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Poll: Why are Republicans so dumb?
- Poor education
- Poor diet
March 4th 2021: Trump not re-inagurated
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2021-03-04 at 7:53 PM UTC
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2021-03-04 at 7:54 PM UTCEven most Qtards have abandoned Trump lol.
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2021-03-04 at 7:55 PM UTC
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2021-03-04 at 8 PM UTC
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2021-03-04 at 9:44 PM UTC
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2021-03-04 at 10:17 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson I don't care about the measly check…I think you missed the point again gramps…that being Biden and crew are already lying and backpedaling on what they promised. lololol
And you're surprised? Frankly I'd be surprised to see a puppet politician not uturn on his election promises.
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2021-03-04 at 10:19 PM UTC
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2021-03-04 at 10:40 PM UTC
Originally posted by Narc You mean the restaurants called "hush puppies", or they deep fry puppies very quietly?
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There is a food called hush puppies as well.
Its usually corn bread deepfried with stuff in it. it can be something like cream cheese and taste like a pastry sweet or with garlic cream cheese. or it can have stuff like crab meat or chicken. the closest thing I can thing of if its a meat hush puppy is a peroski. which is Russian or Polish (i forget) and theyŕe pretty good. if its a sweet hush puppy its like a cream filled donut hole.
I mean this is what I had. there might be other forms of hush puppies. -
2021-03-04 at 10:40 PM UTCWaiting... Any second now...
Where's Trump? -
2021-03-04 at 10:42 PM UTC
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2021-03-05 at 2:45 AM UTC2022 and 2024 will be just as rigged as 2020 was. Nothing's been done to prevent the fraudsters from repeating their operations. All elections from here on in will be rigged. Elections no longer mean anything.
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2021-03-05 at 2:58 AM UTC
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2021-03-05 at 3:11 AM UTC
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2021-03-05 at 3:26 AM UTC
Originally posted by Antifa Member 2016 was totally clean tho amirite
They would have rigged it for Hillary, too, but they were so arrogant they thought a guy like Trump could never win, not in a million years. They thought they had it in the bag already. Hillary did, too. That's why they went batshit insane when he did win. From here on in, they won't be taking the same chance. They'll be rigging everything right and left, and you'll still be nodding blank approval. -
2021-03-05 at 3:27 AM UTCHonestly so long as a mechanism is maintained whereby there can be a bit of turnover on top and small tweaks to the system implemented whatever. If it "works" i guess, works a lot better for some tho.
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2021-03-05 at 3:10 PM UTC
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2021-03-05 at 4:21 PM UTC
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2021-03-05 at 4:31 PM UTC
Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ They would have rigged it for Hillary, too, but they were so arrogant they thought a guy like Trump could never win, not in a million years. They thought they had it in the bag already. Hillary did, too. That's why they went batshit insane when he did win. From here on in, they won't be taking the same chance. They'll be rigging everything right and left, and you'll still be nodding blank approval.
You must be referring to the Republicans and their hundreds of new laws they're trying to get passed to suppress people's rights to vote. -
2021-03-05 at 5:02 PM UTC
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2021-03-05 at 5:28 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Can you cite a couple of these new laws that would prevent a legal and registered citizen of the United states from voting?
Republicans roll out “tidal wave of voter suppression”: 253 restrictive bills in 43 states
GOP is using Trump’s “big lie” to push a historic “contraction of voting rights," says Democratic lawyer Marc Elias
By IGOR DERYSH
FEBRUARY 27, 2021e
Republicans across the country responded to record voter turnout by unleashing a flurry of legislation aimed at restricting ballot access, citing concerns over unfounded allegations of rampant voter fraud that they themselves stoked for months.
At least 253 bills with provisions restricting voting access have been introduced, pre-filed, or carried over in 43 states, mostly by Republicans, according to an analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School, dwarfing the number of similar bills filed at this point in 2020.
Many of these measures are in response to a "rash of baseless and racist allegations of voter fraud and election irregularities" that former President Trump and his Republican allies promoted for months without any evidence, the Brennan Center report said.
"We are about to be hit with a tidal wave of voter suppression legislation by Republican legislatures throughout the country," warned Marc Elias, a prominent Democratic attorney and founder of the voting rights advocacy group Democracy Docket, who batted back many of the election lawsuits filed by Trump and his supporters. Elias said in an interview with Salon that he fears this could result in a historic "contraction of voting rights like we have not seen in recent memory."
"Republicans are doing this because they think they can gain an electoral advantage from making it harder for Black, brown and young voters to participate in the process," he said, adding: "This is the reaction of a party that knows it can't compete for a majority of the votes. So it is acclimating itself to minority rule through a number of tactics. Gerrymandering is one piece of it. But certainly, voter suppression is a big piece of it."