We need a general tweet of the day thread
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Us normal folks had this figured. Batshit crazy! BidenBros cheered!
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More of H’s people
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Findthem and deport them all ASAP! BidenBros voted for that shit!
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This pussy has never been held accountable for anything in his life and has never taken a punch. I might give him two finger jabs to assault/batter me, but the third one I’m punching him with a left hook and this midget can pick himself off the ground.
He’s cracking for sure.
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He's going to prison.
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Look at this edgy faggot.
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Brisket and cheap gas - remind me again why the fuck we live in this fucking state?
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Tennessee doesn't even have the geography or natural resources the West coast does.
Self imolation for NOT climate change.
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The gay rights.
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Truth
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$2.69 at Costco last week I think. I am probably going there later. Sometimes Bill goes to Wal-mart where it's $2.73 because Costco is crowded from like 8-7 and there aren't any fucking squeegees. Bill does third person a lot.
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Sounds sort of authoritarian. No probable cause subpoenas issued against republicans. If only Jack Smith and US District Court Judge Boasberg had gone to law school and then passed the bar they might have realized this small failure. Same with the FISA wire taps of the Trump campaign. Verizon sure went to the mat for their customers.
Major phone carriers reveal Jack Smith's subpoenas for Republican senators' records
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/major-phone-carriers-reveal-jack-smiths-subpoenas-republican-senators-recordsVerizon complied with subpoenas while AT&T refused to turn over records for Arctic Frost investigation
Grassley: FBI ‘Arctic Frost’ probe collected GOP lawmaker call logs, 197 subpoenas revealed
Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Ron Johnson, R-Wis., unveil whistleblower records alleging Special Counsel Jack Smith subpoenaed data from Trump allies and GOP groups in Washington on Oct. 29, 2025.
FIRST ON FOX: Two major phone carriers took sharply different paths when former special counsel Jack Smith's team subpoenaed phone records tied to Republican lawmakers in 2023, according to the redacted subpoenas and letters first shared with Fox News Digital.
The documents, provided by the office of Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, reveal Verizon's compliance and AT&T's resistance when faced with Smith's requests, which were part of Arctic Frost, the FBI probe that led to Smith bringing election charges against President Donald Trump.
The 12 phone numbers on the subpoena to Verizon are redacted and replaced by Grassley's office with the names of the lawmakers associated with them. They include one House member and 10 senators, including Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fl., whose name was not previously reported.
AT&T received a similar request, according to a second subpoena. The company told Grassley the subpoenaed phone records were associated with two lawmakers, including Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, according to a source directly familiar with the matter. The source said AT&T declined to disclose the second person.
Jack Smith, then-special counsel, speaks during a news conference in Washington, Aug. 1, 2023. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Accompanying the two subpoenas were gag orders, signed by U.S. District Judge James Boasberg of Washington, D.C., that directed the two phone companies not to disclose the subpoenas to the lawmakers for one year. Prosecutors can seek such gag orders to temporarily keep investigative matters confidential.
The phone companies also wrote letters to Grassley, first shared with Fox News Digital, explaining how they handled the subpoenas they received, revealing two different approaches.
Verizon justified complying with the subpoenas, saying they were "facially valid" and contained only phone numbers, not names. Verizon said that with the "benefit of hindsight" and recent discussions with the Senate Sergeant at Arms, which handles congressional phone services, it has modified its policies so that it puts up more of a challenge to law enforcement requests pertaining to Congress members.
AT&T, meanwhile, did not comply with the subpoenas.
"When AT&T raised questions with Special Counsel Smith’s office concerning the legal basis for seeking records of members of Congress, the Special Counsel did not pursue the subpoena further, and no records were produced," David Chorzempa, general counsel for AT&T, wrote.
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