Joined July 2023
146 Photos and videos
Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
Baby poopy talk. Meaningless drivel that sounds really profound if you don't stop to think about it. It's not an argument because it's so obviously devoid of content. But dullards think it's a kill shot because it contains a kernal of truth. 🧵, but short
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
>A Catholic Bishop gets put on prime-time national television in the 1950s >No script, no teleprompter, no celebrity guests, just him, a chalkboard, and the Gospel >Hollywood completely writes him off as boring religious programming >Proceeds to absolutely dominate the TV ratings, drawing 30 million viewers every single week >Crushes the biggest secular comedians in the country to win the Emmy Award >Accepts the Emmy on live TV by thanking his four writers: "Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John." >Converted countless communists, atheists, and Hollywood executives to the Catholic faith >About to be beatified in 2026 We need more men like this. Archbishop Fulton Sheen pray for us!
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Forget it, Jack, this is Snowmalia.
If I didn't read the caption I'd think this was a third world country
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
Easy
You've just been put in charge of coming up with a popcorn bucket for a classic film. GO. I'll start. Goodfellas Cadillac trunk.
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
Good list.
THE CATHOLIC RULE OF LIFE I WISH SOMEONE HAD TAUGHT ME SOONER A few years ago, I thought becoming a better Catholic meant learning more. More theology. More apologetics. More books. More Catholic content. Those things are good. But I eventually discovered something surprising. Most saints did not become saints because they knew more. They became saints because they consistently did a few simple things every day. That realization changed how I view the spiritual life. So after studying Sacred Scripture, the Catechism, and the lives of the saints, I began noticing a pattern. Different saints. Different centuries. Different personalities. Yet they all built their lives around the same foundations. If someone asked me today: “How do I actually live like Jesus Christ every day?” This is the framework I would share. And honestly, it is the framework I am still trying to live myself. 1. GIVE GOD THE FIRST MOMENT OF YOUR DAY Before the notifications. Before the messages. Before the news. Before social media. Give God the first moment. Make the Sign of the Cross. Thank Him for another day. Offer everything to Him. The first voice you hear should not be the world. It should be God. 2. READ THE GOSPEL BEFORE YOU READ OPINIONS One verse. One paragraph. One chapter. Whatever you can manage. The point is simple: Let Christ shape your mind before the world shapes it for you. Many of us spend hours consuming information and only minutes receiving formation. That imbalance affects everything. 3. PROTECT THE STATE OF GRACE LIKE YOUR GREATEST TREASURE Because it is. The Church teaches that sanctifying grace is God's own life within the soul. Nothing on earth is worth losing that. Not success. Not money. Not pleasure. Not popularity. Go to Confession regularly. Take sin seriously. Take God's mercy even more seriously. 4. BUILD YOUR LIFE AROUND THE EUCHARIST The saints never got tired of speaking about the Eucharist. Neither should we. The closer they drew to Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament, the more they began to resemble Him. Sunday Mass is the minimum. Not the goal. If possible, attend daily Mass. Visit Jesus in Adoration. Stay after Communion. Speak to Him. Listen to Him. Remain with Him. 5. STOP LOOKING FOR HOLINESS IN EXTRAORDINARY THINGS Most holiness happens in ordinary moments. Being patient when you are tired. Forgiving when you would rather hold a grudge. Remaining kind when someone is difficult. Serving when nobody notices. The saints did not become saints because they did spectacular things every day. They became saints because they loved God in ordinary circumstances. 6. CARRY YOUR CROSS INSTEAD OF RUNNING FROM IT Every day brings a cross. A disappointment. A struggle. A wound. A sacrifice. A burden nobody else sees. Modern culture says: “Avoid suffering.” Jesus says: “Follow Me.” The difference is enormous. One path seeks comfort. The other seeks transformation.
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
THE CATHOLIC RULE OF LIFE I WISH SOMEONE HAD TAUGHT ME SOONER A few years ago, I thought becoming a better Catholic meant learning more. More theology. More apologetics. More books. More Catholic content. Those things are good. But I eventually discovered something surprising. Most saints did not become saints because they knew more. They became saints because they consistently did a few simple things every day. That realization changed how I view the spiritual life. So after studying Sacred Scripture, the Catechism, and the lives of the saints, I began noticing a pattern. Different saints. Different centuries. Different personalities. Yet they all built their lives around the same foundations. If someone asked me today: “How do I actually live like Jesus Christ every day?” This is the framework I would share. And honestly, it is the framework I am still trying to live myself. 1. GIVE GOD THE FIRST MOMENT OF YOUR DAY Before the notifications. Before the messages. Before the news. Before social media. Give God the first moment. Make the Sign of the Cross. Thank Him for another day. Offer everything to Him. The first voice you hear should not be the world. It should be God. 2. READ THE GOSPEL BEFORE YOU READ OPINIONS One verse. One paragraph. One chapter. Whatever you can manage. The point is simple: Let Christ shape your mind before the world shapes it for you. Many of us spend hours consuming information and only minutes receiving formation. That imbalance affects everything. 3. PROTECT THE STATE OF GRACE LIKE YOUR GREATEST TREASURE Because it is. The Church teaches that sanctifying grace is God's own life within the soul. Nothing on earth is worth losing that. Not success. Not money. Not pleasure. Not popularity. Go to Confession regularly. Take sin seriously. Take God's mercy even more seriously. 4. BUILD YOUR LIFE AROUND THE EUCHARIST The saints never got tired of speaking about the Eucharist. Neither should we. The closer they drew to Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament, the more they began to resemble Him. Sunday Mass is the minimum. Not the goal. If possible, attend daily Mass. Visit Jesus in Adoration. Stay after Communion. Speak to Him. Listen to Him. Remain with Him. 5. STOP LOOKING FOR HOLINESS IN EXTRAORDINARY THINGS Most holiness happens in ordinary moments. Being patient when you are tired. Forgiving when you would rather hold a grudge. Remaining kind when someone is difficult. Serving when nobody notices. The saints did not become saints because they did spectacular things every day. They became saints because they loved God in ordinary circumstances. 6. CARRY YOUR CROSS INSTEAD OF RUNNING FROM IT Every day brings a cross. A disappointment. A struggle. A wound. A sacrifice. A burden nobody else sees. Modern culture says: “Avoid suffering.” Jesus says: “Follow Me.” The difference is enormous. One path seeks comfort. The other seeks transformation.
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
Prison itself is a relatively recent innovation. @CovfefeAnon has written a ton about this: I'll link one of his threads in the replies. Prior to the 1700s, criminals were either executed or exiled. Incarceration was used almost entirely to hold convicts until they were sentenced. Violent offenders were hanged, non-violent ones were told to GTFO of Dodge within ten days on pain of death. Britain shipped convicts to the Thirteen Colonies prior to the Revolution and Australia afterwards. (Aside: it's funny that Australians puff themselves up over being descended from "convicts." The majority of convicts sent to Australia were from debtors' prisons, the white equivalent of Kool-Aid pineapple enthusiasts.) Exile was considered tantamount to death throughout most of human history. It meant being stripped of your possessions, permanently separated from your friends and family, and cast into foreign lands where you would be viewed with suspicion at best, where you could not speak the local language. THE SONG OF THE CID starts with El Cid's anguish at being unjustly exiled for this reason; he was booted out of Castile after being accused of robbing the king. The modern prison system was intended to reform criminals into productive citizens, hence the name "penitentiary": to repent. It only works in a limited number of cases. Libtards have worsened the problem with their anti-death penalty campaigning in one of their longest running motte-and-bailey operations. "Life imprisonment is punishment enough!" Except that libtards also campaign to abolish life imprisonment and have already succeeded in places like Norway, where 21 years is the maximum sentence a judge can hand out. A rational society would have tried Karmelo Anthony within a week of his crime, then dragged him behind a woodshed and put one in his skull. Just look at him. Zero empathy, zero remorse. The kind of sociopath who was common in Europe before centuries of executing or exiling criminals made it safe. Even a life sentence couldn't teach this freak empathy. He is societal dead weight. No more cushy Club Fed prisons for rapists and murderers. Time to take a page out of Stolypin's book and letting military tribunals get rid of people like this. A few more Karmelo Anthonys in shallow graves and "changing consumer habits" will change for the better.
Replying to @memeticsisyphus
What should we do to people who randomly rape and murder? Execution seems just. Certainly better for society than they be fed and housed for half a century.
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
C.S. Lewis's The Screwtape Letters is the second best supplement for RPGs, second only to the bible. jonmollison.com/2026/06/06/s…
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
USA. They sell food here in the sizes of war. A single jar of mayonnaise as large as my helmet. I bought two. One must always keep a reserve. I entered a hall so vast it had weather. Shelves to the heavens. And upon them, no small things. No humble portions. Everything sized as if for a siege. A bag of rice I could not lift alone. A tower of paper as tall as a child. Forty-eight of one thing, ninety of another, a vat of oil that could float a boat. And the people pushed carts the size of carriages, loading them as if the snows were coming and would not leave for years. I understood at once, and I was moved to my core. For it is written that a house is judged not in its feasting but in its famine — by whether, when the long winter comes, it can feed its own without bowing to any lord. This nation does not shop. This nation provisions. Every family a fortress, stocked to outlast a siege that is not coming, has never come, and against which they remain magnificently, gloriously prepared. So I provisioned. I filled a carriage-cart to the brim. Rice for a regiment. The helmet of mayonnaise, and its reserve. Enough paper to write the history of the world. Twice. And here my heart rose, and I declared the thing a calmer man would not: "Let the hardest winter in a thousand years descend. Let the roads vanish and the rivers freeze. I will not so much as rise from my chair — for I hold, in my garage, mayonnaise enough to outlast the apocalypse, and a man with that much mayonnaise fears no season, no army, and no god." The woman checking receipts at the door studied my cart a long moment. Then she smiled. "Big family?" "Not yet," I told her, honestly. I took my provisions home. And because no winter came — none ever does — I did the only honorable thing a man can do with a fortress full of food. I fed the whole street. We ate for a week. The mayonnaise held. So tell me, America. You call it buying in bulk. A Costco run. A little too much, as usual. I call it every household quietly ready to survive the end of the world — and then, when the world stubbornly refuses to end, throwing a feast instead.
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
What a hidden masterpiece can teach you about RPGs. jonmollison.com/2026/06/03/l…
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
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Some, such as @LL_929, call them retrospectives.
New, by me, at the Retreat: The Culture: Git Gud With Post-Game Reviews bradfordcwalker.blogspot.com…
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
Yes, "Just work harder and save more" is an excuse, not an answer. Millennials save more than their parents did. They forfeit more vacation time than previous generations. Yet buying a typical home now takes about 5x more hours of work than it did in the 1970s.
Dear small percentage of Boomers who can actually be told things: Here are some facts, to help you understand what Millennials are trying to tell you. Here is what the middle-class experience is right now. Not for losers, but for your average hardworking, but unexceptional, dude born in 1992. - No company pensions. Ever. No job offers this. - Laid off every 2 to 3 years. - No vacations. Ever. If you are lucky, you have 10 to 15 days of annual "PTO" (paid time off). But this is not vacation. This is your sick days. You can take a break with whatever's left over. - If you are not lucky, you have "unlimited" PTO. Which sounds nice, but in practice it means you get sick days and nothing else. - They pay social security taxes, but they know they will never receive those benefits, because the system will crash first. - Not promoted. Ever. - No annual raises. Instead, these are effectively pay cuts, because they don't match inflation. - Because of this, can only get a raise by changing jobs. Some judicious prevarication about salary history is recommended. - Good chance you'll have to change careers at least once, possibly more, as industries get rugpulled by offshoring or work visas. - Total mortgage cost on a median house in 2026 is 104,600 minimum-age-hours. This is 50 years of full-time work. - For comparison, a 1972 purchase would be 23,750 minimum-wage-hours, about 11 years of full time work. What this all adds up to is that Millennials can't buy homes until they are past their child-bearing years. And, no, scrimping and saving doesn't change that equation. This is with scrimping and saving. I am not a Millennial. I am GenX, the child of Boomers. I do not need to be told how much Boomers forwent luxuries to save, and how hard they worked. I know exactly how much they did of each. I was there. I saw. They worked hard at the beginning of their careers, and lived frugally for about 5 years to save up a down payment. After that, things gradually eased up, bit by bit. Until, by retirement, a lot of them had nice fat stock portfolios and multiple rental property investments, and Caribbean cruise holidays. And this seems, to them, like a fair and natural progression. But as America has been hollowed out and by a corrupt political machine, those doing the robbing have left the Boomers whole, and placed the burden of that corruption squarely on the backs of younger generations. For Millennials, there's no light at the end of that tunnel. Just another tunnel. And another after that. They have been standing between Boomers and the reality of the modern economy for 20 years. At some point, they are going to break.
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
Today, we remember a legend. On this day in history, Harambe would have celebrated another birthday. An icon that became part of internet history, American culture, and an entire generation’s timeline. Tomorrow marks 10 years since we lost him. Ten years since the moment the world stopped scrolling and collectively mourned something bigger than a meme. He became a symbol of loyalty, strength, chaos, unity, and the strange beauty of the internet bringing millions of people together for one cause: never forgetting Harambe. Everyone remembers where they were when they heard the news. And somehow, a decade later, his legacy still lives on. Gone, but never forgotten. Rest easy to a true patriot. 🕊️🇺🇸 May 27, 1999 — May 28, 2016 Forever in our hearts.
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
It’s imperative that we revert to STANDARD, not Daylight time, for two reasons, one of which you may have never considered. You know the first: solar noon is closest to 12 o’clock all year. That means an equal number of hours before and after noon each day. This also means earlier sunrises which are significantly better for establishing a healthy circadian rhythm. The second reason is that nearly ONE THIRD of US counties are in the wrong timezone. A significant swath of the country isn’t only an artificial hour ahead because of daylight time… but TWO HOURS ahead of true solar time. Year-round daylight time, especially without recalibrating time zones, would establish this error permanently, affecting millions of Americans. We should be letting the Sun dictate the day the way God made it. Arbitrary, artificial tampering would be worse for us all. Fix the time zones and affix standard time.
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
Pattern recognition time: Republicans could lock in midterm wins the easy way — by embracing Steve Cortes’ simple message. Deport every illegal. Slash legal immigration to a trickle. Supply and demand fixes wages, and it protects the wild spaces and values we’re importing away. Instead, they fumble basics like the SAVE Act and do… nothing. Are they playing to lose? Or just stuck in old defaults? Time to primary the RINOs and elect winners who get it. Supporting mass deportations isn’t radical — it’s obvious pattern recognition. Winners see the system and act. It’s actually very easy to win if you choose to.
The fastest, smartest way to get Real Wages growing again — esp now that the war seems over — is simple: IMMIGRATION enforcement. Deport every last illegal — and, while we’re at it, slash legal migration/visas to a trickle too. It’s not complicated. Supply & demand!
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As if any of your coworkers would risk their jobs to tell you.
Fwiw basically nobody in the tech industry has these views about immigrants even if they are concerned about the very real problem of ethnic cliques at big companies It’s almost entirely a group of very loud internet chuds
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
Debt Reckoning: The Student Loan System Explained How Student Loans Promised the American Dream but Delivered a Nightmare kickstarter.com/projects/bri…
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Cyberpsycho Dorrinal retweeted
nuclear trained sailors average 12-36 weeks of training and they’re fine. the grift of ‘we need foreign talent’ is treasonous lies. any 16-36 american man out of nebraska can do any of these jobs you just don’t want to pay them or allow them to have families.
The Trump administration is now telling people who entered the country legally to “go home” and apply for green cards there. These are immigrants already legally working in the United States.   It was never about illegal immigration.
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Same (well, 50, but I started late)
I am a retired software engineer who made so much money I dont have to care about anything, forever, before I was 40. I worked with our "high skilled immigration", and I dont fucking want them either, regardless of what an indian woman posing as an intellectual on twitter says.
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