Anonymous 04/10/2026 (Fri) 13:29 Id: 344dd2 No.180523 del
>>180502, >>180503, >>180503, >>180505, >>180506, >>180507, >>180508, >>180509, >>180510, >>180511, >>180512, >>180513, >>180514, >>180515, >>180516, >>180517, >>180518, >>180519, >>180520, >>180521, >>180522
EA4HLB @EA4HLB - Video: @ARISS_Intl Short video of today's contact between students at Lycée du Vimeu and Sophie Adenot on the ISS.
https://x.com/EA4HLB/status/2042190358751105398

Eagle Ed Martin @EagleEdMartin - Politics is the art of what is possible.
Give a damn about America? Vote in midterms.
https://x.com/EagleEdMartin/status/2042459564642079221

Eagle Ed Martin @EagleEdMartin - Wise
Quote:
Alex Bruesewitz @alexbruesewitz
One of the Right’s most potent advantages over the past decade has been its unmatched online ecosystem: a diverse yet united coalition of patriotic creators, independent voices, and citizen journalists.
While the Left relied on legacy institutions, corporate media, and Big Tech censorship, the Right built something truly organic, resilient, and extraordinarily effective. The Left had no equivalent.
After losing the information war and the 2024 election, the Left and their media allies finally woke up. They’ve been working overtime ever since to sow division, most visibly by amplifying every minor right-wing disagreement they once ignored.
Legacy outlets like The New York Times and The Washington Post have now become eager participants in turning routine internal friction into national “feuds” and manufactured drama.
This isn’t journalism. It’s psychological warfare. Unable to defeat the Right’s online strength at the ballot box, they’re deliberately trying to fracture the very coalition that beat them, turning our strength into self-inflicted weakness.
Unity isn’t uniformity. But when hostile actors elevate every disagreement into a national spectacle, it becomes far too easy to lose sight of the bigger fight.

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