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THE MAGA PARTY!,,, the GOP is dead, republicans are going down with the dems,, get ready for THE MAGA PARTY lefty's
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2021-06-21 at 12:21 AM UTCYOU LEFTYS ALWAYS WANNA ACT LIKE YOU THINK YOU KNOW SHIT,,, WE DON'T BUY IT,, WE KNOW WE HAVE THE POWER TO REMOVE GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS WHEN THEY GO AGAINST THE PEOPLE,, WE DON'T EVEN HAVE TO PROVE FRAUD TO REMOVE THE DEMS FROM THE WHITE HOUSE,, WE JUST HAVE TO FEEL THREATENED THAT OUR GOVERNMENT IS WORKING AGAINST AMERICA FIRST AND FOR GLOBALISM,, OUR FORFATHERS MADE IT CLEAR IN THE CONSTITUTION THAT WE HAVE A DUTY TO REMOVE FRAUDULENT ELECTED OFFICIALS GOING AGAINST THE REPUBLIC
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2021-06-21 at 12:27 AM UTC54 MILLION VIEWS ON MY 10 ELECTION ENTEGRITY FOLKS ON YOUTUBE IN 6 DAYS,, SCARRED SOROS SO BAD HE HAD HIS HIT SQUAD PUT OUT A HIT PEICE ON MY BOYS TALKING ABOUT THE CONSTITUTION AND HOW TO REMOVE POLITITIONS GUILTY OF MALADMINISTRAITION AND TREAASON
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2021-06-21 at 12:56 AM UTC
Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ I mean an accomplishment which benefitted the country. Zilch. Nada. 50 friggin' years.
dont you believe in trickle down economy.
his rich sons hired lots of prostitutes, ie; job creation.
and drugs, which means more money in circulation in the economy.
i can go on but im not stl. -
2021-06-21 at 9:24 AM UTC
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2021-06-21 at 9:27 AM UTCThe gay pride GQ faggot of the month
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2021-06-21 at 10:12 AM UTC
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2021-06-21 at 10:35 AM UTCinternet pussy
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2021-06-21 at 3:36 PM UTCThe Hill
Juan Williams: Trump's GOP descends into farce
Juan Williams, opinion contributor
Here are the early gambling odds for 2024 politics.
Right now, the smart money in Las Vegas says either President Biden or Vice President Harris have a better chance to win the 2024 presidential election than former President Trump.
But oddsmakers give Trump, who will be 78 by the time of the next election, a good shot at becoming the Republican nominee.
Trump's 41 percent favorable rating in the RealClearPolitics (RCP) average of polls - a poor rating for a former president - hides the fact that two-thirds of Republicans recently told Quinnipiac University polling that they want to see Trump run for the nomination in 2024.
Why wouldn't Trump run, with that kind of hold on the party?
The problem for Trump is that while his candidacy is the tallest tree in the GOP jungle, it has shallow roots in the soft, shifting soil of a cult of personality.
At his maximum political power, Trump is a towering idol for a fickle crowd that agrees on only one thing - hating Democrats.
Trump had no strong political agenda to attract support when he ran in 2020.
He still has no agenda.
He makes headlines by demonizing Democrats as "socialists" and shouting his latest grievance with liberal "cancel culture" into microphones. He also attacks Republicans who don't bow to him.
The same lowball strategy is now true for Trump's imitators among Republicans on Capitol Hill.
Last week, Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), the third-ranking Republican in Senate leadership, said his agenda is to make Biden a "one-half-term president."
That myopic political agenda fits with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's (R-Ky.) pledge a month ago that "100 percent of my focus is on stopping" the Biden administration.
The best that can be said of the Barrasso-McConnell strategy is that it is all they have to get out their base for the midterm elections.
The worst to be said about that plan of attack comes from former Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.). Trump's GOP is defined by "the latest grievance" and "resentments instead of by ideals," Ryan said recently.
What happened to legitimate GOP criticism of Biden's policies?
It turns out Biden's $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief plan, approved with only Democratic votes in Congress, remains incredibly popular in polls.
Biden's infrastructure bill is also popular. And Biden's approval rating is 53 percent, according to the RCP average.
Let's continue:
What happened to Republicans joining the debate over ideas for dealing with police abuse?
Oh, right - Republicans in Congress fear upsetting their older, white voting base by holding police responsible for racially disproportionate shootings of Black citizens and using deadly holds of the kind that led to the murder of George Floyd.
In fact, the grievance of the moment among the Trump base is outrage at schools teaching about America's long history of slavery, rigid racial segregation and the civil rights struggle.
What happened to the debate over the stunning number of billionaires and big corporations that pay little to no taxes?
It turns out Republicans are more concerned with how some tax records became public than with rising income inequality and billionaires evading taxes.
What about Republican input on urgently needed immigration reform to deal with the more than 10 million people in the country without proper documents?
Well, Republicans prefer to take selfies at the border than offer any ideas for passing immigration reform to solve a major national problem.
What happened to the longstanding conservative fight for fiscal discipline?
That went away with Trump blowing up the national debt with his tax cuts.
What happened to right-wing passion for the rule of law?
Oh, right - they don't want to talk about Trump using the Justice Department to try to undo a lawful election.
So instead, Republican talking heads and elected officials are focused on how the Hasbro toy company represents the gender of a plastic toy, Mr. Potato Head.
And then there is the right-wing talk shows' fevered fascination with whether transgender children are allowed to compete on girls' school teams.
Before the fury over Mr. Potato Head, the right-wing echo chamber was in a rage over the decision by Dr. Seuss' estate to stop selling books that featured racial caricatures of Asians and other minorities.
A cynic could ask if this is a joke and laugh it off as culture wars folly.
But Trump and his loyalists, in politics and the media, continue to raise money and attract a crowd with this approach. For example, recent attacks on Anthony Fauci, the nation's top virus doctor, are baseless - but they get attention in the right's echo chamber for undercutting a man vilified by Trump.
There is no ignoring the market for populist grievance among people who feel dizzy at the rapid changes in the nation - from the shift away from blue-collar jobs to rising racial diversity and acceptance of a range of sexual identities.
It was 29 years ago that right-wing firebrand Pat Buchanan gave his famous "culture war" speech at the Republican convention. He lashed out against "the raw sewage of pornography that so terribly pollutes our popular culture."
Sad to say, but Buchanan now looks like an intellectual giant among Republicans compared to the current toxic silliness about Mr. Potato Head that consumes the Trump Party in 2021 - and potentially 2024. -
2021-06-21 at 3:36 PM UTC
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2021-06-22 at 4:08 AM UTCTick... tock...
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2021-06-22 at 5:12 AM UTCHickory, dickory, dock.
Trump's time ran out on the clock. -
2021-06-22 at 5:58 AM UTC
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2021-06-22 at 4:03 PM UTCThe Hill
Press: Supreme Court unmasks brain-dead party
Bill Press, opinion contributor
In a stunning decision last week, the Supreme Court ripped the mask off the Republican Party. According to the nation's highest court, the party no longer has anything to offer the American people.
Of course, the Supreme Court didn't say that directly, but that's the indisputable meaning of their ruling to uphold the Affordable Care Act. Seven justices - including two appointed by Donald Trump - rejected, for the third time, a Republican Party attempt to overturn the public health plan passed by Congress in October 2009.
Read between the lines of their decision. In effect, the Supreme Court told Republicans: Look, get serious. ObamaCare's been around for almost 12 years now. You promised to "repeal and replace" it with something better, yet never came up with a plan of your own. You voted to repeal it 54 times in the House, but never got enough votes in the Senate. This is the third time you begged the Supreme Court to kill it for you, but couldn't even convince your fellow conservatives to do so. In the meantime, the Affordable Care Act's more popular than ever - and 31 million Americans have now signed up for health care coverage. You lost this battle. It's time to move on.
The problem is, Republicans have nothing to move on to. They're against everything, but for nothing. What was once correctly known as "the party of ideas" has completely run out of ideas. Even when they were in control of the House and Senate, Republicans did not come up with one single plan to deal with any of the major challenges facing this country: not on health care, climate change, economic injustice, cybersecurity or anything else.
So what's left? Playing the race card! What used to be the Republican Party - now the "Trump Party" - has morphed from enlightening Americans with big ideas to scaring them with two big lies, both of them inherently racist: that the 2020 election was stolen from Donald Trump and that acknowledging America's history of racism is fundamentally anti-American.
Embracing Donald Trump's big lie that he, not Joe Biden, won the election, Republican governors and state legislators have embarked on the worst voter suppression spree since the Jim Crow era. According to the Brennan Center for Justice, over 350 bills have been introduced in 48 states to make it harder for people to vote - by limiting early voting, closing many polling places, and banning or restricting vote-by-mail: measures aimed especially at people of color, who are likely Democratic votes.
At the same time, fanning white Americans' fears of losing their hold on power, Republican legislators have introduced bills in 22 states banning the teaching of so-called critical race theory, or CRT, in public schools. While nobody, it seems, can define CRT, it generally means teachers can never discuss the history of racism in this country. Which means never telling children the truth: about slavery, segregation, Jim Crow, lynches, Frederick Douglass, Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr., Juneteenth or John Lewis. And certainly not about George Floyd.
How pathetic, and how perverse. Teaching children about America's history of racism doesn't show how bad we are, it shows how much better we are, how much progress we've made - and how far we still have to go.
Denying the truth about the 2020 election and denying the reality of racism in America. If that's the best the Republican Party has to offer today, it might as well turn out the lights, lock the door and close up shop. -
2021-06-22 at 4:12 PM UTCIt's not the Big Lie, it's the Big Steal, and the world will soon see that for themselves.
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2021-06-22 at 4:17 PM UTCSEPTEMBER, MOTHERFUCKER!
Them, you can tell me how Rump is coming back in October. -
2021-06-22 at 4:36 PM UTC
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2021-06-22 at 4:42 PM UTC
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2021-06-22 at 4:42 PM UTC
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2021-06-22 at 4:44 PM UTC
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2021-06-22 at 5:15 PM UTC