, so I will merely say: Bella Dodd was a card-carrying member of the American Communist Party. She was involved in setting up the public school system.

"She revealed that their motive in creating the public school system was: to break up the family.

"Not to educate, but to bring in socialism through the seduction of the young through the mechanism of a public school."

https://ljagilamplighterwright.substack.com/p/education-is-not-the-answer#:~:text=The%20real%20blow,a%20public%20school.
Forwarded from Mrtdogg (@Mrtdogg)
Forwarded from Mrtdogg (@Mrtdogg)
Forwarded from CarboNation
Original mind control ..

William Shakespeare's influence on the English language is immense, with many phrases he coined still in common use today. Here are 25 popular phrases that originate from Shakespeare's plays:

1. "Break the ice" (The Taming of the Shrew) - to commence a project or initiate a friendship.
2. "The be all and end all" (Macbeth) - the central or most important element.
3. "Fair play" (The Tempest) - adherence to rules or standards of fairness.
4. "In a pickle" (The Tempest) - to be in a difficult situation.
5. "Love is blind" (The Merchant of Venice) - love does not see imperfections.
6. "Wild-goose chase" (Romeo and Juliet) - a futile search or pursuit.
7. "Heart of gold" (Henry V) - a very kind or generous nature.
8. "Such stuff as dreams are made on" (The Tempest) - the ephemeral nature of human life and pursuits.
9. "Wear my heart on my sleeve" (Othello) - to openly display one's emotions.
10. "Dead as a doornail" (Henry VI) - absolutely dead or unusable.
11. "Green-eyed monster" (Othello) - jealousy.
12. "A rose by any other name would smell as sweet" (Romeo and Juliet) - what matters is what something is, not what it is called.
13. "All that glitters is not gold" (The Merchant of Venice) - appearances can be deceptive.
14. "Bated breath" (The Merchant of Venice) - in great suspense; very anxiously.
15. "Brave new world" (The Tempest) - a new and hopeful period in history.
16. "Full circle" (King Lear) - returning to the original position or state of affairs.
17. "Good riddance" (Troilus and Cressida) - an expression of relief at being free of a troublesome or unwanted person or thing.
18. "It was Greek to me" (Julius Caesar) - something that cannot be understood; incomprehensible.
19. "Kill with kindness" (The Taming of the Shrew) - to overwhelm or harm someone by excessive kindness.
20. "Knock knock! Who’s there?" (Macbeth) - the phrase used in the famous knock-knock jokes originated from this play.
21. "Laughing stock" (The Merry Wives of Windsor) - a person subjected to general mockery or ridicule.
22. "Naked truth" (Love’s Labour's Lost) - the plain or unembellished truth.
23. "Set your teeth on edge" (Henry IV) - to cause someone to feel intense irritation or discomfort.
24. "Star-crossed lovers" (Romeo and Juliet) - lovers whose relationship is doomed to fail.
25. "There’s the rub" (Hamlet) - a phrase indicating a problem or obstacle.

These phrases show Shakespeare's lasting impact on the way we express ideas and emotions in English.
Advice on how to avoid “most of the AI-generated website optimization crap” is spreading across Western social media. Even Elon Musk considers the current state of affairs to be a "real problem."