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Posts That Were Thanked by Data

  1. Lanny Bird of Courage
    Hey everyone! Look at me! The jedis really like me and they know I’m such a well trained goy that I’ll always pay money back to them when they give it to me!

    If you work really really really hard like me, you too may be able to raise you “ability to be safely exploited by bankers” level
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  2. Originally posted by POLECAT pussy,, I have 3 dodge trucks a 1500 for casual driving a 2500 for long distance, it rides like a caddy and a 3500 for heavy loads the 1500 gets 14 mpg and the 2500 &3500 get 20 miles per gallon
    and I have a 2003 tacoma for my workers to drive and a 2006 tacoma for bidding jobs,, it looks real nice.

    I also have a samurai to play in the mud with and a honda 4 wheeler and 9 snowmobiles. but I'm on;y half white trash

    That's some serious compensating right there brutha.
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  3. Originally posted by BummyMofo You're unworthy of respect.

    Only insecure needy people crave the respect of others.
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  4. Quick Mix Ready Dark Matter [jealously defalcate my upanishad]
    Originally posted by Wariat you wouldnt be able to stab me in the neck you old fst out of shape fsggit. id stomp your teeth in or the rest u have on u schizo fsggit.

    Can you just keep your delusion of who I am and how you would kick my ass to one post. I mean 20 fucking posts with 1 line each. You sound scared and add to your tough guy speech everytime your mind farts out a new insult. Give it some time and then post what you have to say, Mr tough guy who is "self made"
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  5. Robert Mugabe African Astronaut
    pics?
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  6. WellHung Black Hole
    Douglas Monks is jealous of Narc.
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  7. Nile bump
    Fucking wariat
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  8. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Making

    America

    Goofy

    Again



    The Hill
    Boehner: 'America First Caucus is one of the nuttiest things I've ever seen'
    John Bowden


    Former Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) on Sunday derided plans reportedly spearheaded by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) to form a nativist anti-immigration America First Caucus in the House.

    Speaking on NBC's "Meet the Press," Boehner said the plan, which Greene reportedly abandoned after a document outlining the group's goals sparked criticism after it was published by Punchbowl News, was "one of the nuttiest things I've ever seen."

    "I wouldn't call it mainstream in our party, but I can tell you that this so-called America First Caucus is one of the nuttiest things I've ever seen," the Ohio Republican said.

    "Listen, America is a land of immigration. We've been the world's giant melting pot for the last 200 years. And we've got to celebrate that we're this giant melting pot," he continued, adding that it was "the silliest thing" he's ever seen, and that members of the GOP should "denounce it."

    Boehner went on to add in the interview that his "greatest regret" as speaker was not reaching a deal with former President Obama to reform the U.S. immigration system.

    Greene, a first-term GOP member from Georgia, has been the center of controversy since before her election to the House due to her past support for the anti-Semitic "QAnon" conspiracy theory, which alleges that top Democrats are conspiring with a cabal of satanic pedophiles.

    Reps. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) and Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), who is currently under a federal sex trafficking investigation, reportedly considered joining the now-abandoned caucus idea.
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  9. aldra JIDF Controlled Opposition
    Originally posted by aldra if she's chipped, EMP it and deny deny deny
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  10. Misterigh Houston
    Don't get caught and you don't have to go.

    +$350
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  11. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Make

    American

    Gulags

    Again


    The Hill
    There was Trump-Russia collusion — and Trump pardoned the colluder
    Marik von Rennenkampff


    It's official: The Trump campaign colluded with Russia.

    In an explosive development, the Biden administration confirmed that a Russian government agent with close connections to Donald Trump's top 2016 campaign official "provided the Russian Intelligence Services with sensitive information on polling and [Trump] campaign strategy."

    This revelation demolishes, once and for all, Trump's ceaseless claims that he was the victim of the "greatest witch hunt in the history of our country." (Recall that a Trump appointee directed Robert Mueller to investigate "any links and/or coordination between the Russian government and individuals associated with the campaign of President Donald Trump.")

    But just how valuable was the polling and campaign strategy data that Paul Manafort, Trump's campaign chairman, gave to a Russian agent?

    According to Brad Parscale, Trump's election data guru, the information that Manafort handed directly to Russian intelligence was of critical importance, determining "98 percent" of the campaign's resource allocations (such as spending on TV, radio and social media ads, rallies, field operations, and so on).

    Indeed, the data was so important that Parscale kept a visualization of the information on his iPad at all times, allowing him to tell then-candidate Trump where to conduct his next rally at a moment's notice.

    According to the then-Republican-led Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, the ultrasensitive campaign information that Manafort passed to a Russian spy "identified voter bases in blue-collar, democratic-leaning states which Trump could swing," including in "Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Minnesota."

    Moreover, the Russian intelligence officer who received the information "was capable of comprehending the complex polling data."

    That leaves a lot of unanswered questions as to what Russia's spies did with the information.

    Perhaps worse, Trump ultimately pardoned Manafort. Trump's potential political rivals would be wise to remember that he handed the ultimate political favor to the man who colluded with Russia amid Moscow's campaign to undermine American democracy.

    But Manafort's malfeasance fits a broader pattern.

    As former Trump adviser Steve Bannon - indicted on fraud charges - aptly noted, top Trump officials engaged in a "treasonous" meeting with a former Russian counterintelligence officer and a woman with "extensive and concerning" links to Russian intelligence services.

    At the same time, the then-GOP-led Senate committee made clear that Trump knew of and discussed the release of tens of thousands of Russian-hacked documents and emails pilfered from the Democratic National Committee.

    Indeed, Trump may have instructed a close confidant, Roger Stone, to orchestrate the leak of Russian-stolen documents as a political distraction at a make-or-break moment during the 2016 campaign.

    But it gets worse. According to former Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates, in surreptitious conversations with a top Russian official, Trump's soon-to-be national security adviser Michael Flynn was "neutering" American sanctions designed to punish Moscow for interfering in the 2016 election on Trump's behalf.

    At the time, Flynn's previous links to Russia made him the target of a counterintelligence probe, thoroughly justifying the FBI's investigation into his collusive calls with a senior Russian government official.

    Perhaps worst of all, Trump's political allies released sensitive document after sensitive document in a desperate - and ill-fated - bid to score cheap political points for their boss.

    Among other damaging revelations, these selective, politically driven leaks of once highly classified information gave America's adversaries an intimate look into how America's secretive spy catchers conduct their work. The long-term damage to national security and to America's counterintelligence efforts will be debated for years to come.

    Ultimately, it took five years to finally learn that the Trump campaign colluded with Russia.

    While the Republicans and conservative media outlets that peddled falsehood after falsehood are dealt a decisive blow, one must wonder what other revelations will come to light in the months and years to come.
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  12. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    The Hill
    GOP acknowledges struggle to bring down Biden
    Jordain Carney


    Republicans are struggling to land attacks against President Biden as they grapple with how to win back power in Washington next year.

    Biden is proving to be an elusive cipher for Republicans to successfully message against nearly 100 days into his administration, keeping a relatively low profile and refusing to engage in the day-to-day verbal sparring that has consumed Washington in recent years.

    It presents a challenge that, GOP senators acknowledge, they aren't hitting the mark on.

    "We need to get better at it. I don't think sometimes our messaging is as sharp as it should be because a lot of the things they're doing are things that are popular-when you're spending money, you're popular," Sen. John Thune (S.D.), the No. 2 Senate Republican, said about Republicans' success in defining Biden.

    Asked how his party was doing, Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) replied: "Poorly."

    "I don't think we've done a very good job because he's getting away with defining himself and rolling out this stuff that we're borrowing every penny for it, and the public is buying it," Braun said. "We've got to find ways to articulate and scuffle in a better way, and I don't know that we've found that."

    Biden has spent decades building his reputation as an affable dealmaker who came up through the party's centrist wing. During the 2020 campaign, he talked up his relationship with Republicans and hoped that after former President Trump left office that the "fever" would break.

    The bipartisan rhetoric has continued in the White House, with the administration reaching out to GOP lawmakers through private phone calls and publicly disclosed Oval Office meetings.

    "His tone is moderate and he's an affable person, he's a likeable individual and a lot of us know him, have relationships with him and it's probably harder to attack somebody who is relatable and likeable," Thune said.

    Republicans were quick to back new sanctions the administration announced against Russia. And his speech at the memorial for a Capitol Police officer killed this month earned him praise from Fox News, where host Harris Faulkner called him "iconic" for delivering "kindness and empathy."

    GOP senators have acknowledged that, politics aside, they largely like Biden, with many knowing him for years if not decades.

    Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.), in a recent stop in Kentucky, accused Biden of leading a "left-wing administration" but added that he was a "first-rate person."

    "I like him personally, I mean, we've been friends for a long time," McConnell said.

    GOP senators say Biden's "nice guy" reputation and moderate tone have helped insulate him politically.

    "It's always harder to fight against a nice person because usually people will sort of give him the benefit of the doubt," he added.

    Biden's approval ratings have largely held steady in the low-to-mid 50s since taking office in late January, according to averages compiled by tracking website FiveThirtyEight. That's higher than Trump got during his four years in the White House.

    A Pew Research Center poll released on Thursday put Biden's approval at 59 percent, up from 54 percent in their March survey. Forty-six percent of Americans also said they liked how Biden "conducts himself as president," compared to 27 percent who don't. Forty-four percent says he's improved the political debate.

    But Cornyn garnered fierce backlash this week for a tweet thread where he quoted a Politico article that detailed Biden's less-is-more media strategy. He followed that up with another tweet asking who is "really in charge," sparking criticism that he was elevating those questions. The GOP senator described the experience as being "carpet bombed," but stood by his tweet.

    "I think it's a good question. When the 10 Republicans went over to talk about the COVID-19 relief bill, they were apparently having a really nice meeting with the president and Ron Klain was shaking his head ... so I think it's a fair question," he said, referring to Biden's chief of staff.

    But Senate Republicans have largely stayed away from personal attacks on Biden, arguing that the best way to win politically against him in the long-run is on policy.

    "I don't enter into that kind of conversation. I'm more worried about nuts and bolts in what they're doing on policy," Braun said.

    Polling shows that Biden's ideas are popular with a majority of Americans. Pew found that 67 percent of Americans approve the $1.9 trillion coronavirus package. Fifty-seven percent of Americans back his infrastructure plan, according to a Morning Consult-Politico poll.

    Braun credited Biden with picking issues that are on-the-surface widely popular, even if Democrats then stretch the actual legislation to go much further.

    "I think that he's defined himself and that's resonating with the public that he's after bipartisanship and unity and they've picked topics-who's against COVID relief? But then it's only 10 percent. Who is against infrastructure? And it's only six percent, which is roads and bridges," Braun said.
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  13. Sudo Black Hole [my hereto riemannian peach]
    Is this thread a troll? I can't tell. Everything about it is retarded, especially the narrative. Troll or not?
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  14. Bradley Black Hole
    OP should look into cigar cutter technology and it's maladaptive potential
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  15. Bradley Black Hole
    I can read really fast and thought you could too, tbh.
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  16. Ghost Black Hole
    Originally posted by Quick Mix Ready Iv never been to BC or Canada but its not far from us. I think Im closer to BC than you are in Toronto. and Nelson is a known town. especially in the winter for its WInter Festival. so weather the podcaster is from USA or Canada itself, never to have heard of Nelson is like saying you never heard of Quebec or Montreal or Island of Victoria. its small but a well known tourist destination

    I lived in that area for 5 years up in the mountains it was pretty chill. Yeah you can easily drive from BC to California by going along the coast. I met a lot of people from that part of the USA who came up north and wound up in lower mainland BC. One dude I met was from Big Sur and hitchhiked his way all the way to canada and worked along the way for like 10 years, he was pretty cool.



    we lets lots of americans "doing the loop" the selkirk loop that is

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  17. Bradley Black Hole


    I get these massively long texts bro.
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  18. Meikai Heck This Schlong
    Originally posted by Data Lol these poll results

    Really made me rethink the idea that weed is harmless.
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  19. Meikai Heck This Schlong
    Originally posted by Donald Trump You mean FBI agents.

    On the one hand this is true, but on the other hand this is also the ultimate psy op. Like... does the FBI/ATF/DEA monitor these groups and sometimes play a part in encouraging behavior that is actionable? Yeah. Probably. Definitely. Sure. But they aren't all knowing or all powerful. The number of would-be radicals I've seen dissuaded from taking any kind of substantial action is depressing. The invisible hand of the mythical ever-present glowie weighs heavily on their shoulders and they cannot move

    It's also the ultimate copout for loud cowards who like to act tough on the internet. "It's time to fucking kill those corrupt politicians" they say, and when you reply "you won't do it pussy" they pull some shit like "you'd like it if I did wouldn't you, glownigger". smh
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  20. no Yung Blood
    Originally posted by aldra the question in this case is with the 'vaccines' themselves because outside of the ones used exclusively inside China, none of them are 'vaccines' in the traditional sense. the two main types available are essentially experimental vaccine with no long-term or large-scale testing, have exaggerated their effectiveness and are already reporting that the virus has mutated strains that they no longer cover… which is the reason we never bothered trying to make one for the common cold (another coronavirus).

    it begs the question as to why there's such a push for universal vaccination against a virus with such a low mortality rate.
    I don't disagree that a lot of these were rushed, or that mortality rates are low. I'm more just commenting on the broader idea that's got a lot of mindshare at the moment, that people broadly pushing for vaccines have some kind of secret agenda. The mortality rates of COVID are super low; the mortality rates of the vaccines are an order of magnitude lower even accounting for vaccination vs infection rates. Whatever you think of the broader picture, the math still favours some kind of broad vaccination programme

    Unrelated: I hate this 10 posts per day shit for first 30 posts. I guess it's to stop idiot new folks like me taking up too much dead air
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