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Speaks for itself
A good day to piddle around - was thinking about political satire
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Born From Rebellion: The Tennis Court Oath and West Virginia Statehood: June 20
On June 20, 1789, France’s Third Estate found their meeting hall locked and marched to a nearby tennis court, swearing not to disband until the nation had a written constitution. The Tennis Court Oath became the spark of the French Revolution. On the exact same date 74 years later, the people of we
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Woodrow Wilson: Visionary and Contradiction | Vibes vs. Verifiable Facts Ep. 26
He was the scholar president who reshaped the economy, championed the League of Nations, and led America through WWI. He also resegregated the federal government and resisted suffrage for years. A hidden stroke. A wife running the presidency in secret. The legacy is as complicated as it gets. Sourc
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She Led 10,000 People to Fight for the Vote at 16 — Then the Law Said It Didn’t
At sixteen years old, she rode a white horse at the head of a New York City suffrage parade, leading ten thousand people in the fight for women’s right to vote. She went on to earn a PhD from Columbia University — the first Chinese woman in America to do it. Then the 19th Amendment passed in 1920,
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Born From Rebellion: The Tennis Court Oath and West Virginia Statehood: June 20
DESCRIPTION: On June 20, 1789, members of France’s National Assembly locked out of their meeting hall gathered on a nearby tennis court and swore not to disband until the nation had a new constitution. The Tennis Court Oath became the spark that ignited the French Revolution. On the exact same dat
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Freedom’s Long Road: Juneteenth and South Africa’s Natives Land Act: June 19
On June 19, 1865, Union General Gordon Granger rode into Galveston, Texas and announced that the last enslaved people in America were free, two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation had already made it law. That day became Juneteenth, celebrated informally in Black communities for ov
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William Howard Taft: More Than the Bathtub Guy | Vibes vs. Verifiable Facts Ep.
He was TR's chosen successor, filed more antitrust suits than Roosevelt, and sent gunboats to protect American banks. But Taft's real legacy? He never wanted the presidency in the first place. The Court was always the dream. Sources in comments. #WilliamHowardTaft #TaftPresidency #Do
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She Rode a White Horse to Lead the Suffrage Parade at 16 — Then They Told Her Sh
She led 10,000 people in the fight for women’s right to vote — on horseback, at sixteen years old. She earned a PhD from Columbia. She organized her community for forty years. And when the 19th Amendment finally passed, they told her it didn’t apply to her. Because she was Chinese. Her name was Mab
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Freedom’s Long Road: Juneteenth and South Africa’s Natives Land Act: June 19
On June 19, 1865, Union soldiers arrived in Galveston, Texas and announced that the last enslaved people in America were free — two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation had already made it law. That day became Juneteenth, the oldest celebration of Black freedom in the United States
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Their Finest Hour | Churchill’s Speech & Sally Ride | June 18
On June 18, 1940, Winston Churchill broadcast one of the most consequential speeches in history as France fell to Nazi Germany and Britain stood virtually alone. He told his nation — and the world — that whatever came next, this would be their finest hour. On the exact same date 43 years later, Sal
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Theodore Roosevelt: The Legend vs. The Record | Vibes vs. Verifiable Facts Ep. 2
He charged up San Juan Hill, busted the trusts, and protected 230 million acres of American land. But the full TR record includes selective trust-busting, a controversial Panama power grab, and a Great White Fleet flexing U.S. muscle across the globe. The legend is real — and so are the contradicti
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A Grave Error in Judgment
Bill Gates appeared in the Epstein files more than 3,000 times. On June 10, 2026, he sat before the House Oversight Committee for nearly six hours. He said he never witnessed criminal conduct. He never went to the island, the ranch, or the Florida home. He said meeting Epstein was a grave error in
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Their Finest Hour | Churchill’s Speech & Sally Ride | June 18
On June 18, 1940, Winston Churchill stood before a nation on the brink of collapse and broadcast his “Finest Hour” speech — rallying Britain to resist Nazi occupation as France fell around them. On the exact same date 43 years later, Sally Ride strapped into the Space Shuttle Challenger and became
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She Ran the Department. She Didn’t Know.
Pam Bondi was Attorney General when the Epstein files were mishandled. Congress subpoenaed her by a bipartisan vote. Trump fired her. She showed up anyway — not under oath, no video recording, no apology to the survivors sitting directly behind her. She said she was proud of the DOJ's transpare
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The President Who Built an Empire | Vibes vs. Verifiable Facts Ep. 23
He presided over a booming economy, won a war in months, and launched America onto the world stage. But the full McKinley record includes the highest tariff in history, a brutal occupation of the Philippines, and an assassination that ended the Gilded Age. The American Century came at a cost. 🧵 Sou
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She Composed Music Still Performed Today, Wrote Science Textbooks, and Told Pope
She began experiencing visions at the age of three and spent decades deciding what they were for. When she understood, she wrote them down — then wrote everything else. She composed over seventy pieces of music still performed and recorded today — more surviving compositions than any other medieval
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The Break-In That Broke a Presidency | Watergate & End of Apartheid | June 17
On June 17, 1972, five men were arrested breaking into the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C. It seemed like a minor burglary. It ended a presidency. On the exact same date nineteen years later, South Africa’s parliament voted to repeal the apart
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Benjamin Harrison: The Forgotten President Who Reshaped America | Vibes vs. Veri
Sandwiched between Grover Cleveland’s two terms and largely forgotten — but Benjamin Harrison’s four years left a permanent mark. Antitrust law, six new states, naval power, and Native land loss on a massive scale. The full record is more complicated than the history books let on. 🧵 Sources in comm
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Who am I?
She was a 12th century abbess who composed over seventy pieces of music still performed today. Wrote major works on theology, medicine, and natural science. Corresponded with popes and emperors as an equal and told them when they were wrong. Invented her own language. A one-woman Renaissance three
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She Refused to Surrender Her Kingdom — Then Led Her Own Army Into Battle With a
The British East India Company told her Jhansi was no longer hers. She raised her own army and led it herself. They besieged her fort — she held the walls for two weeks. When they broke through she rode out in the dark with her son on her back and two swords drawn. She kept fighting. She was killed
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