Professional Monitorer of Situations. Chair of my local Wafflehouse Fightclub, Western Chauvanist, 3/4CajunCatholic, O&G drilling tech turned smartgrid tech.

Joined September 2009
3,399 Photos and videos
I don’t care about democracy. Never have. I care about natural rights. I care about economic freedom. I care about rule of law. I care about liberty. If a monarchy gets me all that, cool. If a democracy gets me that, fine. Democracy in and of itself is not a good.
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Who did this 🀣
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Why TF is Joe Rogan buying his ties at Baby Gap? Someone get this man a proper tie. He looks like a buffoon.
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Holy shit. My favorite artist followed me on TikTok and DM’d me.
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Saint Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle.
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It’s Sunday. Go to Mass!
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This whole trip has just been a huge reminder of how much the South gets slept on. The South rocks. Even though I technically don’t live there anymore. I don’t consider Tampa the South.

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I have very very wealthy relatives. I would never in a million years imagine asking them for a handout. I’d go homeless before I ever did. I wasn’t raised like that.

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I’ve stood in that very spot a few times. It’s breathtaking, almost scary. Even when empty.

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Lives were changed.
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God Bless America πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ
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Jamming on US 19.
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The vibes are insane. Driving through the great state of Louisiana on our way to New Orleans. It’s crazy how diverse this country is, every day the scenery looks different.
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Decided to run to the gym. Better view than a treadmill. This shit came on. Talk about take me back to HS.
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Ok this is the @bucees CEO and he looks exactly as you would imagine. Love it.
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β€œYou've got to kill people, and when you've killed enough people, they stop fighting.” - General Curtis LeMay U.S. Air Force.
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To be fair, Gulf to Bay around US 19 is traffic nightmare most of the day.

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Soldados estadounidenses conversan con un miembro de la Guardia Suiza Pontificia del Vaticano, en junio de 1944.
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Never change, New Orleans 🀣
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Because this area exists.
if you’re american, how do you not choose to live in one of these areas???
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Ray’s Rock - Omaha Beach On the morning of June 6, 1944, 23 year old Staff Sergeant Arnold β€œRay” Lambert came ashore with the first wave of the 1st Infantry Division on the eastern side of Omaha Beach. At this small patch of concrete he saved nearly 20 lives: The division came under intense fire from several German bunkers surrounding the entrance to the Colville Draw (one of two exits off Omaha Beach). Ray, a medic, immediately went to work. He was shot in the arm. Moments later he was hit by shrapnel in the leg, but Ray kept pulling men to safety. He pulled nearly 20 wounded soldiers to cover behind this 8ft wide obstacle, treating each soldier before going out in search of others. After several hours under fire, while pulling a wounded soldier from the ocean, he was struck by a landing craft. It dropped its ramp on top of him, breaking his back. He fell face down in the water, drowning. The craft backed up and nearby soldiers pulled an unconscious Ray to safety, eventually evacuating him off the beach. Remarkably, Ray had already earned two Silver Stars and three Purple Hearts in Sicily and North Africa, prior to landing in France. But here in Normandy his war would end. He awoke in a hospital back in England a day later. In the next bed over was his brother, who had also been wounded at Omaha. When asked about his work on D-Day, Ray simply said, β€œI did what I was called to do.” Ray Lambert passed in 2021 at 100 years old. He exemplified the best of American grit and why remembering this day is so important.
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