2022-02-23 at 9:02 PM UTC
in
Hello everyone! I am back.
I never thought you were Proots.
Real men have basements they can afford to heat with stairs they can traverse.
Only idiots go where there isn't a need to go or heat where they ain't.
How the hell would you ever know what real men do or don't do, sonny?
2022-02-23 at 5:05 PM UTC
in
🍬🍬Candy~Land🍬🍬
When did this turn into the gay and bestiality thread?
I bet posting after me makes your wee-wee tingle.
I wonder what was in the icing.
IT'S ALWAYS TRUMP'S FAULT!
HOW CAN YOU STILL SUPPORT THIS ASSCLOWN?
The Guardian
Trump praises ‘genius’ Putin for moving troops to eastern Ukraine
Oliver Milman
Donald Trump has said that Vladimir Putin is “very savvy” and made a “genius” move by declaring two regions of eastern Ukraine as independent states and moving Russian armed forces to them.
Trump said he saw the escalation of the Ukrainian crisis on TV “and I said: ‘This is genius.’ Putin declares a big portion of the Ukraine … Putin declares it as independent. Oh, that’s wonderful.”
The former US president said that the Russian president had made a “smart move” by sending “the strongest peace force I’ve ever seen” to the area.
Trump, a long-term admirer of Putin who was impeached over allegations he threatened to withhold aid to Ukraine unless it could help damage the reputation of Joe Biden, praised the Russian president’s moves while also claiming that they would not have happened if he was still president.
“Here’s a guy who’s very savvy … I know him very well,” Trump said of Putin while talking to the The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show. “Very, very well. By the way, this never would have happened with us. Had I been in office, not even thinkable. This would never have happened.
“But here’s a guy that says, you know, ‘I’m gonna declare a big portion of Ukraine independent’ – he used the word ‘independent’ – ‘and we’re gonna go out and we’re gonna go in and we’re gonna help keep peace.’ You gotta say that’s pretty savvy.”
Trump’s intervention was criticized by the two Republicans serving on the House select committee investigating the January 6 Capitol riot, who are among the few Republicans who have been critical of the former president. Liz Cheney tweeted that Trump’s statement “aids our enemies. Trump’s interests don’t seem to align with the interests of the United States of America.”
Adam Kinzinger, meanwhile, retweeted a screenshot from the House Republicans that showed Biden walking away – which was captioned with the comment: “This is what weakness on the world stage looks like” – to denounce it in fiery terms. Kinzinger wrote: “As still ‘technically’ a member of house Republicans, let me, with all my might, condemn this damn awful tweet during this crisis. You can criticize policy but this is insane and feeds into Putins narrative. But hey, retweets amirite?”
During a lengthy speech on Monday that questioned Ukraine’s right to exist, Putin said he recognized the independence of two breakaway regions in Ukraine’s east – the Donetsk People’s Republic (DNR) and the Luhansk People’s Republic (LNR) – and that Russian troops will be sent there for “peacekeeping operations.”
The move has been roundly condemned by western leaders as a dangerous escalation of the tense situation at the border between the two countries and a violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty.
Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the US ambassador to the United Nations, said that Putin’s declaration was “nonsense” and that Russia was “creating a pretext for war”. Boris Johnson, the British prime minister, said that Russia was “plainly in breach of international law” by trying to break off the two territories.
Other than Cheney and Kinzinger, most other Republicans and leading conservative figures have vacillated between condemning Biden as being weak in his response to the situation and claiming that Putin is being vilified in a conflict that should not interest the US.
“Hating Putin has become the central purpose of America’s foreign policy,” said Tucker Carlson, the rightwing Fox News host on Tuesday. “It’s the main thing that we talk about. Entire cable channels are now devoted to it. Very soon, that hatred of Vladimir Putin could bring the United States into a conflict in eastern Europe.”
Can't wait to read Trump's new book:
ORANGE MAN BAD: My GREATEST time in the slammer!
Subtitled "Yes, I do have a pretty mouth!
Now that I have seen what it is you want to do, the way I would do it is to install a standard circuit breaker feeding a GFCI outlet directly below the breaker box and then feed your other two desired outlets from that GFCI. All should be run in conduit and has to be wired so that both other "downstream" outlets are also GFCI protected.
Parts required:
1 20 amp single pole breaker by the same manufacturer as your breaker box
1 20 amp GFCI outlet
2 standard 20 amp outlets
3 2 x 4 handy boxes
3 metal outlet cover plates
1/2' steel conduit (as needed)
6 1/2' to box x 1/2' to conduit (with set screw) connectors
12 gauge wire (as needed)
3 red wire nuts
hammer drill, anchors and screws for mounting boxes
Note: will need to pigtail from GFCI outlet to feed other two outlets as not legal to put two wires under one screw.
Add to list: Poster of Joe Biden for above your computer!
2022-02-22 at 7:45 PM UTC
in
Fona's Fucking Lancer Part II
I was surprised to see a donut under the hood seeing as how your engine sounds like an eggbeater!
Did you find any bacon under there?
-ORANGE MAN BAD-
Business Insider
Supreme Court formally denies Trump's request to review the January 6 committee's bid for White House records
ssheth@businessinsider.com (Sonam Sheth,Brent D. Griffiths)
The Supreme Court officially denied Trump's request to review the Jan. 6 committee's bid for White House records.
It was a widely expected ruling after the court previously declined to block the National Archives from turning over documents to the Jan. 6 committee.
The archives recently recovered 15 boxes of documents from Trump's Florida residence, some of which contained classified information.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday officially denied former President Donald Trump's request to review the January 6 select committee's bid for White House records.
The decision was widely expected after the high court previously declined Trump's request to block the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) from turning over several tranches of executive branch documents to the select committee.
Trump asserted executive privilege over the documents when the committee initially requested them. But the Biden White House declined to do the same, saying in October that it was "not in the best interests of the United States," and authorized the National Archives to turn over the materials to Congress.
Trump filed a lawsuit in response, setting up the first constitutional showdown testing whether a sitting president has the right to overrule their predecessor's assertion of executive privilege.
A federal judge rejected Trump's request in November, saying in a lengthy ruling that while Trump has the right to assert privilege, Biden is not required to honor it. The US Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington, DC, affirmed the lower court's ruling in a blistering 68-page opinion written by Judge Patricia Millett.
"Benjamin Franklin said, at the founding, that we have '[a] Republic'—'if [we] can keep it.' The events of January 6th exposed the fragility of those democratic institutions and traditions that we had perhaps come to take for granted," Millett wrote.
Both the incumbent president and Congress determined that "access to this subset of presidential communication records is necessary to address a matter of great constitutional moment for the Republic," she added.
"Former President Trump has given this court no legal reason to cast aside President Biden's assessment of the Executive Branch interests at stake, or to create a separation of powers conflict that the Political Branches have avoided," the ruling said.
In the weeks since the Supreme Court declined to block the archives from turning over documents to the January 6 select committee, it surfaced that Trump took around 15 boxes of White House documents to his Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida.
NARA said in a letter to lawmakers on Friday that it communicated with Trump advisors about the materials last year, received the 15 boxes last month, and is still in the process of inventorying its contents.
The agency said that among other things, it recently learned that some of the boxes Trump took with him contained classified national security information.
NARA recently asked the Justice Department to investigate whether Trump violated federal law by taking documents with him to Mar-a-Lago that should have been turned over to the archives at the end of his presidency.
Legal experts have said that Trump's actions may have violated the Presidential Records Act, which requires presidents and White House staff to preserve official documents and communications, and turn those items over to the Archives at the end of a president's term.
SEVEN MILLION MORE OF THEM said "NO!"