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That is probably the most interesting thing that CNN has ever aired in 40+ years
I guess "too big to fail" wasn't a thing back then
Where did this notion that men going out to work must mean he's sitting in a recliner somewhere just scratching his balls comes from?

Or at least that's the impression I get from bitter women TikTok and socials, who chose the traditional marriage but then constantly nag and complain about their man online, and the fact they're expected to pull THEIR weight in the marriage.

You know what he's doing? He's earning a pay-check to pay to keep a roof over your head and food in your increasingly fat stomach, and the frivolous expensive shit you keep ruining his weekend for. Now woman up and clean the house.

@WTFPurpleAlpaca I don’t think she has the mental capacity to understand that. When he’s gone she feels fearful, her man protects her. Or worse he could be lying to her and seeing another woman.

@PNS Totally was the driver turning into his lane’s fault. Thankfully he had a dash cam.

@Cosmic From what i understand we send 3.8 billion annually for military purchases. About 75% of the money is spent on US weapons. We fund Israeli military growth and U.S defense profits. The problem arises is that it’s all taxpayer money spent.

“Israel is our greatest ally.”
I understand the perspective now.
Israel is more than an ally in name — it should be a partner in action.
By building defense capabilities together on American soil, we create jobs, strengthen our economies, and deepen trust.
This alliance must serve both nations equally — militarily, economically, and civilly.
Let’s turn words into reality: a true partnership for peace, prosperity, and shared security.

Pros of the policy

Keeps U.S. tax dollars at home
Creates American jobs
Boosts oversight & accountability
Strengthens U.S. Israel partnership
Puts American interests first
Cuts waste & endless military spending

Taxpayer money flows to Israel to build military strength — but American taxpayers don’t benefit. That’s not right. Aid should serve the people who pay for it first.

@TenaciousGoat

excellent point...
... all along, even though I knew GOV was not the most efficient, I assumed they were actually DOING something useful with the money.

NOW, I'm pretty sure most of the money "leaks out" of any program well before it reaches a point of utilization.

Policy Post

Instead of sending billions in aid to Israel, the U.S. should require weapons be built here using American labor. Let Israeli firms partner with U.S. factories—jobs stay here, oversight improves, and taxpayers benefit. This isn’t anti-Israel, it’s pro-America. Foreign aid should serve American interests first.

@GluedToTheScreen Then used for god knows what. I’m not against taxes, but I would at least like to see a result from my taxes that benefits the people and not the government or a foreign nation. Israel…

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Merovingian Club

A club for red-pilled exiles.