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  2. https://x.com/romanhelmetguy/status/1946391370798698759?s=46&t=XnJPB0vm-gWk34ikDvnV1g
  3. This list could go on and on.
  4. Why would anyone go to a Coldplay concert.
  5. Politics is so tribal.. hilarious stuff actually. Watching libs switch places with QAnon when it comes to Epstein/Child Trafficking simply because Trump’s Administration is now in charge of the files. Not a peep about this prior, when their team had the ability to release everything, but now there are secrets and clues all around us.
  6. 8 more to go. Now they can’t even say a college degree will get you employment. …When the promise is destroyed, most middle-class men (greedy phenotypes marginally exist) would rather prefer to drop out to a homestead / farmland / van-life / forest-cabin, than going through long Education, slogging 70h in an eventual dead-end corporate job with stagnant wages & endless politics and consuming hedonistically. However, wealthy are fine. They are marrying with higher TFR. It’s the middle-class male facing DEI, broken family dynamics, AI disruption, housing unaffordability. They (government, feminists, Hollywood, corporate America) sold us a lie that both parents had to work. They knew that would destroy families. But so long as it increased the GDP in the process, they didn’t care.
  7. The World Woke Up In half a year, the impossible became obvious: borders closed, recruits returned, Iran retreated, and elites were exposed—all because people finally said, “Enough.” By Victor Davis Hanson In less than six months, the entire world has been turned upside down. There is no longer such a thing as conventional wisdom or the status quo. The unthinkable has become the banal. Take illegal immigration—remember the 10,000 daily illegal entries under Biden? Recall the only solution was supposedly “comprehensive immigration reform”—a euphemism for mass amnesties. Now, there is no such thing as daily new illegal immigration. It simply disappeared with common-sense enforcement of existing immigration laws—and a new president. How about the 40,000-50,000 shortfall in military recruitment? Remember all the causes that the generals cited for their inability to enlist soldiers: generational gangs, obesity, drugs, and stiff competition with private industry? And now? In just six months, recruitment targets are already met; the issue is mostly moot. Why? The new Pentagon flipped the old, canceling its racist DEI programs and assuring the rural, middle-class Americans—especially white males—that they were not systemically racist after all. How about the “end of the NATO crisis,” supposedly brought on by a bullying U.S.? Now the vast majority of NATO members have met their pledges to spend two percent of GDP on defense, which will soon increase to five percent. Iconic neutrals like Sweden and Finland have become frontline NATO nations, arming to the teeth. The smiling NATO Secretary-General even called Trump the “daddy” of the alliance. What about indomitable, all-powerful, theocratic Iran, the scourge of the Middle East for nearly fifty years? Although it had never won a war in the last half-century, its terrorist surrogates—Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis—were supposedly too dangerous to provoke. Now? Most of their expeditionary terrorists are neutered, and their leaders are in hiding or dead. Iran has no air force, no real navy, no air defenses, and no active nuclear weapons program. Its safety apparently depends only on the mood of the U.S. or Israel on any given day, not to fly into its airspace and take out its missiles, nuclear sites, generals, or theocrats at will. What happened to the supposedly inevitable recession, hyperinflation, stock market collapse, unemployment spikes, and global trade war that last spring economists assured us would hit by summer? Job growth is strong, and April’s inflation rate is the lowest in four years. GDP is still steady. The stock market hit a record high. Trade partners are renegotiating their surpluses with the U.S. {snip} So, what flipped everything? We were living in an “emperor has no clothes” make-believe world for the last few years. The people knew establishment narratives were absurd, and our supposed experts were even more ridiculous. But few—until now—had the guts to scream “the emperor is naked” to dispel the fantasies. When they finally did, reality returned. MORE at the link: https://amgreatness.com/2025/07/17/the-world-woke-up/
  8. I watched, it’s fun. I coached a flag football team back in the 1980s, rules are completely different now.
  9. When they introduced the rookie wage scale the union could've done a better job of negotiating % of guaranteed money by draft position. When the contract runs up the NFLPA if they're worth anything will have these rookie contracts set with no wiggle room by teams.
  10. I agree with this 100%. The thing I think helps is out is Bosa is here on a 1 year deal. This is his "prove it". Really the last chance he has to turn this season into a big contract. And he realizes this. He knows if he wants a big payday next year, he needs to produce this year. That means he has to stay on the field. I think a lot of the injuries that saw him out in the past he will play through. I think he appears on the injury report frequently, but is game day active for a high % of games.
  11. Fitz has seven children with nine different teams.
  12. If we are just going with rooks here my pick would be Walker. If his back is fully healed and he is able to return to his 2023 form, watch out.
  13. His friends call him Turd..
  14. I can’t think of a worse comp for Palmer than Tyler Boyd. Boyd was a slot predominant guy who had 2 1000 yard seasons in his first 4 years. Palmer is a boundary WR with like half the production.
  15. C'mon OB, you know. Like the majority of liberal protests it is just to make them feel good/superior. Results are not their thing. .
  16. A small price to pay for getting a shot that neither prevented you from getting Covid nor spreading it. Something like that.
  17. Did you guys see this catch and throw by Acuna?
  18. I would love to know the point of the performance.
  19. I think the only guys I’d be money on becoming superstars this year are Spencer Brown, James Cook and Dalton Kincaid. As @HappyDays points out above, Spencer Brown is a notch below Lane Johnson & Penei Sewell, with Lane himself talking up Brown as one of the young studs of that position. He was incredibly raw coming out of college and has made a jump every recent year as a pro. If he makes another one, he’s in that caliber of RT that could be considered a weapon. Kincaid has the traits to be a star tight end. 1) He has to stay healthy as injuries torpedoed him last season and rendered him pretty much mediocre with a drop to end the season. 2) He and Allen need to get on the same page. If they do, he was open quite a few times for big plays down the field. Cook, if used more in the passing game and shows some semblance of increased pass blocking ability, becomes Alvin Kamara in his prime. I don’t think that hyperbole. We know he can catch and run routes, we know he’s a top tier runner, but his inability to pass block has hindered his usage in that area. I think we’d all consider Kamara in his prime a superstar, so with Cook it’s up to him with his pass blocking and up to Brady/McDermott on usage. I think McGovern and Torrence are both Top 5-10 at their position potential, but maybe a notch below the top guys, with Dawkins Top 5 but as at his age/development, pretty much at his prime. Quite a few WR2 potential guys in Coleman, Palmer, Shakir and a dark horse in Moore, but not sure I see any WR1 guys yet. On Defense, I think guys like Benford, Rousseau, Bosa, Oliver, Bernard, Milano and Johnson all have high end potential but for various reason, I don’t see superstar ability aside from maybe Rousseau if he still has another jump to make (very possible) and Bosa, if he can stay healthy. That would leave the rookies, and of them, Hairston & Sanders have superstar traits.. but are rookies.
  20. Scientists have discovered that Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine may increase the risk of eye damage, leading to vision loss. The new study specifically examined how the vaccine affected patients' corneas, the clear front part of the eye that allows light to enter. In 64 people, scientists in Turkey measured changes in the cornea's inner layer, called the endothelium, before taking the first Pfizer dose and two months after receiving the second. Results revealed that taking both doses of the vaccine led to thicker corneas, fewer endothelial cells in the eye and more variation in size of these specialized cells that form the endothelium. In the short term, these changes suggest the Pfizer vaccine may temporarily weaken the endothelium, even though patients didn't suffer clear vision problems during the study. For people with healthy eyes, these small changes likely won't affect vision right away. Pfizer Covid Shot Linked To Eye Damage
  21. Weird thing is Watt gets half his sacks being basically unblocked. I can't stand him or the Steelers, but you have to admit he's been an impact player for some time.
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