>>/174776/,  >>/174777/,  >>/174778/,  >>/174779/,  >>/174780/,  >>/174781/,  >>/174782/,  >>/174783/,  >>/174784/,  >>/174785/,  >>/174786/,  >>/174787/,  >>/174788/,  >>/174789/,  >>/174790/,  >>/174791/,  >>/174792/,  >>/174793/,  >>/174794/,  >>/174795/
James Woods @RealJamesWoods - If you’re bored with whistle-tweeting far left insurrectionists, and would like to see an American hero in action instead, take a gander at this.
Quote
Eric Spracklen @EricSpracklen
You have to stop what you’re doing and watch this video. An armed robbery suspect takes a family hostage in the middle of a police chase and this officer doesn’t hesitate for a second. An absolute hero.
https://x.com/RealJamesWoods/status/2017044146150887661

Jeff Clark @JeffClarkUS - Interesting.
- 
I was supposedly told that NO further investigations of Fulton County, GA were warranted — as an unequivocal matter, i.e., in a way such that no rational lawyer could disagree — by several DOJ colleagues in 2020 and early 2021.
- 
Apparently, the current DOJ and the Magistrate Judge who signed this warrant (Judge Salinas) both disagree with that assertion.
- 
Indeed, the DC Bar charges against me hinge on the absurd assertion that by disagreeing with my colleagues back then, I was attempting to lie. How can that theory possibly work as a factual matter after this warrant’s issuance and execution today? Answer: It can’t.
- 
What’s enough for my complete factual defense at this point is not what the warrant turns up but that it was, as a binary matter, worth seeking and executing versus failing to seek and execute it.
- 
This is how investigation works: It’s not a crime and it’s not unethical deceit to actually do investigatory spade work, let alone merely advocate for additional investigatory spade work to be done. Investigations actually involve looking for information and documents. Even ordinary non-lawyer citizens will find this unremarkable.
- 
Strange how the worm turns, isn’t it?
Quote
Greg Bluestein @bluestein
Here’s the warrant
https://x.com/JeffClarkUS/status/2016673776356770024

Jeremy Redfern @JeremyRedfernFL - This would be a good thing, actually.
It would keep U.S. Senators from running 6-year reelection campaigns and refocus public attention on local-level elections.
The framers were right the first time, and the 17th Amendment was detrimental to our republican form of government.
Quote
Rep. Oscar De Los Santos @RepODLS
WTF?? House Republicans just introduced a measure to REPEAL the 17th Amendment of the US Constitution. They want to ban the people from voting for our US Senators. Instead, they want the Legislature to appoint our Senators. 
WTF are they thinking?
https://x.com/JeremyRedfernFL/status/2016866535562682373

Joe Rambo @RamboAndFrens - This....... is only the beginning.
Delaware, Centre, Chester, Montgomery, Northampton, Philly, Bucks Counties, PA.     ....tick tock
Milwaukee, Dane Counties, Wisconsin.....    tick tock
Fulton, Chatham Counties, Georgia......   tick tock
Wayne County Michigan.....  tick tock
Maricopa County Arizona......  tick tock
The American people know what they saw.
The idea that lawsuits were dismissed or dropped by state and federal courts due to a lack of evidence or legal standing. ..... was always absurd on its face.
The ball is rolling now.
PANIC.    DECLAS.    2020 is far from over.
https://x.com/RamboAndFrens/status/2016896014930608513

Johnny Cadillac @lippyent - The Magnolia house was a Sears kit home, 1918
For nearly 30 years, people could order a piece of the American dream through the mail.
A  buyer could leaf through a Sears, Roebuck and Co. catalog, choose a  house and mail in the order. In time, a railroad boxcar would chug into  town, carrying a ready-to-assemble house — complete with nails and a  75-page instruction book.
Most of the house kits came in a single box car. The model, named the Magnolia, sold between 1918 and 1922. Throwback Thursday 
https://x.com/lippyent/status/2016950427187581067
 21