Faith, Family, Health, America First. Man Up! 🇺🇲 💪 Save the Mothers. Protect the Babies.

Joined January 2016
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“Everything worth doing is hard. And the more worth doing it is, the harder it is. The greater the payoff, the greater the hardship.“ — @AlexHormozi
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Jonathan Hunkin retweeted
If blueberries were made of meat, they’d probably be the perfect food.
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The American deer camp was, between approximately 1880 and 1990, the autumn ritual of every rural family in the upper Midwest, the Northeast, and the Appalachians. A cabin in the woods. Three or four men, three generations sometimes, who got there on the Friday before opening day, lit the wood stove, drank coffee that had been on the burner since 4am, played cards, told the same stories they had told the year before, and went out at first light on Saturday with rifles their grandfathers had owned. A buck taken cleanly with one shot. Field-dressed in the snow. Hung in the woodshed. Butchered the next weekend in the garage with the family. Forty pounds of venison in the chest freezer. Steaks for the winter. Sausage made by the grandfather with a recipe nobody had written down. A roast for Thanksgiving. The hide tanned and turned into mittens for the youngest grandson. The deer was free. The freezer was full. The boys learned to shoot, to clean a rifle, to gut an animal, to butcher it, to thank the woods for the deer, to be quiet for hours at dawn in the cold and notice things. Roughly 14 million Americans hunted in 1980. By 2020 that number was 11.5 million, and the average hunter age had risen from 35 to 51. The next generation is not coming up. Suburbanization removed the woods from the back door. Liability fears closed private lands. Public hunting access shrank. Time pressure on working families killed the long weekend at camp. The cultural drift made hunting socially suspect, then unfashionable, then, in some quarters, taboo. The number of American teenagers who have ever fired a rifle, gutted an animal, or watched their grandfather butcher a deer in the garage on a November Sunday afternoon is, in 2026, statistically vanishing. The freezer that used to be full of free, lean, grass-fed wild protein is full of ground beef from a Smithfield CAFO in Iowa. The skill is one generation deep. If the grandfather did not pass it to the father, and the father did not pass it to the son, the chain is broken. YouTube is, at the moment, where the few remaining young hunters are getting most of their training. A small American tradition that fed families for a century, taught a sequence of practical and moral lessons no textbook can replace, and connected three generations to the land their ancestors lived on, is closing down quietly, camp by camp, season by season. The cabin is still there. The stove still works. The buck is still in the woods. The grandfather is in the cemetery on the hill above the cabin. He cannot take the boy himself. Somebody else has to.
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If you invented a machine that could: - Restore degraded land - Build topsoil - Sequester carbon - Produce fertiliser - Create complete protein - Generate its own fuel - Reproduce itself - Require zero electricity You'd win the Nobel Prize. We call it Gerald and want to ban him.
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There is a pattern, and it runs through everything. The sun was free. They sold you sunscreen. Sleep was free. They sold you pills. Walking was free. They sold you a treadmill. Fasting was free. They sold you meal replacement shakes. Cold water was free. They sold you a plunge barrel. Animal fat was free. They sold you supplements to replace what it contained. Fermented food was free. They sold you probiotics. Tallow was free. They sold you a seventeen-step skincare routine. Silence was free. They sold you a meditation app. Sunlight on your skin was free. They sold you vitamin D tablets. Every single thing the human body requires to function was available, free, for the entirety of human history. The 20th century built an industry around removing access to each of them. The 21st century is building an industry selling them back. Nothing about this is accidental. Your great-grandmother had none of the products. She had all of the things the products are compensating for. She was, largely, fine.
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This happened. How much of this are we supposed to accept?
If you're not mad 357 members of Congress made the conscious decision to cover up sexual harassment records, you aren't paying enough attention.
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THIS. 1000% THIS. ALL DAY. EVERY FKNG DAY. This is also exhausting.
The most fucked up thing about modern life is that being healthy requires you to actively fight everything around you The default food is poisoned. The default schedule destroys your sleep. The default stress level is chronic. The default medical system manages symptoms instead of finding causes. The default cooking oils are industrial waste. The default response to feeling like shit is a pill You have to FIGHT to eat real food. FIGHT to sleep properly. FIGHT to find a doctor who investigates instead of prescribes. FIGHT to avoid seed oils at every restaurant. FIGHT to manage stress in a world designed to keep your cortisol maxed 24/7 Your great-grandfather didn't do any of this. He ate what was available and it was real. He worked physically and slept because he was tired. His food came from soil that wasn't depleted. His stress was seasonal. His gut was intact because nothing was designed to destroy it You're not failing at health because you lack discipline. The entire system you live in is engineered to make you sick and sell you the cure Processed food creates inflammation. The doctor prescribes an anti-inflammatory. Seed oils wreck your hormones. The clinic prescribes TRT. Sugar crashes destroy your mood. The psychiatrist prescribes an SSRI. Each problem creates a customer I stopped fighting individual symptoms and started rejecting the whole system. Real food. Enough of it. No seed oils. Gut repair. Sleep Within months I felt like a different species. And I was just eating the way humans ate for 10,000 years before the last 50 fucked everything up The system is designed to make you a patient Opt out
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Jonathan Hunkin retweeted
Mar 6
The human brain isn’t designed to process all of the world’s breaking emergencies in realtime.
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I'll never see the world the same way again after Covid. Casinos, liquor stores, & weed shops were essential. Gyms, hiking trails, & churches were not. Children were made to inject poison that they knew upped the odds of myocarditis. Little kids were taught to be AFRAID of fresh air. Schools gave candy rewards for keeping masks on. Think about that. BEYOND EVIL. DEMONIC. Never forget.
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This. 1000% this.
I got my first ever bonus from work today. I worked super hard, was so stoked. I opened my check… …and 30% of it went straight to taxes Probably to some 3rd world fraud program All this time I’ve been saving, going to school, working hard… For what? Somali fraudsters. Luxury hotels in NYC by FEMA for illegal aliens. Free healthcare for illegals. Free housing for illegals. Free cell phones and FULLY FUNDED DEBIT CARDS for illegals. I work my ass off and have worked my ass off for years and years… So much of my tax dollars, maybe all of it, went to fraud. Was stolen. Didn’t help a single American. It’s incredibly demoralizing. We shouldn’t be paying taxes until this is fixed.
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He gets it. I get it. You should get some and get it too!
There are ENDLESS things to do with land. Nature is beautiful but nature also has a way of hiding even more beautiful things (via overgrowth). Once you own land, the work never stops. Here are the top 5 things I do: 1) Explore it - even small pieces (5-50 acres) can take months of walking it to find all the cool things it has to offer. 2) Maintain it - sure, you could pay someone to clear brush, grade a washed out dirt road, haul gravel (and I’ve surely done that some), but you won’t get a better sense of fulfillment than by doing a lot of the work yourself. There is something about a good day of hard manual labor that gives you a sense of accomplishment. It’s almost like you’re tapping into what your ancestors did in order to just survive. 3) Hike it - Especially true on hilly or mountainous land, I’ll get up each morning and walk DOWN the mountain and then back up. That gives the most hardcore gym in the world a run for its money. 4) Clean it - As I mentioned at the start, beautiful things that naturally occur can hide even more beautiful things via overgrowth. In the Smoky Mtns, large formations of grandiose slate rock get hidden by various trees/brush over the years. Cleaning all that 15-20 yr small overgrowth of pine or oak to reveal the really cool blueish slate rock formations that have been there for millions of years is extremely fulfilling. It’s like you discover a Van Gogh painting in an old attic. The dust, dirt that collected on it “naturally occurred” from it just sitting there, but wiping it off reveals something extremely majestic. 5) Meditate - when you explore your land, you’ll naturally just find your favorite spots to sit and pray/ponder/meditate. I’ve found a few spots on my acreage overlooking some insane views of the mountain range and I’ll just sit on a rock for hours watching red tail hawks screech as they fly by, watching eagles fly over my head and just think “Man, this is what life is all about, how could have have been so foolish chasing so many other unfulfilling things for so many decades”. (Video is from yesterday of my buddy Jimmy and me clearing out some small pines that were hiding some amazing rock formations)
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Jonathan Hunkin retweeted
It’s sobering. But also thoughtful. Don’t panic.
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Jonathan Hunkin retweeted
Tech Bros: "AI will replace doctors. Between that and whole body MRI's, we won't need most of you in another 10 years." Also Tech Bros: "No-code can’t replace developers. Systems are complex. Edge cases matter. Someone has to own decisions."
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Jonathan Hunkin retweeted
I have truly horrific news... An illegal alien driving a semi-truck has just crashed head-on into a van of Amish men, k*lling 4 of them. It appears the trucking company that employed the illegal is based out of California and is known as a "chameleon carrier"... ...which are trucking companies that re-register under new names to evade safety violations. The Amish men who lost their lives to this illegal alien are: Henry Eicher, 50. His sons: Menno Eicher, 25, and Paul Eicher, 19. and Simon Girod, 23. There will be no protests for them. Their story won't be in the mainstream news. Please pray for their families.
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Jonathan Hunkin retweeted
Most people around you are now at the age where they are giving up on themselves and their dreams. Don't forget how contagious mediocrity is... Don't catch it.
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Jonathan Hunkin retweeted
If everyone ate sugary things only on special occasions & holidays If everyone got sunlight & fresh air If everyone drank water, coffee, tea & milk If everyone ate meals featuring meat & healthy fats If everyone moved their body The medical cartel would collapse.
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I am now an official cosponsor of @SenMikeLee’s SAVE Act. This important legislation strengthens election integrity. The right to vote in American elections belongs to American citizens alone.
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"Why was meat regarded as inferior to processed foods, and alcohol treated as more harmful than social media and prescription meds? The answer is basic. For years, health authorities insisted all our ailments could be solved by an artificial mechanism..." americanthinker.com/blog/202…
This…………. “These changes reflect a positive shift in American culture away from processed foods and pharmaceutical quick-fixes, and towards an all-in approach to life. Amidst dueling crises of chronic disease and deaths of despair, there is no substitute for steak on the front porch or a drink shared with friends. As Americans adopt the spirit of this change, we might see a next generation of healthier people less afraid of life itself. To see just how much the previous health guidelines violated common sense, consider one example. Breakfast, featuring unhealthy cereals like Fruit Loops and Lucky Charms, became the most important meal of the day, while families shunned red meat at dinner time. In doing so, they lost out on the ample protein, vitamins, and minerals red meat provides. Meanwhile, manufacturers of sugary cereals could tout the government-endorsed health benefits of their products.”
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Oh, the good old days when TRAITORS were prosecuted for TREASON...
I want to know why Alejandro Mayorkas is a free man today. After seeing how President Trump has secured the border within 1 year, I can make no other reasonable interpretation other than Mayorkas wanted millions of illegal aliens to invade our country. No other explanation.
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LOL. Good luck Nashville.
I’m officially obsessed with this snowstorm. Weather people are fighting over what’s going to happen in Nashville like it’s Miami vs Notre Dame for the final spot in the playoff. Citing different weather models between rain, sleet, ice, or snow.
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