Profile avatar
jlk-greystone.bsky.social
There is no sweeter revenge than revenge that comes from justice being served. Born 8.5 months after the first hydrogen bomb explosion. There was urgency in my delivery.
6,320 posts 2,118 followers 463 following
Regular Contributor
Active Commenter
comment in response to post
The senator had the right to be there. The black shirts, not so much. It never happens overnight. First, it’s normalized. Then, it’s comfortable.
comment in response to post
It all depends on the spread—whether a partisan team wins in a bipartisan baseball game. When personal profit outweighs defending the second but equal branch of what was once a republic, erosion is inevitable.
comment in response to post
It all depends on the spread—whether a partisan team wins in a bipartisan baseball game. When personal profit outweighs defending the second but equal branch of what was once a republic, erosion is inevitable. It never happens overnight. First, it’s normalized. Then, it’s comfortable.
comment in response to post
Is DHS prepared for a suspect but unprovable Iranian response on the 62nd day—after an offer they couldn't refuse? Underestimating the Persians would be a mistake. After all, it was the Persians who freed the Hebrews the first time they angered Yahweh.
comment in response to post
I hope this age is short-lived, but I fear it is only the beginning of a long run.
comment in response to post
We are entering an era where a court-certified 'Fair Witness' will be required to oversee every conversation—ensuring no words go unchecked. The looming specter of 'he said/he said' lawsuits for defamation will dictate discourse.
comment in response to post
Now, with the president they need, the radical right of that denomination has its best chance to reassert itself.
comment in response to post
With federally protected gay marriage on the chopping block, will the Southern Baptists target interracial marriage next? After all, it was only in 1995 that they finally issued a resolution apologizing for their role in supporting slavery and segregation.
comment in response to post
Well, there goes another guardrail.
comment in response to post
It seems that those once deemed uneducated had sharper critical thinking skills than the modern American shaped by a 12-year education—blind to the forces eroding the very freedom their ancestors sought. In the end, it’s all just consent engineering.
comment in response to post
It’s now up to the people to vote out federally elected officials who pander to Southern Baptist ideology. Otherwise, gay marriage may follow the same fate as Roe. Why should 12.7 million true believers dictate the morality of 335 million Americans? Maybe because they vote. 🍸🤔🚬
comment in response to post
With the regime’s credibility now in question—following denial, then the pointed dig, 'I gave them 60 days, this is day 61'—gas prices could soon rival the spikes seen during the oil embargo of the '70s.
comment in response to post
Until then, homelessness will be an American tradition too.
comment in response to post
Profiting from stolen land has long been an American oligarch’s tradition, etched into the history of Native Americans. To change that, the descendants of those enterprising pioneers would have to relinquish their towers—golden thrones in gaudy surroundings built atop generations of dispossession.
comment in response to post
What he truly meant was clear—those who oppose me or my loyal police force will not be tolerated. Those who defended me against the socialist liberals who 'stole' the election will be rewarded, perhaps even with federal jobs as ICE agents. That was the gangster’s warning, as I heard it.
comment in response to post
Should a Marine be ordered—by a commander following a general, both bound by a Commander in Chief—to open fire on protesting American citizens, that shot will be heard around the world. It will change everything. Of course morale is low. They are, after all, Americans.
comment in response to post
It will swell the ranks of undocumented immigrants drawn into domestic criminal activities, ultimately benefiting international crime syndicates with GDPs larger than some third-world nations. When hope in the American dream fades, people find hope in America however they can.
comment in response to post
We’re not being invaded by an alien military force, but rather a pseudo-military syndicate of organized crime. And instead of confronting it, this regime turns a blind eye—choosing instead to stage photo-ops with gardeners and handymen, the only ones willing to work for the wages being offered.
comment in response to post
Not only is it typically prohibited, but it’s entirely unconstitutional—precisely why it isn’t allowed. Yet the deep state has been weaponized, and it took him less than 200 days to do it.
comment in response to post
Perhaps it was a Star Chamber grand jury before a Star Chamber judge, led by a Star Chamber prosecutor, presenting handpicked Star Chamber witnesses. This is Trump’s former personal attorney, after all—would we expect anything less?
comment in response to post
Perhaps they’re just waiting—watching as we dismantle ourselves—before reclaiming the planet and rebuilding atop the ruins. Maybe they’ve deemed us beyond assistance, too consumed by superstition to change." 🍸👽🚬
comment in response to post
Yes, but they are natural born citizens killing natural born citizens, not illegal aliens looking for work in a Home Depot.
comment in response to post
The irony is undeniable—the power brokers who once saw Trump as their golden ticket are now the ones paying the highest price. Not only have they failed to secure what they wanted, but they can’t even grasp what they truly need.
comment in response to post
It seems some of those pardoned by Trump for their actions on January 6 have conveniently found employment as ICE agents. Perhaps that explains the masks—they’re not just enforcing policy, they’re enforcing loyalty. ICE isn’t just an agency anymore; it’s Trump’s personal militia.
comment in response to post
Makes you wonder what kind of kompromat Putin’s people handed Trump on Disney executives in the Disney General Entertainment Content division, doesn’t it??
comment in response to post
Yeah, and they're overworked picking up the asshole's trash instead of polishing the floor, dusting the desks, and cleaning the urinals as they are hired to do.
comment in response to post
If Trump's 'big, beautiful' bill passes, Ohioans won't be the only ones turning to dog meat for protein.
comment in response to post
Well, Rand, I suppose you never anticipated that the monster your party helped create would leave you stranded outside the castle, desperately dodging its wrath—just like Dr. Frankenstein. Poetic justice, wouldn't you say? God works in mysterious ways, no?
comment in response to post
Whether through apathy or the erosion of critical thought, many seem incapable of engaging beyond the immediate moment. Some simply cannot be bothered to vote, while others have been so intellectually dulled that they make decisions based solely on short-term impulses. Perhaps it’s a mix of both.
comment in response to post
Not entirely true. It appears that 36% have given Trump and Project 2025 their tacit approval. Hence their claim of having a "mandate." Now is the moment for them to make a stand—will they embrace the Trumpian future, or will they uphold the principles of patriotism? 🍺🤔🚬
comment in response to post
They claim they could govern more effectively without us, yet their economic struggles in states like Mississippi, Louisiana, West Virginia, and Arkansas suggest otherwise.
comment in response to post
Perhaps liberal cities should retain their tax revenue locally, allowing conservative regions to manage their own financial resources. Why should we continue to subsidize areas that reject our presence in their union?