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Posts by stl1

  1. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    My daughter now lives in her 5 bedroom, 3 bath home (after having sold her condo and sold her first house...she knows someone who is handy and helped her).

    Too bad you're still at home stealing all of mom and dad's money to inject in your arm.

    They're never going to be able to retire now because of you, are they?
  2. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Originally posted by Donald Trump stl1 please tell us all about how organised slaughter is fantastic.




    Only as it applies to conspiracy theory, child molesting, pedophilia, junky, whackadoodle MAGAts.
  3. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Recommendation...20 amp circuit (because of heavy electric heater load)...requires 20 amp single pole breaker made by the same manufacturer of the breaker box. Circuit requires 12 gauge wires and 20 amp outlets (can be differentiated from more standard 15 amp outlets by the right angle coming off the shorter leg on the outlet). Black wires go to outlet darker screw terminal, white wire to lighter screw terminal and bare wire to green terminal.

    Because wiring is to be done in a basement, you will probably be required to use a GFCI breaker and conduit.

    I know what I'm talking about here. I did all my own wiring when I added my three bedrooms and a bath upstairs as well as seperate furnace and A/C and it was all checked and approved by the City. If you don't feel 100% confident in your abilities, do not attempt as this type work can kill you or others down the road.

    When my daughter was looking into buying her condo, the previous owner had done some of his own remodeling and the home inspector found that the idiot had miswired several things, the most glaring being that he had wired an outlet so that a metal lamp plugged into the outlet had a "hot" frame. Luckily, there was not a ground nearby to complete the circuit.

    Recommend calling in a professional.
  4. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    See those two bright shiny bars that all your breakers are connected to?

    THEY WILL KILL YOU!

    This is rental property, right? Have the landlord pay for the upgrade.
  5. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Someone let in that little fucking annoying gnat again.
  6. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Originally posted by aldra you should stick to things you know about and just not comment about anything, ever




    If you were to do that, your posting history would be a big, fat ZERO.
  7. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    What's your electrical problem?
  8. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Originally posted by POLECAT Oh yeah,, I'll say this as of next December 31st if trump is not back in office or about to be according the the fake media I'll pay off on my bets. encluding leaving here, although some lefty bitch is gonna have to pay the 20 bucks, NIGGERS PAY ME TO LEAVE!




    So...Dec. 31, 2022?

    Right, WEASEL. We believe you.

    Now, about that swampland in Florida...
  9. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    But I just got up.
  10. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Try to actually act as if you are an adult.

    Courts like that.
  11. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Kinda like your skull, right?
  12. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Originally posted by filtration I agree. I just want to see and spend time with my kid… Shit, she doesn't even want to let my family see him. It's really weird because her uncle had his kid taken away from him and her family wasn't allowed to see her, yet she's doing the same thing.



    Get a lawyer and a custody arrangement.

    Call the cops if she refuses your rights.

    Document everything.
  13. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    The Guardian
    ‘This should terrify the nation’: the Trump ally seeking to run Arizona’s elections
    Ed Pilkington


    Last September, Donald Trump released a statement through his Save America website. “It is my great honor to endorse a true warrior,” he proclaimed, “a patriot who has fought for our country, who was willing to say what few others had the courage to say, who has my Complete and Total Endorsement.”

    Former US presidents usually reserve their most gushing praise – replete with Capital Letters – for global allies or people they are promoting for high office. A candidate for the US Senate, perhaps, or someone vying to become governor of one of the biggest states.

    Trump by contrast was heaping plaudits on an individual running for an elected post that a year ago most people had never heard of, let alone cared about. He was endorsing Mark Finchem, a Republican lawmaker from Tucson, in his bid to become Arizona’s secretary of state.

    Until Trump’s endorsement, Finchem, like the relatively obscure position for which he is now standing, was scarcely known outside politically informed Arizona circles. Today he is a celebrity on the “Save America” circuit, one of a coterie of local politicians who have been thrown into the national spotlight by Trump as he lays the foundations for a possible ground attack on democracy in the 2024 presidential election.

    The role of secretary of state is critical to the smooth workings and integrity of elections in many states, Arizona included. The post holder is the chief election officer, with powers to certify election results, vet the legal status of candidates and approve infrastructure such as voting machines.

    What’s so insidious about the Trump plan is that it is focusing on state-level races

    In short, they are in charge of conducting and counting the vote.

    About three weeks after Trump lost the 2020 presidential election – and on the same day that Joe Biden’s 10,457-vote victory in Arizona was certified – Finchem hosted Rudy Giuliani at a downtown Phoenix hotel. Giuliani, then Trump’s personal lawyer, announced a new theory for why the result should be overturned: that Biden had relied on fraudulent votes from among the 5 million undocumented immigrants living in the state – a striking number given that Arizona only has a total of 7 million residents.

    Two weeks after that, Finchem was among 30 Republican lawmakers in Arizona who signed a joint resolution. It called on Congress to block the state’s 11 electoral college votes for Biden and instead accept “the alternate 11 electoral votes for Donald J Trump”.

    Finchem was present in Washington on 6 January 2021, the day that hundreds of angry Trump supporters stormed the US Capitol, resulting in the deaths of five people with 140 police officers injured. He had come to speak at a planned “Stop the Steal” rally, later cancelled, to spread the “big lie” that the election had been rigged.

    Communications between Finchem and the organizers of the “Stop the Steal” rally earned the lawmaker a knock on the door from the January 6 committee this week. The powerful congressional investigation into the insurrection issued a subpoena for him to appear before the panel and to hand over documents relating to the effort to subvert democracy.

    Finchem will have to answer to the committee for what he did in the wake of the 2020 election, or face legal consequences. But there’s a more disconcerting question thrown up by his candidacy for secretary of state: were he to win the position, would he be willing and able to overturn the result of the 2024 presidential election in Arizona, potentially paving the way for a political coup?

    “Someone who wants to dismantle, disrupt and completely destroy democracy is running to be our state’s top election officer,” said Reginald Bolding, the Democratic minority leader in the Arizona House who is running against Finchem in the secretary of state race. “That should terrify not just Arizona, but the entire nation.”

    Trump has so far endorsed three secretary of state candidates in this year’s election cycle, and Finchem is arguably the most controversial of the bunch. (The other two are Jody Hice in Georgia and Kristina Karamo in Michigan.)

    Originally from Kalamazoo in Michigan, he spent 21 years as a public safety officer before retiring to Tucson and setting up his own small business. In 2014 he was elected to the Arizona legislature, representing Oro Valley.

    Even before Finchem was inaugurated as a lawmaker, he was stirring up controversy. On the campaign trail in 2014, he announced that he was “an Oath Keeper committed to the exercise of limited, constitutional governance”.

    The Oath Keepers are a militia group with a list of 25,000 current or past members, many from military or law enforcement backgrounds. They have been heavily implicated in the January 6 insurrection.

    The founder of the Oath Keepers, Stewart Rhodes, and nine co-defendants are facing trial for seditious conspiracy based on allegations that they meticulously planned an armed attack on the heart of American democracy.

    Finchem entered the Arizona legislature in January 2015 and soon was carving out a colourful reputation. With his bushy moustache, cowboy hat and boots, and offbeat political views, his hometown news outlet Tucson Weekly dubbed him “one of the nuttier lawmakers” in the state.

    Bolding, who entered the legislature at the same time as Finchem, remembers being called into his office soon after they both started. “He wanted to show me a map of how Isis and other terrorist groups were pouring over the border with Mexico to invade the United States,” Bolding told the Guardian.

    One of the first measures sponsored by Finchem reduced state taxes on gold coins on the basis that they were “legal tender”. He then introduced legislation that would have imposed a “code of ethics” on teachers – a “gag law” as some decried it – that would have restricted learning in class.

    The nine-point code was later revealed to have been cut and pasted from a campaign calling itself “Stop K-12 Indoctrination” backed by the far-right Muslim-bashing David Horowitz Freedom Center.

    “In essence he wanted a pledge of fealty from teachers that they wouldn’t discuss ‘anti-American’ subjects,” said Jake Dean, who has reported on Finchem for the Tucson Weekly.

    It was not until Trump began to fire up his supporters with his big lie about the 2020 election that Finchem truly found his political voice. The state lawmaker was a key advocate of the self-proclaimed “audit” of votes in Maricopa county carried out by Cyber Ninjas, the Florida-based company that spent six months scavenging for proof of election fraud and failed to produce any.

    To this day no credible evidence of major fraud in the 2020 election has been presented, yet Finchem continues to beat that drum. Last month he told a Trump rally in Florence, Arizona: “We know it, and they know it. Donald Trump won.”

    In his latest ruse, Finchem this month introduced a new bill, HCR2033, which seeks to decertify the 2020 election results in Arizona’s three largest counties. There is no legal mechanism for decertifying election results after the event.

    As the August primary election to choose the Republican and Democratic candidates for secretary of state draws closer, attention is likely to fall increasingly on Finchem’s appearance in Washington on the day of the insurrection. Allegations that he played a role in inciting the Capitol attacks led to an unsuccessful attempt to have him recalled from the legislature, as well as a motion by Arizona Democrats to have him expelled from the chamber.

    “The consensus in our caucus was that individuals who participated in the January 6 insurrection do not belong serving as members of the legislature,” Bolding said.

    Finchem has responded to claims that he helped organize the insurrection by threatening to sue. Through lawyers he has denied that he played any role in the violent assault on the Capitol building, saying that he “never directly witnessed the Capitol breach, and that he was in fact warned away from the Capitol when the breach began”.

    In his telling of events, he was in Washington that day to deliver to Mike Pence an “evidence book” of purported fraud in the Arizona election and to ask the then vice-president to delay certification of Biden’s victory. For Finchem, January 6 remains a “patriotic event” dedicated to the exercise of free speech; if there were any criminality it was all the responsibility of anti-fascist and Black Lives Matter activists.

    The Guardian reached out to Finchem to invite him to explain his presence and actions in Washington on January 6, but he did not respond.

    He has repeatedly insisted that he never came within 500 yards of the Capitol building. But photos and video footage captured by Getty Images and examined by the Arizona Mirror show him walking through the crowd of Trump supporters in front of the east steps of the Capitol after the insurrection was already under way.

    At 3.14pm on January 6, more than two hours after the outer police barrier protecting the Capitol was overcome by insurrectionists, Finchem posted a photograph on Twitter that he has since taken down. It is not known who took the photo, but it shows rioters close to the east steps of the building above the words: “What happens when the People feel they have been ignored, and Congress refuses to acknowledge rampant fraud. #stopthesteal.”

    Finchem’s campaign to become the next secretary of state of Arizona is going well. Last year his campaign raised $660,000, Politico reported – more than three times Bolding’s haul.

    Bolding sees that as indicative of a fundamental problem. On the right, individuals and groups have spotted an opportunity in the secretary of state positions and are avidly targeting them; on the left there is little sign of equivalent energy or awareness.

    “The public in general may not understand what’s at stake here. All Democrats, all Americans, should be concerned about this and what it could do to the 2024 presidential election,” he said.

    Dean agrees that there is a perilous void in public knowledge. “What’s so insidious about the Trump plan is that it is focusing on state-level races where voters know very little about what the secretary of state does. That’s a danger, as it gives Finchem a realistic path in which he could win – and Finchem will do what Trump wants.”
  14. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Well, at least "Thanks!" for printing the truth before lying.
  15. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Originally posted by AngryOnion Surprised you didn't try to back that up with a wallo text.



    Maybe even you can read the Reader's Digest Condensed version:

    How many states have introduced voter suppression bills this year?

    Overall, 216 bills have been introduced in 41 states to achieve these ends. When Texas Republicans scrambled to pass a massive voter suppression bill over Memorial Day weekend, they included a provision written behind closed doors with no public scrutiny that would make it easier for judges to throw out election results.
  16. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    I'll get in line directly behind you.
  17. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Do you mean like Republican scumbags enacting legislation in well over 30 states to infringe on the rights of people of color to vote legally?
  18. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Originally posted by CandyRein You're a funny old man..i wish you the best in your last days ..



    And I wish you barefoot, pregnant...and happy.
  19. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Originally posted by Speedy Parker Way better than that I promise you.

    And no I will never post her on here.




    How can you when she only exists in your feeble little mind?
  20. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Or blimps!

    lol
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