Wordle 1,750 3/6
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Michael S Wildcard ✨ 😶🌫️🗽⚡
MichaelS@bitcoinveterans.org
npub168u2...68qx
Location: Middle Tennessee, USA
Homesteader, entrepreneur and all around goofball
Talks about: Guns, knives, pipes/tobacco, livestock, Liberty, Freedom, Free markets, Austrian Economics, AMSOIL, Infinite Banking, Bitcoin, Shitcoin, Lightning payments, building meaningful social relationships, business, entrepreneurship, homesteading, permaculture, agriculture, generational wealth, personal finance...
Member of npub1qktts9naunvjdwsktq5xjdhwh539xt4x0mqj4yxq0q9dvm03ljvs6sms0r get on the mission
#GrowNostr #AMSOIL #AMSOILLubeDirect #LubeDirect #InfiniteBanking #FinancialTailwind #plebsrustica #ChestnutRidgeTN #middleTN #Tennessee ⚡⚡ zapper
Nostring since 4/20/23
30 Rock on gummies is a fucking riot. I'm not sure if all shows are this funny or just the ones we watch high.
30 Rock was made for weed.
"Be peaceful, but not harmless." My little Rosie (12 lb rat terrier) you think they will notice?
#PeacefulNotHarmless


Buying a new vehicle... Spend $70k then another $10k making it right. Running boards, bed cover, paint protection, spray on bed liner, under seat storage, seat covers, of course AMSOIL conversion @AMSOIL Lube-Direct


Wordle 1,749 4/6
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Secretary of War Pete Hegseth Forces Army Chief of Staff to Step Down Over Ignored COVID Vaccine Injury
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has demanded that Army Chief of Staff General Randy George step down and retire immediately.
A young soldier wounded by the Biden-era mRNA COVID vaccine says General George ignored her desperate case until investigative reporting forced military records into the light.
Specialist Karoline Stancik was just 24 when the shot hit her hard. She suffered three heart attacks, a mini-stroke, and severe POTS that left doctors no choice but to implant a pacemaker in her chest.
During the Biden administration, the Army wrongly kicked Stancik off orders and stripped her of military medical insurance, leaving her to pay more than $90,000 out of pocket while fighting for her life.
An October 2023 Army memo later declared her condition "Line of Duty" and pointed straight to research linking her cardiac damage to the mRNA vaccine.
"Secretary of War has asked the Army Chief of Staff, General Randy George, to step down," the report states. "A COVID vaccine-injured soldier says General George ignored her case until our investigation exposed military records linking her three heart attacks to the mRNA vaccine."
After the reporting broke through, Stancik finally received medical retirement and partial back pay. She is still battling the VA to wipe out the rest of her crushing medical debt.
This case exposes how top brass looked the other way while fit young troops paid the price for forced experimental shots. Hegseth's move sends a clear message: real leadership puts injured soldiers first, not the cover-up.
Stancik's fight is one of many buried injuries from the military's heavy-handed vaccine push. Accountability is long overdue.
The first step towards success is taken when you refuse to be a captive of the environment in which you first find yourself.
Wordle 1,748 5/6
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Wordle 1,747 6/6
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What caused families to fight against each other during the American Civil War?
Chatgtp...
Families fought against each other during the American Civil War for a mix of political, economic, and deeply personal reasons. It wasn’t just a war between states—it often split households and communities.
**1. Divided loyalties to state vs. nation**
At the time, many people felt stronger loyalty to their **state** than to the United States as a whole. When Southern states seceded, individuals had to choose: support their state or remain loyal to the Union. Even within the same family, people made different choices.
**2. Disagreement over slavery**
Slavery was the central issue behind the war. Some family members supported it (often due to economic dependence or beliefs about race), while others opposed it on moral or political grounds. These differences could be intense enough to divide siblings, parents, and children.
**3. Geographic and cultural splits**
Border states like Kentucky and Missouri had mixed populations—some pro-Union, some pro-Confederate. Families living there were especially likely to split sides because they were surrounded by conflicting influences.
**4. Economic differences within families**
Not all Southerners owned enslaved people. Poorer family members might not support the Confederacy’s cause, while wealthier relatives might strongly defend it. These economic differences could create opposing viewpoints even at the dinner table.
**5. Personal beliefs and pressure**
Some people joined armies due to personal conviction; others felt pressure from neighbors or local communities. In tight-knit areas, choosing the “wrong” side could lead to social isolation, pushing individuals to make different choices than their relatives.
**6. Communication and distance**
Families were often spread across different states. If relatives lived in both North and South, they naturally ended up on opposing sides once war broke out.
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In short, the Civil War divided families because it forced people to answer big questions—about loyalty, morality, and identity—and those answers weren’t always the same, even among close relatives.
Follow up, Are there any similarities between what happened during the Civil War and families and current times in the United States?
Chatgtp
There *are* some parallels—but it’s important not to overstate them. What’s happening in the U.S. today is **nowhere near the scale or violence** of the American Civil War. Still, certain patterns of division can feel familiar on a smaller, social level.
**1. Political polarization within families**
Just like in the 1860s, families today sometimes split over politics—whether about elections, government policy, or social issues. People may strongly identify with different parties or ideologies, and that can strain relationships.
**2. Different sources of identity and loyalty**
During the Civil War, people argued over loyalty to state vs. nation. Today, divisions can center more on **political identity, cultural values, or worldview** (urban vs. rural, religious vs. secular, etc.). These identities can shape how people see the country and their place in it.
**3. Media and information bubbles**
In the 1860s, newspapers often presented very partisan views, reinforcing divisions. Today, social media and news outlets can do something similar—people may consume very different information, which can deepen disagreements even within the same family.
**4. Moral disagreements**
Then, the major moral issue was slavery. Today, disagreements often revolve around issues like civil rights, immigration, or economic fairness. While the topics differ, the **feeling that “this issue is fundamental”** can create strong emotional divides.
**5. Geographic and cultural differences**
Regional differences still matter. People in different parts of the country may have different values or priorities, which can show up in family disagreements—especially if relatives live in different states or environments.
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**Key difference (and it’s a big one):**
Today’s conflicts are mostly expressed through **debate, elections, and public discourse**, not organized warfare between states. The Civil War involved armies, secession, and massive loss of life—something the U.S. is not experiencing now.
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**Bottom line:**
Yes, both then and now show how deeply held beliefs can divide families. But today’s divisions are political and cultural tensions within a single nation—not a violent conflict that literally turns relatives into enemy soldiers.
Wordle 1,745 4/6
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You know, being a single dad sucked a lot, figuring out women hood for a teenager, dealing with hormones and emotions, boys, other stuff I probably don't know about. What sucks is my adult daughter doesn't talk to me, because she's a socialist marxist...
Where did I Fuck up?
1 million Sats, done over and over 100 times... That's how it works!
#StayHumbleStackSats #keepstacking
Day sex... Getting older, fucking beat by 7 or 8 pm. No kids in the house. Day sex is awesome, yes we're not 18, and we both have flab, spots and sagging parts. But man is it so good! Especially mid morning after coffee and before lunch. Getting warmed up in the hot tub is a bonus.
Try it you might like it.
On this day in U.S. military history, 29 March 1911, the United States Army adopted arguably the greatest combat sidearm in history. The M1911 is a single-action, semi-automatic, magazine-fed, recoil-operated pistol chambered for the .45 ACP cartridge.


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Nice, took less than a minute this morning.
Wordle 1,743 5/6
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Things you won't read on MSM.
Texas Mom Approaches ICE Agents at Houston Airport: "How Can My Son Join?"
A proud Texas mother didn't hesitate at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston. She walked straight up to a group of ICE officers, asked how her son could sign up to join the ranks, then shook every hand and wished them a blessed day.
This heartwarming moment, captured on video, shows real America standing with the men and women enforcing our borders. No protests, no drama—just genuine respect for the thin blue line protecting our sovereignty.
While the left paints ICE as villains, everyday patriots in red states like Texas are cheering them on and encouraging their kids to serve. It's a powerful reminder that most Americans want secure borders, rule of law, and officers who do the tough job no one else will.
Under President Trump, ICE recruitment has exploded—more than doubling the agency's workforce with over 12,000 new hires from hundreds of thousands of applications. Patriots are answering the call to make America safe again.
This is what winning looks like: strong enforcement, public support, and families proud to see their sons and daughters wear the badge. God bless this Texas mom and every ICE agent out there doing the work.
🎥 Daily Wire


Wordle 1,742 3/6
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My "fidget toys" on the living room table. #SparksSharps #rule9 #alwayscarryaknife #edc

