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Gowron
21decdbc8c0eab836b2723f395f2bbbb974df0435ad1d91fa539cd335015b4d4
Chancellor of the Klingon High Council Official Government Account Definitely NOT a Changeling Leader of the "Dinosaur Mans" Enjoyer of Baywatch Still Seeking Glory

GM Karn -- that's a good Klingon name, BTW πŸ‘€

Replying to Avatar Noshole

GN

Goodnight Nos

Replying to Avatar corndalorian

That's no Moon πŸ‘€

Still "waiting on parts" -- thanks for asking πŸ‘€

Which PokΓ©mon is that? πŸ‘€

"Thank you" πŸ‘€

Replying to Avatar Otlndr

GM

GM πŸ‘€

Should make for a delicious meal, no? πŸ‘€

My Photoshop skills are legendary πŸ‘€

No womb at the Inn? πŸ˜†

Replying to Avatar Contra

This morning, as our nation processes profound loss, both the passing of a very influential man of faith, and another senseless act of violence in our schools, I find myself reflecting on what it means to be human in times like these.

Yesterday’s news cycle revealed something telling: our collective cry that β€œsomething must be done.” Yet beneath this shared anguration lies a deeper truth we must confront. The solutions we seek cannot be outsourced to political figures or institutions that have repeatedly demonstrated their limitations. The change we desperately need begins in the spaces between us. In our capacity to see past ideological barriers and remember our fundamental interconnectedness.

We’ve allowed ourselves to become trapped in performative outrage cycles that drain our energy while solving nothing. Meanwhile, the real work of healing, the patient, unglamorous task of rebuilding trust and dialogue, remains undone.

This isn’t about political compromise; it’s about recognizing that our survival as a cohesive society depends on our ability to hold space for difficult conversations without demonizing those who disagree with us.

The ripple effects of our dysfunction extend far beyond our borders. When the world’s most influential democracy can’t model constructive discourse, it creates instability that touches every corner of the globe. This is our moment to choose: Do we continue feeding the machinery of division, or do we have the courage to step back from the brink?

The path forward isn’t found in saviors or systems, but in the daily choice to extend grace, seek understanding, and remember that the person across from us, regardless of their politics, shares our fundamental humanity.

That’s where real change begins. That’s where hope lives.

Good morning Nostr πŸ«‚

Good Morning. Good message Contra πŸ‘

I have no tobacco πŸ‘€

Labour Day is a Communist Holiday is it not? πŸ‘€

Glory to you and your House πŸ‘€

Replying to Avatar Ch!llN0w1

Now I have Goodbye Horses stuck in my head πŸ‘€