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Jimmy Carter

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Halldan1

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All day social media has been posting that Jimmy Carter has passed.

Typical garbage on Twitter. Carter is alive and kicking and about 2 months from 100.

 
he owns this proverbial public square but he doesn’t tell people what to say. People can’t control their worst impulses. You can even see it here.
What Dorsey created was much worse. A bias cesspool that suppressed views that didn’t suit their narrative.

Amazing how the discourse has changed since the Carter/Ford days.
 
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There was an RU poster I got to know, RC78College I think was his tag. He died way too soon about 10-15 years ago. Thru our posts on the RU OT board we got to know each other. We disagreed about everything but we somehow liked each other anyway. Aint that America?
 
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The emotional moment Coco Gauff found out she’d be US Olympic flag bearer​

By Post Wire Report

Coco Gauff was stunned.

She held her hand over her mouth in disbelief when he was informed by fellow tennis Olympian and longtime friend Chris Eubanks that she would be one of the U.S. flag bearers for the opening ceremony of the 2024 Olympics alongside LeBron James on Friday.

“I was not expecting that,” an emotional Gauff said in a video posted by Team USA on X on Wednesday morning.

Gauff, the reigning U.S. Open champion, is set to make her Olympic debut at the Paris Games and will be the first tennis athlete to carry the U.S. flag. She and James were chosen by Team USA athletes.

“I mean, for me, the Olympics is a top priority. I would say equal to the Grand Slams. I wouldn’t put it above or below, just because I’ve never played before. This is my first time,” Gauff said earlier this year. “Obviously, I always want to do well, try to get a medal.”


Gauff and James, the 39-year-old leading scorer in NBA history, both compete in sports that are outside the traditional Olympic world and get attention year-round, not just every four years.

The 20-year-old Gauff made the American team for the Tokyo Games three years ago as a teenager but had to sit out those Olympics because she tested positive for COVID-19 right before she was supposed to fly to Japan.

Now Gauff, who is based in Florida, is a Grand Slam title winner in singles and doubles. She won her first major championship in New York in September, defeating Aryna Sabalenka in the singles final of the U.S. Open, then added her first Grand Slam doubles trophy at the French Open this June alongside Katerina Siniakova of the Czech Republic.

The same clay courts at Roland Garros used for the French Open will be where matches are going to be held for the Paris Olympics. The draw to set the brackets is Thursday, and play begins Saturday.

Gauff is seeded No. 2 in singles, matching her current WTA ranking behind No. 1 Iga Swiatek of Poland, and will be among the medal favorites.

She and her usual doubles partner, Jessica Pegula, are seeded No. 1 in women’s doubles. It’s possible Gauff could also be entered in mixed doubles, but those pairings have not been announced yet.

“I’m not putting too much pressure on it, because I really want to fully indulge in the experience,” Gauff said about her Olympics debut. “Hopefully I can have the experience multiple times in my lifetime, (but) I’ll treat it as a once-in-a-lifetime experience.”
 
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