so you're just going to get on here and think you're a great troll or something?
pretend you didn't run like a bitch when your bitch dictator slapped the mandates down and covered your mouth in fear of hate speech?
yep
so you're just going to get on here and think you're a great troll or something?
pretend you didn't run like a bitch when your bitch dictator slapped the mandates down and covered your mouth in fear of hate speech?
so you're just going to get on here and think you're a great troll or something?
pretend you didn't run like a bitch when your bitch dictator slapped the mandates down and covered your mouth in fear of hate speech?
A large-scale, multi-agency nuclear incident TRAINING EXERCISE will take place May 1-5 in southeast Houston and Harris County. The training exercise will NOT pose risks to area residents. Please do not be alarmed by training-related activity.
@HoustonOEM
When a toddler shits his pants and sits there, still in the shitted pants, denying he's done it.
im glad we can come together to defund jews' hired guns
Videogame enthusiasts are scouring popular social-media platforms in the hope of finding classified U.S. military documents, turning the recent national-security crisis over leaked secrets into a global scavenger hunt.
The competition pits online users eager to see secrets against the U.S. government, which wants to keep those secrets off the internet.
At issue are a cache of sensitive military documents that the Justice Department alleges Jack Teixeira, a 21-year-old member of the Massachusetts Air National Guard, posted on Discord, a platform that allows gamers to gather and communicate online. The documents first began showing up last year on a Discord group—known as a server—and remained unnoticed for months until some of them were reposted to other larger servers and platforms, eventually finding their way to the media, garnering public and U.S. government attention....
@ all the dupes who bought into the russia russia russia hillary won
(and still lost while rigging the national election w/ statist power)
you deserve to be mocked and ridiculed
A whistleblower from the FBI’s Boston field office testified that agents in Washington refused to share hours of video footage from the January 6 Capitol riot between the offices because there “may be” undercover officers or confidential human sources in the videos whose identities would need to be protected.