Joined December 2012
150 Photos and videos
I love a big boy on the mound. Give me Phil Coke 2.0
Drew Sommers: 6’3 / 250 lbs Micah Parsons: 6’3 / 250 lbs
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Hear me out
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Mark Naida retweeted
Replying to @bourscheid
No, you don't get it. He does not have $1 trillion sitting in cash, it is 99% stock in his companies. To make that wealth liquid would mean selling all that stock which would swiftly destroy *both* the companies (Tesla, SpaceX, others) and the wealth. If he sold it all, he'd end up with maybe $100b max, several hundred thousand people would be out of work, the companies ruined and many of their suppliers also ruined. Okay, but now Elon has $100b in cash, and can "solve the world's problems". $100b divided by the world's 8 billion people is $12 If you were in charge, several of the most innovative industrial companies in the world would be destroyed, hundreds of thousands out of work, and space would again close to human civilization for another generation. But everyone on earth could have one nice meal and you could revel in your altruism.
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After half a century of discourse, I have spoken.
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The Only Great Coffee North of Harbor Springs Trillium Woods Coffee is a little bastion of civilization, created by a couple building a family in this isolated place By O.W. Root @owroot Harbor Springs — What are the signs of civilization? In the very old days, it might have been a church or some establishment of law and order—a small monarch or maybe a lord. In the Wild West it might’ve be a saloon or a piano in the corner—a symbol of European civilization at the dusty Western end of the earth. Today our world is very settled, though some less civilized places remain, and I can think of no sign of civilization more apt in 2026 than the coffee shop. I drive through the Northern hinterlands often. Dirt roads, two-tracks, abandoned houses, four-wheelers in the summer and snowmobiles in the winter, and it’s when I see a coffee shop—a real coffee shop, one without a drive-thru, one where you are supposed sit for a while, one with good coffee —that I know I’ve reached some form of civilization. Just the other day, I had the pleasure of visiting one of these much appreciated outposts of civilization in the far northwest corner of the Lower Peninsula. On M-119, where cell service starts to fade and the world starts feeling empty, is Trillium Woods Coffee. A log cabin made of dark wood with green trim and an old screen door. A group of tables and chairs under a large shady tree. Dappled morning light on the ferns and the scrubby untamed woods. A gravel parking lot that crackles under the tires of your car. The glorious scent of freshly brewed coffee in the Northern woods, where you don’t go unless you are going for a reason. If there is a way to make a coffee shop that feels completely and entirely organic and complimentary to the surroundings of the deep woods, Trillium Woods Coffee might have achieved it. Phil and Mary Allore—the couple who run this wonderful outpost of caffeinated civilization—sat down with me on a warm Monday morning in June, under that great shade-giving tree next door, to tell me about their coffee shop in a log cabin and why they do what they do. Trillium Woods Coffee wasn’t always this way. The old building that now spouts espresso was once an antique shop, and then an art gallery, and then a tea shop, and before that a 1950s diner called The Hemlock House. But since 2023, it’s been Trillium Woods Coffee, as imagined by Phil and Mary. They told me, “We made a coffee shop because we wanted to go to a coffee shop more than we wanted to run a coffee shop.” North of Harbor Springs there just aren’t many places to hang out. It’s one of the unfortunate things about living in the hinterland. But they wanted to change that, so they made Trillium Woods what it is. Phil says, “This is basically the only place around Good Hart to come and hang out. We have met a bunch of friends here, we hang out with our friends here. I’ve seen people get jobs here. Building the social hub of Good Hart has been by far the most rewarding aspect.” Continuity and rootedness is a thick part of the story of what makes Trillium Woods Coffee so special. It’s in the fact that the building is still the same building in the same place. But it’s also the people. Phil’s family first came to the area seven generations ago. Their manager Odawa has had family living here for hundreds of years. What makes a real place a real place is a question and a thoughtful provocation for Phil and Mary growing Trillium Woods in a whole and authentic way. When we met, Mary was pregnant with their first and just one day from her due date. They told me, “We are starting a family here, but we are also continuing a family here.” The theme of building and growing is palpable in both sides of their lives at the current moment. Them wishing there was a third place for people to spend time together this far out and them making that place, and of course beginning a family so that there are, hopefully, people in the future to hang out in that place. As a father of three who also lives in the same distant Northern corner of our partially civilized state and as an avid reader of population statistics and birthrates, I thought about the fact that we make the future we hope to inhabit. We build the places we want to see, we have the children we want to raise, we change the world where we can and how we can. Some do it in suburbs with shopping malls, some do it in the epicenter of empire, others do it just off M-119.
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Mark Naida retweeted
Which Great Lake has the most fish??
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I am well on my way to becoming the youngest man who ever lived.
"Men with two children had an estimated brain age that was 0.6 years younger than their childless peers had, and for men with three children, it was 0.7 years younger. That’s similar to the brain benefit associated with exercising 2.5 hours a week." nytimes.com/2026/06/06/opini…
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Mark Naida retweeted
Livonia's Hazmat Bandit Tried to Steal From His Neighbors The suspect tried two unsuccessful break-ins, and the police arrested him at Busch's By Jay Murray @Stainless31 In an example of real life imitating art, the arrest of the Livonia’s notorious “Hazmat Bandit” by police on Saturday afternoon exposed a plot seemingly pulled from Apple TV’s “Your Friends and Neighbors.” In a stunning twist confirmed by multiple sources speaking on the condition of anonymity, the suspect arrested was identified as Livonia resident, Manuel Bardakjian, 40. In an even more jaw-dropping reveal, Bardakjian lives directly across the street from one of his alleged victims home, and only a couple blocks away from the first break-in attempt. The back-to-back attempted burglaries on May 13 and 14 were allegedly attempted by Bardakjian wearing a mask and white painter’s suit, stunning Livonia residents and quickly becoming a national news story as the culprit vanished into thin air after being confronted by residents of both homes. Surveillance footage of the first break-in on May 13 depicted a chilling confrontation with a female resident as she returned home while the masked Bardakjian probed for entry into the residence carrying a screwdriver. The next day, Bardakjian is alleged to have made a second attempt at a home on Bloomfield Drive, within walking distance of his own home, and was again confronted by homeowners before jumping a wall and vanishing. Enjoyer spoke with a resident of the subdivision who witnessed unusual police activity at Bakdarjian’s home Saturday afternoon with plainclothes officers entering the residence. According to others, Bardakjian’s arrest came after several hundred hours of investigation, surveillance, and undercover work by the Livonia Police. Bardakjian is a married father of two, and his arrest is alleged to have occurred while he was away from his residence on Saturday afternoon at a Busch’s grocery store in Livonia. He’s scheduled to be arraigned today on charges of home invasion and a weapons charge as he’s alleged to have brandished a firearm at homeowners during the second break-in. Additional sources informed Enjoyer that gambling debt could be a possible motive for the burglaries. Like Jon Hamm’s character from “Your Friends & Neighbors,” Bardakjian is believed to have cased homes within his own neighborhood. The truth about our neighbors here in Livonia is stranger than fiction.
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It is known.
One state I'd absolutely consider relocating to if we wind up leaving NYS is Michigan. MI is an improvement over NY in every domain. Far better gun laws, easier homeschooling, lower income taxes, lower property taxes -- but the climate and scenery is incredibly similar. I enjoyed living in Sault Sainte Marie for a year back in 2020. It's a great community, the lakes are fantastic, the forests are lovely, and the soil was fine. Was an easy place to live for me -- if I blurred my eyes I felt like I was back home in NY because everything was so similar. Yet you can actually carry a gun, and you pay thousands less in taxes year over year. I suspect if we moved out to the UP we wouldn't regret it one bit.
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America’s Youngest Man
I was SHOT by @owroot
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Mark Naida retweeted
Because we’ve got this area
if you’re american, how do you not choose to live in one of these areas???
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The UAW has endorsed a man who thinks the auto industry is dying
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If you hang out with OW he will bestow aura upon you
Atomic age essence on 35mm film.
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Crazy how the number keeps going up week by week. Like the city wants you to get comfortable with the idea.
Duggan said Detroit’s latest demo dirt mess would cost less than $8M to clean up and that his admin had a "100%" success rate getting contractors to pick up such tabs. Neither claim held up. My latest, on the mess now poised to cost city taxpayers $27M: freep.com/story/news/local/m…
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amazing park
Ready to track down some Michigan elk??? @supermarkus
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Will this tiny Lansing stadium change the way kids play baseball? @BuddyMoorehouse
Can Michigan’s Smallest Baseball Stadium Revive Pickup Baseball? @BuddyMoorehouse enjoyer.com/can-michigan-sma…
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Mark Naida retweeted
I started my career in Alpena. They have a huge need for medical professionals. We loved living so close to the beach for so cheap. Your neighbors are amazing. Ultimately we moved home to be closer to family. Still has a place in our hearts.
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Mark Naida retweeted
Whitmer Can Make Jobs in the Carolinas but Not Michigan @Stainless31
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Mark Naida retweeted
On Piety Hill with @owroot
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Mark Naida retweeted
Let Charlie in!
Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, Charlie LeDuff DENIED entrance into the Mackinac Policy Conference! @Charlieleduff
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