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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

MAGA Boat Parade Participant Goes Off on CNN Reporter Attempting to Downplay Inflation
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www.westernjournal.com

MAGA Boat Parade Participant Goes Off on CNN Reporter Attempting to Downplay Inflation

If you happen to support former President Donald Trump, and if reporters from the establishment media ever happen to approach you, remember that they have one agenda: to make you look as foolish as possible. Rest easy, though, for a subtly hostile establishment media reporter stands no chance against a...
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Watch: Trump Completes 'Historic' Bitcoin Transaction to Buy Burgers for Packed Bar
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www.westernjournal.com

Watch: Trump Completes 'Historic' Bitcoin Transaction to Buy Burgers for Packed Bar

Former President Donald Trump is making cryptocurrency great again. On Wednesday, the GOP presidential nominee stopped at Manhattan's PubKey bar and used Bitcoin to buy beers and burgers for patrons. The New York Post reported that this marked the first time in history an American president used cryptocurrency to make...
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Conservative Satire
Conservative Satire
1 y

September 20, 2024
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twincitiesbusinessradio.com

September 20, 2024

September 20, 2024
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Good News in History September 20
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www.goodnewsnetwork.org

Good News in History September 20

Happy 36th Birthday to the pious, dedicated family man Khabib Nurmagomedov, who also happens to be a UFC Hall of Famer, and is considered one of the finest mixed martial artists ever to compete. The only UFC champion ever to retire with the belt and with an undefeated record (29-0), Nurmagomedov’s 13 UFC bouts saw […] The post Good News in History September 20 appeared first on Good News Network.
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
1 y

10 Sequels That Simply Repeat the First Film
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listverse.com

10 Sequels That Simply Repeat the First Film

Sequels already have a reputation for creative bankruptcy. They continue the stories purely for profit, often leading to uninspired plotting and character assassination. That’s what happens when you create something out of obligation instead of passion. However, some examples reach new heights of laziness. Certain sequels are shameless retreads of their predecessors. Sure, they might […] The post 10 Sequels That Simply Repeat the First Film appeared first on Listverse.
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
1 y

10 Head-Scratching Food Fads That Have (Mostly) Come and Gone
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listverse.com

10 Head-Scratching Food Fads That Have (Mostly) Come and Gone

There’s no question that food fads are fun to track. We’ve all seen it happen in real time. A certain food gets trendy, and BAM! It’s everywhere. Or perhaps a new style of food prep in restaurant kitchens takes hold. All of a sudden, a certain type of food or presentation is on every menu […] The post 10 Head-Scratching Food Fads That Have (Mostly) Come and Gone appeared first on Listverse.
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
1 y

Russian and Chinese Military Activity Near Alaska Is ‘Becoming More Frequent,’ Gov. Mike Dunleavy Warns
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www.dailysignal.com

Russian and Chinese Military Activity Near Alaska Is ‘Becoming More Frequent,’ Gov. Mike Dunleavy Warns

ANCHORAGE, Alaska—The U.S. military is responding after Russia and China increased their military activity near Alaska.  The U.S. military deployed 130 Army airborne soldiers with mobile rocket launchers earlier this month to the Aleutian Islands of western Alaska. The action comes after Russia and China conducted joint military exercises close to Alaska. “There’s been naval exercises, there has been joint flyovers … not necessarily our airspace, but identification airspace, which is between the Russian airspace and our airspace,” Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy said, adding that the military activity near Alaska is “becoming more frequent.”   Earlier this month, Russia and China carried out a week of joint naval exercises in the Sea of Japan. On Monday, the U.S. Naval Institute reported that the U.S. “detected Russian aircraft operating in the Alaska air-defense identification zone.” “I think these are, you know, chess [moves] and probes,” Dunleavy said of Russia and China’s actions. “But because of the instability in the world, and to some degree, I think some of these countries are questioning America’s resolve, [so] you may be seeing more of these activities in the future.” Mainland Russia is only 55 miles from Alaska, making America’s northernmost state key to national security, especially as Russia is actively building its Arctic military capabilities. The Daily Signal had the opportunity to visit Dunleavy at his Anchorage office and discuss the national security threat Russia and China pose to the U.S., and why Russia has its eye on the Arctic.  Listen to the podcast below: The post Russian and Chinese Military Activity Near Alaska Is ‘Becoming More Frequent,’ Gov. Mike Dunleavy Warns appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

How Lord of the Rings Prequel Rings of Power Borrows from Ancient History
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www.historyhit.com

How Lord of the Rings Prequel Rings of Power Borrows from Ancient History

The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings are seminal works of fantasy fiction whose rich mythology draws deeply from the real history, legend and sacred narratives that fascinated its author J.R.R. Tolkien. Rings of Power, the Amazon Prime original series based on The Lord of the Rings, continues the tradition, elaborating its fantasy world by appearing to borrow from ancient history to feed its ancient history of Middle Earth. In an episode of Gone Medieval, Matt Lewis is joined by Tolkien expert Dr. Chris Snyder who explains that Tolkien would have had a lot of material to be inspired by as he explored the story of Númenor, central to Rings of Power, which is an advanced civilization that can be washed away by the sea like mythical Atlantis. Snyder is a medieval historian and author of The Making of Middle-earth: The Worlds of Tolkien and The Lord of the Rings. “I think the Númenóreans are key because they’re the civilization that brings civilization to other parts of Middle Earth,” says Snyder. “They’re expert ship-builders and farmers and things. I’ve made an argument that there’s a lot of ancient [history], up to the early middle ages […] on top of the Second Age of Middle Earth, especially as we see it in The Silmarillion.” “If you look at Gondor as the great Númenórean civilization, the great empire, it has around it these other civilizations of men like the Rohirrim who are noble but not as technologically advanced. They live in timber halls as opposed to stone palaces, and I think Tolkien is throwing us a clue there about looking at the Roman world in comparison to the world of the barbarians, i.e., much of western Europe and northern Europe at the time.” “The Germanic and Celtic worlds,” explains Snyder, “who had a nobility, who had a great mythology, who were great warriors, but do not come from that Mediterranean civilization like the Gondorians did originally as an island empire itself.” Diver with a statue of the Greek god Dionysus, in the underwater Roman ruins of Baiae, Italy.Image Credit: anbusiello TW / Alamy Stock Photo Númenor, an island west of Middle Earth, ultimately suffers destruction from the waves in events preceding The Lord of the Rings. “The Atlantis myth appears first in Plato and that’s a powerful myth about a great civilization but one that is now lost under the sea,” says Snyder. “There’s a version in Celtic mythology of a world that is underneath the sea as well, either off the coast of Cornwall or off the coast of Brittany.” Tolkien was clearly drawn to the notion of a wave engulfing the world – it appears as a nightmare in The Lord of the Rings. Scholars have also interpreted civilizational collapse in Tolkien’s works as being informed by the fall of man in Biblical storytelling and the fatalism of Norse mythology, which envisions the world ending in violent cataclysm. In other ways, Rings of Power alludes to Middle Earth’s past as an age of prosperity to be recovered, in a way familiar to a medieval historian like Dr. Chris Snyder. “I thought that Rings of Power season one was really interesting because the series is about the Second Age, of the story of Númenor primarily, but it begins in the First Age with this flashback of Galadriel in a golden age,” says Synder, referring to the Elf character played by Morfydd Clark in Rings of Power and Cate Blanchett in Peter Jackson’s trilogy. “[This is] an age before there was even a sun and a moon, all the light in the world of Eä was being cast by these two trees. And so you get this glimpse of Galadriel’s past, that she’s that old that she goes back thousands and thousands of years to this age in which the elves are living in proximity to these angelic figures, the Valar.” “The elves are living with them and then they have this rebellion. They don’t do what the Valar tell them to do and Galadriel is one of those who leaves this great world behind to go to Middle Earth. So even there you have this devolution.” Can we also overlay the geopolitics of the early 20th century onto Tolkien’s Middle Earth? On this note Snyder is more circumspect. “He very much didn’t want us to make political allegories out of his writings,” he says, and refers to his resistance to readers’ allusions in the 1950s linking the ring and nuclear weapons. He suggests that Tolkein’s love of German literature discounts links between Mordor and Germany, and is wary of linking the Middle East with the eastern portion of Middle Earth. Snyder does concede, however, that the Shire is basically an amalgamation of Oxfordshire and the Midlands. Sign up to History Hit for advert-free listening to this episode, with early access and bonus episodes for subscribers. Sign up to listen advert free
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
1 y

When It Comes to Tech Policy, Biden and Harris Put America Last
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hotair.com

When It Comes to Tech Policy, Biden and Harris Put America Last

When It Comes to Tech Policy, Biden and Harris Put America Last
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
1 y

Up close with Sony’s PS5 Pro — and the 30th Anniversary model
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www.theverge.com

Up close with Sony’s PS5 Pro — and the 30th Anniversary model

The Sony PS5 Pro. We took some photos to give you a better look. Continue reading…
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