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Jul 30, 2023 13:59:38   #
mikee wrote:
Who can list all the legal problems pilling up against former president Trump, or his businesses. Please compare with any legal issues pending against any other person running for any office. It's OK to research it. The limit is, however, it needs to be an actual legal cases presented to a grand jury or a court, not counting conspiracy theorists who have no proof and try their cases in the uneducated court of opinion. It's not that easy to remember them all is it? I mean, I don't know how some courts find the time to deal with anything else on the docket.
Who can list all the legal problems pilling up aga... (show quote)


Comparing Trump’s situation with anyone else, in either party, is like comparing air conditioning costs in South Texas to Antarctica. With the exception of the hard copy files found at Mara Lago, every case involving Trump has begun with political activism, inasmuch as prosecutors began with no evidence, proceeding then with the fishing expedition looking to find enough to bring charges. And since I mentioned documents, note that neither Biden nor Hilary Clinton, both of whom committed the same offense, one of whom also destroyed evidence and very well may have allowed the said info to be hacked by foreign nations, have faced charges. Only double standards and selective enforcement explains that fact. Democrats and GOP also-fans don’t need to worry about media or charges, regardless of their behavior in the same was Antarctica really need not worry about A/C.

Remember, please, Donald Trump, for the 40 years preceding 2015 was a DARLING to the left, only becoming Satan when he voiced political and social policy opposing the most radical leftists. It’s happening right now to RFK Jr, who, for 90% of his life, was paraded about in media as a valued Democrat asset. Now, he is being barred from social media, debate fora, print media, and news media. Why? Because he refuses to chirp vaccine mandate, transgender, and Ukraine mantras. His dissent might make some number of Democrat minions actually think about issues, and by so doing, not vote blue.

Face it. Only voices that might, eventually, elect a GOP President get targeted. If DeSantis or anyone else were earn the nomination, it is 100% predictable that he/she will be ‘fact checked’ at every word, ‘dislaimer-Ed” in every article, and if there is even an unpaid parking ticket somewhere, be painted as criminal. It started before DeSantis even declared with the “don’t say gay” lie and just last week, one sentence from a curriculum of over 100 pages, finalized by black scholars, not overseen at all by DeSantis, was a national news story for days and days, looking to smear the governor.
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Jul 24, 2023 14:59:41   #
Sitting at the movies, my wife and I compiled, favorites, not necessarily greats.

The Sting
Double Indemnity
Witness For the Prosecution
Casablanca
Lord of the Rings Trilogy
Field of Dreams (first date)
The Thin Man franchise
It’s a Wonderful Life
Logan
Memento
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Jul 23, 2023 09:14:24   #
Shutterbug1697 wrote:
Youtube?

You can't be serious.

Follow the facts, not trump's propaganda and Giuliani's alternate reality.


The only thing questionable about my link is why YouTube has not deleted it. It shows Joe Biden speaking / bragging of his interference.
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Jul 22, 2023 20:22:41   #
Shutterbug1697 wrote:
The European Union and the IMF wanted Shokin out.

Read the articles I've linked in previous posts.

You really need to educate yourself, instead of listening to all of the trump and Giuliani LIES and propaganda!


As I said, the ‘official release’ story of why Shokin was removed is at most peripheral to the story of Joe Biden being a) illegally attempting to leverage the situation with monetary threats and b) bragging about doing so.

https://youtu.be/UXA--dj2-CY
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Jul 22, 2023 17:02:30   #
Shutterbug1697 wrote:
Try reading the facts about why Viktor Shokin was actually fired!

https://www.rferl.org/a/why-was-ukraine-top-prosecutor-fired-viktor-shokin/30181445.html


It actually does not matter what the facts are in this case. Joe Biden bragged of influencing the decision, thereby admitting he was involved in foreign affairs, also admitting a threat of withholding funds over said affair. Criminal behavior with a stupid-as-hell chaser.
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Jul 21, 2023 18:36:22   #
mwalsh wrote:
People have the right to assemble and peacefully protest. But I agree, blocking traffic on public roadways is well beyond that. They should be arrested. I would think most local laws should provide for that as well.


Deleted
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Jul 20, 2023 12:19:27   #
Blurryeyed wrote:
Yes, Facebook, Twitter, Threads... They can all censor as you are correct they are privately held companies but to do so at the governments urging or request is arguably a 1st Amendment violation.


Not arguably, surely. It is illegal censorship by proxy. The Hunter laptop story alone, by its suppression, and by exit polling data, seems to have ‘blinded’ a large enough bloc to have swung several swing states. I will have to hunt for the published polling data on my laptop, but from memory, some 2/3 of those in exit polls who said they voted Biden were unaware of at least one of the following:

Hunter Laptop

Hunter’s employ in Ukraine oil and Joe’s PUBLIC boasting of getting a Ukrainian investigator fired

Kamala Harris’ extremely radical voting record (rated the most leftist in the Congress).

Of those unawares, about 1/3, or roughly 16 percent of the Democrat vote, and 8 percent of the nation said, in those exit polls, that these unknown stories would have changed their vote. With the vote in the swing states not reaching 3% in most cases, 8 percent switching sides is a 16 percent shift.

There is no doubt that social media censorship rigged the outcome in 2020, and did so by quashing particular information, illegally, at the behest of governmental people / forces / threats.
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Jul 20, 2023 12:02:37   #
Truth Seeker wrote:
https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2023/07/empty_suit_empty_suites_joe_bidens_government_of_empty_buildings.html



Empty suit, empty suites: Joe Biden's government of empty buildings
By Monica Showalter
We often ask who's running the government with a White House led by doddering Joe Biden.

But with a new audit out, maybe the real question is what is the government.

According to the Washington Examiner:

The evacuation of federal headquarters during the COVID-19 crisis appears to have become permanent and costly with up to 90% of several agency headquarters empty, according to a federal audit.

At least 6 of 24 Washington area headquarters are 90% empty, including several that manage federal office space and employees such as the General Services Administration and the Office of Personnel Management.


The audit from the Government Accountability Office found that just six agencies were operating with half of their staff in the office during the first three months of 2023, the latest sign that efforts to get federal employees back into the office after the coronavirus crisis and after years of encouraging telework have failed.

The findings echo private sector reports. In Washington, private offices are less than 40% full.


Turns out the government buildings Joe Biden presides over in his expensive, bloated government are about as empty as the old dotard's head.

It's like we have a pretend president, presiding over a pretend government.

Practically every agency headquarters is something like 80% empty.


But the empty buildings still stand, as if to suggest that something had been there. Mainly, it's the illusion of power and importance.

Overall, Uncle Sam owns or leases 511 million square feet. That includes some 1,500 buildings and 7,685 leases. It costs $7 billion a year to maintain buildings and lease others, said GAO.


The auditing agency urged headquarters to consider consolidating or dumping space and to even consider joining with other agencies to share space.

But many rejected that advice. "One official said their leadership is reluctant to share headquarters space with other agencies because it could lower their perceived standing as a cabinet-level agency," said the audit report.

One thing the audit also notes is that these empty buildings waste a lot of electricity even with no one in them. So as Joe Biden tries to shove us into green vehicles and pay more at the pump to bankroll his energy transition, he's busy burning electricity...on nothing.

The Wall Street Journal, in an editorial on the matter, has noted that even the worst empty building problems in the private sector, such as vacant office towers in big blue-run cities, are dwarfed by the emptiness of the federal government buildings.

The near-uniform emptiness across different agencies is another way the government stands out. Weekly attendance in the bottom quarter of surveyed offices is a measly 9%, and not one reported attendance above 50%. Compare that with corporate offices in New York, where average in-office attendance surpassed 50% last month, according to turnstile operator Kastle Systems.

The question is, why are we paying for this? If the federal government can't get its post-COVID pandemic-era employees to come back to the office, then it's time for layoffs. If the government can function as it does on 20% of its people, then maybe it's time to lay the other 80% off.

The Journal notes that Congress does have a law for getting rid of empty government office space and recovering the expense for taxpayers:

The Federal Property Management Reform Act of 2016 mandates that the executive branch create and carry out annual plans to reduce its unused space. The law was passed by a GOP Congress and signed by President Obama, but it has spurred little action. The GAO report says the law has "improved the focus on real property management," yet concedes that "federal agencies continue to have unneeded space."

House Republicans seeking a small victory could demand that the Office of Management and Budget enforce the law and help federal agencies shed some of their extra space. The merits of working from home may be up for debate, but there's no need to fund empty offices from the public purse.

That should be a good project for the House and Senate.

Already, we know that at least some of them are trying to get something done.

Recall, for instance, that back in March, Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana grilled Health and Human Services secretary Xavier Becerra on why the parking lots were so empty at 10:30 A.M. on a weekday at many of his agency's offices, which I wrote about here:

"How many are at their desk as opposed to being at home, or someplace else, the coffee shop or whatever?" Cassidy asked Becerra, after the cabinet secretary said that the department's employees were working full time.

"What we make sure we care about is that they're performing and they're delivering," Becerra said.

There was a whiff of what the problem here was in that answer, as Becerra kept gaslighting Cassidy about all his employees performing their jobs well.

Obviously, these characters view the big buildings with their agencies' names on them as proxies for their own power and importance. That will make getting rid of these costly hulks and husks all the harder.

But they do need to get rid of them, if for nothing else, then to save the taxpayers' money. The federal government is already overspending us into inflation, and that activity has consequences. Cutting the fat in government, and shedding the excess buildings, is probably the only way to restore our economy to health. This situation is not a sign of national vigor, or growth, or anything positive — and you can bet that nations such as China and Russia are taking note.

Congress should tell these agencies they can finance themselves through selling their excess buildings that their employees won't work in and getting rid of those who aren't showing up to work, because they aren't going to hand them another dime until they do.

Image: Pixabay, Pixabay License.
https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2023/07/empty... (show quote)


Proof positive that an emaciated pile of corruption is equally as effective as a bloated pile of corruption, if not more so. Maybe bloat adds an unintended brake to the progress of attaining corrupted goals?
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Jul 20, 2023 11:50:27   #
Triple G wrote:
There are a few others who need to be censored in the House like MTG yesterday. Why have censoring rules if they are not to be used? Do you think all speech should be aired even if it is inflammatory, inaccurate, antisemitic?


I disagree. Unless people are openly advocating for violence, let the morons have the mic. Record the stupid and, with evidence, refute it. If Kennedy is way wrong, or if MTG said something ‘inflamatory’, call it out. Silencing anyone only makes them a martyr and you a tyrant, and both of these effects move public opinion towards supporting the one silenced. This is true no matter if it’s RFK Jr gaining support within the DEM party or if it was the rousing swell of opposition that was seen after Maxine Waters actually DID promote physical confrontation, stupidly, on camera.

https://youtu.be/tJCDe7vdFfw
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Jul 19, 2023 22:24:15   #
Architect1776 wrote:
Went to this yesterday and was an excellent docudrama.
Exposing children sex trafficking and slavery.
More slavery now in USA than in the antebellum era.
Not sure why there is so much leftist hatred for this movie, it has no politics at all, but a story of an agent who quits his job to save a young girl from being a sex slave in Colombia in an area where I was decades ago taking action against the same anti government evil forces.
Looks far worse now though.

https://rumble.com/v30m2cy-even-the-media-cant-silence-the-sound-of-freedom.html
Went to this yesterday and was an excellent docudr... (show quote)


The left HAVE to decry any outlet that would trend public sentiment towards regulating the border, admitting pedophilia is immoral, or that sexualizing children is awful. To allow those thoughts to creep into the social conscious would stymie the drag agenda, the trans agenda, the overt attempt to import a voting bloc, and God forbid, might usher in a new age of morality, replete with marriage, monogamy, and religious homes.
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Jul 18, 2023 11:53:45   #
Blurryeyed wrote:
They are bringing them in with the app, there has been no significant decrease, they are still coming but the Biden Administration has just found a way to make it look better than it is.


We have a family from the Phillipenes in the school where I teach. They first came in to the US with a 7 year old and a 5 year old, and came legally through some program or other looking to import workers of dad’s education and skills. Just this past year, now with boys of 19 and 17, and after legal / travel expenses exceeding 30 000, they are legal citizens.

I say that to make a few points. 1) These productive, educated, INVITED, immigrants had to battle for over a decade to achieve their goals of citizenship. 2) They also had substantial background checking and 3) were mandated a vaccination regimen before even reaching US shores. Compare that story to the modern illegal. These people have no background check, no verifiable medical check, are highly unlikely to be highly educated, are generally crossing in violation of the laws of the land, yet they are housed and fed at tax payer expense, and freqently fast tracked to legal status.

BOTH of these stories are dead ‘wrong’. Leagal immigration should be highly scrutinized, but fast and cheap. Illegal immigration should bear NO benefit to the immigrant and NO cost to the tax payer beyond the legal and law enforcement cost of tracking and trying them. Legal and illegal immigrants should face exactly the same background and medical checks, and both groups should be subject to expulsion from the US for any violent and/or felonious offenses.
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Jul 18, 2023 11:34:53   #
RixPix wrote:
Inflation has almost always occurred after the United States ends a protracted military operation. The ends of the United States’ involvement in WWII, Vietnam, and now Afghanistan all resulted in several years of inflation. I remember the “Whip Inflation Now” campaign during the Nixon/Ford administration and the Price-Fixing scheme of the 1970s that froze wages and prices.

Now that the inflationary bubble has burst we can all look forward to more tolerable economic conditions.


I hope your optimism is correct. I’m on the other side of your thought. The inflation numbers are one number to watch, but I’m quite sure that the true economy killers lag behind the inflation spike. Inflation is just the flip side of supply and demand. Everyone knows that a ‘hot commodity’ item will begin to sell for very high prices when the demand is high and the supply is low. Economics 101. Generally, systemic inflation occurs when money supplies are increased beyond the increase of goods and services. This causes EVERYTHING to be (relatively) more scarce compared to cash than it once was. Or one can simply say that too much currency causes the currency to lose purchasing power. Also economics 101.

THIS portion of the economic cycle may very well be righting itself; but I fear the biggest ‘hits’ are a few months away. Inflation also drives banks to issue riskier loans, and at lower rates, as profit for banks also requires that they earn more dollars on paper, even if those dollars have less value than a year ago. Ample currency implies easy access to it. However, with the fed raising interest rates, loans are now becoming harder to get. That fact alone risks another ‘housing bubble’ crash, when people try to sell homes that are still paying for. What they bought at low interest must now be sold at higher interest, and might also appraise at a higher value, because of inflation…..

These two facts virtually guarantee that many people won’t by homes or office space, and that many mortgages are going to be in default when the ‘owners’ cannot find buyers, or have to sell at prices that leave them still owing money on their original mortgage notes. Just like 2008, the table is set for a several course meal of bad outcomes. The difference is that this time it was terrible government policy alone that has brought us here. At least in 2008 we could blame individuals trying to profit off bad government policy.
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Jul 13, 2023 12:12:47   #
SteveR wrote:
A homeless man collecting bottles and cans finds a dead woman. In anguish, he says, "c'mon, Dorothy, click your heels and wake up."

Do you have any other favorite lines from tv shows or movies?


I have several favorites, many of which are just because I love particular movies, but there are a select few that just deliver a gut punch or a belly laugh every time. Here are a few from my top tier list.

1) Tombstone : after being criticized for backing Wyatt Earp and being told that people have lots of other friends, Doc Holiday says, in a drone “I don’t.”

2) Forrest Gump : At the childhood home where Jenny suffered her abuse, “Sometimes there just aren’t enough rocks.”

3) The Sting. : “I already know how to drink.”

4) American Werewolf in London: “I’m sorry I called you a meatloaf, Jack.”
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Jul 9, 2023 10:47:17   #
jerryc41 wrote:
In MA, if you drive your car in that state for thirty days, you must register the car there and buy a license plate. A man visited a friend for just over a month, and someone reported him for a parking violation. Now, the MA vehicle people are threatening to revoke his license. He's been fighting this for a couple of years, and they gave him a sixty-day extension.

When they say thirty days, they don't mean one after the other. They mean thirty days within a year. Fortunately, this has a happy ending.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wei62939gkA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8hjBCfOV7Q0
In MA, if you drive your car in that state for thi... (show quote)


I have to imagine that law would be struck down given the right challenge. My nearest national park has some 15 employees that live in Carlsbad NM, but cross to Texas several times weekly to work. It seems there is no way a Texas law could force these people to buy Texas plates, as they are not even paid as Texas employees, but federal. I can imagine, say, a lawn and garden service that crosses state lines 30+ days challenging the MA law as an illegal state-to-state tariff that imposes a barrier to doing business in MA.
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Jul 1, 2023 10:11:53   #
samantha90 wrote:
A friend sent this to me. "Here is the roadrunner, where's the coyote?"


So I just learned something. It turns out you don’t even have to HEAR a song (in this case Roadrunner theme) to end up with the tune stuck in your head…… You’re welcome.
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