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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

  1. Originally posted by POLECAT NO NIGGA, IT WAS LIKE 10 VIDEOS.
    I DID'NT CONSIDER IT AN ATTACK MORE LIKE ANOTHER DISTRACTION DIVERTING ATTENTION TO THE ONE WAY GETTING RESULTS IN THIS COUNTRY, i HONESTLY DON'Y GIVE A FUCK ABOUT ANY FUCK THAT DISTRACTS FROM THE MOVEMENT YOU CAN ALL GO FUCK URSELVES, U 2 LALA.
    FUCKIN PEASENTS

    Could it be you are growing too big for your britches.
  2. Donald Trump Black Hole


    What do you think of the gay porn I drew?
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  3. aldra JIDF Controlled Opposition
    doesn't really make sense but looks cool

    gotta give props for drawing two pillows spit roasting a guy
  4. POLECAT POLECAT is a motherfucking ferret [my presentably immunised ammonification]
    Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Could it be you are growing too big for your britches.

    doubtfull, all a nigga has to do is learn your rights and how to use them properly and you can also become as u say to big for our britches .
    it all starts with realizing the pyramid goes like this

    WE THE PEOPLE
    THE STATE CONSTITUTIONS
    THE us CONSTITUTION
    THE FORM OF GOVERNMENT
    THE ELECTED TRUSTEES
    THE COURT OF RECORD
    STATUTES/LAWS FOR ADMINISTRAITIVE COURTS
    THE CORPRATE BUISNESS / ADJENTS OF GOVERNMENT.


    IF YOU LOOK YOU WILL SEE WE MADE THE CONSTITUTIONS TO PROTECT US AND LIMIT THE GOVERNMENT AND GIVE US A WAY TO FIX CORRUPT GOVERNMENT AT WILL IN A SPEEDY WAY.
    NOW THE ONLY REASON ITS EVEN TAKING THIS LONG IS BECAUSE MOST OF YOU PEASANTS WANT TO BE PEASANTS, AND HATE ON PEOPLE THAT KNOW THEY ARE ABOVE PEASANTS.
    ITS OK I UNDERSTAND YOU ARE ALL TO BUSY BICKERING ON HERE TO GIVE A FUCKABOUT REALITY.. IT IS THE PEASANTS WAY, CARRIE ON NIGGERS, i GOT THIS.
  5. Speedy Parker Black Hole [my absentmindedly lachrymatory gazania]
    Originally posted by POLECAT tone? nigger it is time to be bold! any motherfucker not in the movement has no right or reason to judge my tone or actions.
    a week or two ago you asked to get into the telegram groups, I said watch several of the vidoes and then I'll let you in. apparently you think you know what we are doing and by your words you do not believe what we are doing will change anything in this country, BUT if you had watches the several last Vid's I posted you would see other people doing exactly what I have been telling you guys about and they are winning.
    this thread has not morphed at all the title still stands the morons are still here crying about TRUMP and I"M still here posting the history of our nation as it is being made and the corrupt actions of the dem's and leftards trying to overthrow our nation.
    never trumpers ar still posting stupid shit jokers are still posting nonsence, I'm smarter every day and MOre people are joining the movement every day.
    if tone effects feelings against th movement by some well I must inform you FUCK UR FEELINGS go suk a dik if you cant handle facts because they hurt ur feelers.
    now go make ur own god dang thread for stupid shit maybe ule feel better. THIS IS MY THREAD AND MY TONE AND ACTIONS WILL BE WHAT THEY WILL BE MOTHERFUCKER.

    Try paragraphs...
  6. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Money

    And

    Good-assed Republicans

    Awarded




    9 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump outraised GOP challengers in recent filings
    Rachel Looker, USA TODAY


    WASHINGTON – Nine House Republicans who voted to impeach former President Donald Trump outraised their GOP challengers over the summer months, new federal election data shows.

    The incumbents are being targeted by Trump and his allies who want to unseat them for their decision to vote with Democrats to impeach Trump for the "incitement" of the Jan. 6 Capitol riots. Of the 10 House Republicans who backed Trump's impeachment, nine are running for reelection and some are facing candidates endorsed by the ex-president.

    Federal Election Commission totals released earlier this month showed the incumbents raised more money than their Republican challengers in the third quarter, which includes July, August and September.

    Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., leads the group in fundraising, amassing more than $1.7 million in the third quarter. She was by far the top fundraiser among those who voted for impeachment, bringing in more than $1 million more than her nearest counterpart. .

    Harriet Hageman, Cheney's primary opponent endorsed by Trump, raised slightly over $300,000 in fundraising for the quarter. Hageman entered the race in September.

    The other eight Republicans who supported impeachment in some cases raised double or nearly double the amount as their Republican primary challengers.

    One Republican who voted for impeachment, Rep. Anthony Gonzalez, R-Ohio, announced in September that he will not be seeking reelection. He stated one factor for his decision was the “toxic dynamics” of the Republican Party.

    Gonzalez raised $144,133 during the third quarter while the Trump-endorsed candidate who wants to replace him, Max Miller, raised $695,457, which includes a $500,000 loan from the candidate, according to the FEC filing. Miller has brought in $1,646,977 this cycle.

    Nathan Gonzales, editor and publisher of Inside Elections which provides nonpartisan analysis of campaigns, said despite the nine House Republicans outpacing their challengers in fundraising, they face other problems money can't fix.

    He said voting to impeach Trump is unpopular with Republican primary voters who may side with the former president more than their member of Congress.

    “Fundraising is important and it’s a key factor in elections, but raising the most is not the cure for this particular problem,” he said.

    Cheney, for example, has been the most vocal critic of Trump. Gonzales said her challengers may not have to raise as much money to inform voters of her stance against the former president and about her decision to vote for impeachment.

    "That's one of the fundamental challenges for any candidates who want to take on one of the impeachment Republicans, is making sure that primary voters are aware of that vote," he said.

    He added that the impeachment vote is just one factor in the elections, with a few of the nine House Republicans facing the threat of redistricting, including Reps. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., Fred Upton, R-Mich., and Peter Meijer, R-Mich.

    "These impeachment Republicans aren't going to lose because they didn't have enough money,” he said. “If they lose, it will be in large part because they voted to impeach the president.”

    Here's how the other candidates fared during the third quarter:

    Jaime Herrera Beutler
    Herrera Beutler represents the southwest corner of Washington and raised $523,591 in the third quarter for a total of $1,778.877 for the election cycle.

    Opponent Joe Kent, a retired U.S. Special Forces officer, raised $452,132 in the third quarter for a total of $1,087,755 raised this election cycle. Kent received Trump's endorsement on Sept. 1.

    John Katko
    Katko, who represents the Syracuse, N.Y., area, raised $488,743 in the third quarter for a total of $1,421,021 raised this election cycle.

    His Republican primary challenger, John Murtari, raised $2,025 in the third quarter – the only funds he has raised since declaring his candidacy.

    Rep. John Katko, R-N.Y., walks down the steps of the U.S. Capitol on Sept. 23 in Washington, DC.© Anna Moneymaker, Getty Images Rep. John Katko, R-N.Y., walks down the steps of the U.S. Capitol on Sept. 23 in Washington, DC.
    Adam Kinzinger
    Kinzinger raised $562,356 in the last filing period for a total of $2,595,281 in the election cycle.

    He faces Catalina Lauf, a former Department of Commerce advisor under Trump, for the seat in northern Illinois. Lauf raised $453,209 for the same filing period and has raised a total of $809,653 in the election cycle.

    Peter Meijer
    Meijer represents the Grand Rapids, Mich., area and raised $277,550 for the third quarter. He has raised a total of $1,205,306 in the election cycle.

    One GOP challenger, Afghanistan veteran Tom Norton, raised $70,359 in the third quarter, for a total of $136,541 in the election cycle.

    Norton leads another Republican opponent of Meijer's, Audra Johnson, who received attention after holding a Make America Great Again-themed wedding, according to Fox 17. Johnson raised $12,862 in the third quarter. She has raised a total of $27,498 since declaring her candidacy.

    Rep. Peter Meijer, R-Mich., speaks about the American military withdrawal in Afghanistan, during a meeting with House Republicans, including those who served in the military, on Aug. 30.© Drew Angerer, Getty Images Rep. Peter Meijer, R-Mich., speaks about the American military withdrawal in Afghanistan, during a meeting with House Republicans, including those who served in the military, on Aug. 30.

    Dan Newhouse
    Newhouse, who represents a large area of central Washington, raised $162,741 in the third quarter. His funds raised this election cycle total $703,242.

    Newhouse faces a handful of challengers in the 2022 primary, including Jerrod Sessler, a veteran and former NASCAR driver. Sessler raised the most out of the challengers with $118,856 for the third quarter. He has raised a total of $408,001 in the election cycle.

    Behind Sessler is Loren Culp, a former gubernatorial candidate, who raised $81,472 in the third quarter for a total of $104,513 in the election cycle.

    Tom Rice
    Rice's fundraising numbers for the third quarter stood at $401,053. He has raised a total of $1,136,463 for the race to represent northeastern South Carolina.

    His GOP opponent, combat veteran Graham Allen, raised $237,000 for the third quarter. Allen has raised a total of $738,244 for the election cycle.

    Fred Upton
    Upton raised $292,943 in the last filing period. He has raised $910,750 for the 2021-22 election cycle in his reelection bid to represent southwest Michigan.

    He faces Trump-backed opponent Steve Carra, who serves in the Michigan House of Representatives. Carra raised $155,585 in the third quarter for a total of $224,107 since declaring his candidacy.

    David Valadao
    Valadao raised $317,964 for the third quarter in his reelection race to represent a district in the San Joaquin Valley in California. He has raised $1,187,557 in total for the election cycle.

    His top-earning GOP opponent, former Fresno City Council member Chris Mathys, raised less than half compared to Valadao with $104,378 for the third quarter. Mathys has raised a total of $323,509.
  7. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Deseret News
    Trump says he’d do ‘extremely well’ in 2024. Do polls agree?
    D. Hunter Schwarz


    Former President Donald Trump remains the favored candidate to win the Republican nomination in 2024 should he run, and he’s confident it’s his if he wants it.

    “If I do run, I think that I’ll do extremely well,” Trump told Yahoo Finance in an interview earlier this month. “I’m not only looking at polls, I’m looking at the enthusiasm.”

    Trump has come out ahead in recent polls of potential 2024 contenders, including a Politico-Morning Consult poll released Oct. 13 that found 47% of Republican voters would vote for Trump if the primary was held today. That put Trump far ahead of his nearest competitors, former Vice President Mike Pence, at 13%, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, at 12%. Trump said he’s not concerned about any potential challengers.

    “I think most people would drop out, I think (DeSantis) would drop out, and if I faced him I’d beat him like I’d beat everyone else, frankly,” Trump said.

    Some polls this year have found a significant segment of Republican voters want someone else as their nominee in 2024, though. A poll by earlier this year by Trump’s 2020 pollster Fabrizio and Lee found about half of all Republicans would prefer a different nominee, while a Pew Research survey released earlier this month found 52% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents want someone new.

    However, polling that separates Republicans and independents shows a much less favorable landscape for would-be Trump challengers. A recent Quinnipiac University poll shows among Republicans, 78% would like to see Trump run again, up from 66% in May. Among independents, 35% want Trump to run again.

    “While a majority of Americans say, ‘been there, done that’ about Trump, and half feel he has damaged the underpinnings of democracy, support for the former president within the GOP has grown,” Quinnipiac University polling analyst Tim Malloy said in a statement.

    To beat Trump for the nomination now as far as the party is constituted would require a candidate who could unite a coalition of never-Trumpers, independents and the shrinking percentage of Republicans who like Trump but would prefer a new nominee, while also chipping away at Trump’s supporters and trying to woo back former Republicans who left the party, for good measure.

    “I think it’s going to need to be someone who expresses loyalty to Trump in some fashion, or at least praises Trump, or is comfortable with saying, ‘Trump did good things for the Republican Party, Trump did good things as president, here’s how I want to further Donald Trump’s agenda or legacy,’” said Dante Scala, a political science professor at University of New Hampshire.

    Trump challengers must thread the needle of being Trump-friendly, recognizing 85% of Republicans believe the former president has mainly had a positive impact on the party, per Quinnipiac, while also convincing voters they’d be a better pick.

    Arguing they’d be more electable or more effective in office than Trump might be a smart strategy against a potential candidate known for his tweets and impulse. Trump was never popular as a politician, losing the popular vote twice and spending all four years in office with a negative approval rating. Still, Republicans have to recognize they’re operating in Trump’s party.

    “The party is not going back to the way it was,” Scala said. “It’s not going to be Mitt Romney’s party again. Even if it’s not Donald Trump’s, there’s got to be someone who can appeal to white working class voters the way that Trump did, because that’s part of your base now.”

    Former Trump White House communications director Alyssa Farah thinks the Republican Party needs a fresh face in 2024. Farah, who resigned in December 2020 after Trump wouldn’t concede the election, published a Washington Examiner editorial Sunday about the party’s “deep bench of credible, experienced potential candidates” she believes are positioned to run following Trump’s loss.

    “Trump turned out new voters and is a fundraising machine — he also lost the last election, both in the electoral college and by roughly seven million popular votes,” Farah wrote. “I’m old enough to remember that the GOP didn’t line up behind Mitt Romney ahead of 2016 after his 2012 presidential loss or behind John McCain in 2012 following his 2008 loss. There has always been a sense among Republicans that nothing is given; you have to earn it. Losing isn’t earning it.”
  8. Originally posted by POLECAT doubtfull, all a nigga has to do is learn your rights and how to use them properly and you can also become as u say to big for our britches .
    it all starts with realizing the pyramid goes like this

    WE THE PEOPLE
    THE STATE CONSTITUTIONS
    THE us CONSTITUTION
    THE FORM OF GOVERNMENT
    THE ELECTED TRUSTEES
    THE COURT OF RECORD
    STATUTES/LAWS FOR ADMINISTRAITIVE COURTS
    THE CORPRATE BUISNESS / ADJENTS OF GOVERNMENT.


    IF YOU LOOK YOU WILL SEE WE MADE THE CONSTITUTIONS TO PROTECT US AND LIMIT THE GOVERNMENT AND GIVE US A WAY TO FIX CORRUPT GOVERNMENT AT WILL IN A SPEEDY WAY.
    NOW THE ONLY REASON ITS EVEN TAKING THIS LONG IS BECAUSE MOST OF YOU PEASANTS WANT TO BE PEASANTS, AND HATE ON PEOPLE THAT KNOW THEY ARE ABOVE PEASANTS.
    ITS OK I UNDERSTAND YOU ARE ALL TO BUSY BICKERING ON HERE TO GIVE A FUCKABOUT REALITY.. IT IS THE PEASANTS WAY, CARRIE ON NIGGERS, i GOT THIS.
  9. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    WHACKADOODLE FIGHT ! ! !

    Weasel has even reverted to posting in all caps again, I see.
  10. Speedy Parker Black Hole [my absentmindedly lachrymatory gazania]
    Originally posted by stl1 WHACKADOODLE FIGHT ! ! !

    Weasel has even reverted to posting in all caps again, I see.

    At least he can write his own thoughts instead of pasting the thoughts he is told to think.
  11. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Head whackadoodle just checked in, I see.
  12. Speedy Parker Black Hole [my absentmindedly lachrymatory gazania]
    Originally posted by stl1 Head whackadoodle just checked in, I see.

    When a dung beetle tells a raptor that he smells bad the bird of prey pays little mind. Now run along and copy some more turd balls for pasting.
  13. Sudo Black Hole [my hereto riemannian peach]
    The Jan 6 investigation/trial are obviously show trials ffs. So blatent it's laughable. Could have been a teachable moment about the fragility of democracy but instead its just fake outrage and renouncing their figurehead because they're still worried about his political future. Fucking stupid
  14. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    It is a response to the Republicans shutting down a bipartisan investigation to get to the actual truth of the matter, just as they did for both of Trump's impeachments.

    Republicans are afraid of the truth.

    As they should be.

    "Stick their head in the sand." Republicans.
  15. Sudo Black Hole [my hereto riemannian peach]
    Originally posted by stl1 It is a response to the Republicans shutting down a bipartisan investigation to get to the actual truth of the matter, just as they did for both of Trump's impeachments.

    Republicans are afraid of the truth.

    As they should be.

    "Stick their head in the sand." Republicans.

    Do you really think that is a trait exclusive to Republicans?
  16. POLECAT POLECAT is a motherfucking ferret [my presentably immunised ammonification]
  17. POLECAT POLECAT is a motherfucking ferret [my presentably immunised ammonification]
    Originally posted by Speedy Parker Try paragraphs…

    TRY NOT BEIN A FAGGOT
  18. POLECAT POLECAT is a motherfucking ferret [my presentably immunised ammonification]
  19. POLECAT POLECAT is a motherfucking ferret [my presentably immunised ammonification]
  20. POLECAT POLECAT is a motherfucking ferret [my presentably immunised ammonification]
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