Welcome back, girlfriend. I've been wondering what happened to you.
Sorry to read of your divorce as last time we corresponded you told me you two were getting along better than you had in a long time. Divorces are always painful but I'm glad you're feeling better about your situation.
As you can see, things around here are pretty much the same. Jiggly Booty is still a horse's ass.
I've missed your political backing but I've managed to keep ridiculing Trump and the Republicans in Poley's MAGA thread (and pissing him off on a daily basis lol).
I like your photo. Looking good, girl! SEND NEKKID PICS ! ! ! (Some things never change.)
What do you think about a threesome with you, me and the Dirty Girl?
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Newsweek Nearly Half of Republicans Think Chauvin Trial Verdict Was Wrong: Poll Benjamin Fearnow 3 hrs ago
Three-quarters of Americans overall said they agree with the guilty jury verdict found for each of the three charges against former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in the murder of George Floyd. But among Republican voters, about half said the outcome was the "wrong verdict," according to a new survey.
Protesters continue taking to the streets across America and around the world after the killing of George Floyd at the hands of a white police officer Derek Chauvin that was kneeling on his neck during for eight minutes, was caught on video and went viral. During his arrest as Floyd pleaded, "I Can't Breathe".
A CBS News/YouGov poll of more than 2,500 U.S. adults released Sunday found that white Americans' reactions to the Chauvin verdict were "largely related to partisanship."
About 9 in 10 Democrats surveyed said Chauvin's conviction on all three counts—second-degree murder, third-degree murder, and second-degree manslaughter—was the "right" decision. The 75 percent of independent voters who agreed it was the right verdict directly corresponded to the overall response from Americans. Eighty-two percent of people who identify as political moderates said they agree the guilty verdict was the right decision.
But among Republican Party voters, 46 percent said it was the "wrong verdict," about five times the amount of disagreeing Democrats.
Two-thirds of Republicans in a Morning Consult national tracking poll released last week actually flipped the view of the perpetrator or victim roles entirely. Sixty-six percent of GOP voters said "violence against the police" is a more serious issue.
The 25 percent of overall Americans in the CBS News/YouGov poll who said they disagree with the Chauvin verdict also overwhelmingly responded that they "strongly" disagree with any ideas tied to Black Lives Matter (BLM). This one-quarter of Chauvin verdict dissenters disproportionately self-identified as white, conservative and male.
About half of respondents overall, 48 percent, said they agree with the BLM movement's ideas.
President Joe Biden's current approval rating of about 60 percent is almost identical to the percentage of Americans who said they approved of his general responses and handling of George Floyd's death and Chauvin's trial.
Among white Americans, 70 percent responded that the three guilty convictions were the "right verdict," compared to 30 percent who said that was the "wrong verdict."
Sunday's CBS News/YouGov pol also found that 39 percent of white Americans rate the job of their local police department as "very good," compared to 17 percent of Black Americans. Similar shares of white and Black Americans said their local officers are doing a "somewhat good job," with a heavier majority of Black respondents agreeing with that statement. Thirty percent of Black adults said their local police force is doing a "somewhat or very bad" job, compared to 18 percent of white people who said the same.
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I make this a lot. It's healthy as can be and keeps you regular. And...it tastes great!
BEEF STOUP
In an 8 quart pot, cover bottom in olive oil. Brown package of stew meat. Add 2 spicy pre-cooked sausages sliced thin. Add spices to taste (I use steak seasoning and garlic sriracha seasoning). Add 1 container of beef stock and one of vegetable stock. 1 diced white or yellow onion, 1 diced red onion, 1/2 bunch of celery sliced into 1/4" pieces, 1 bag of those small, cleaned carrots cut in half, 1 diced green pepper, 1/2 package sliced mushrooms, 1/2 cabbage cut up, 1 bag frozen corn, 1 bag frozen green beans, 1 bag frozen peas and then add cut up potatoes to fill the pot. Add water if needed. Bring to boil and simmer for 1/2 hour or more. Add hot sauce to bowl when served if desired. Freeze in single serving amounts any that you won't eat in a few days.
Very filling and satisfying meal that takes a little while to make but feeds you for days and days.
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Business Insider Minutes before Trump departed office, a mysterious Florida company reportedly took over a slice of the Pentagon's internet space kshalvey@businessinsider.com (Kevin Shalvey)
A Florida firm took over a slice of the internet owned by the Pentagon during Biden's inauguration. It now controls as much as 6% of the total internet, The Washington Post reported on Saturday. That was more than either AT&T or Comcast controlled, The Associated Press reported.
A mysterious Florida company is said to have taken control of a substantial portion of the internet owned by the Pentagon, only three minutes before President Donald Trump's official term in office ended.
Since then, the company has increased its control to as much as 6% of the total internet, or about 175 million addresses, The Washington Post reported on Saturday.
The Associated Press reported that it controlled more space than some of the world's largest internet providers, including Comcast and AT&T.
The company was identified as Global Resource Systems LLC, headquartered in Plantation, Florida. According to Florida state records, Global Resource Systems filed paperwork in October 2020. The paperwork said it was incorporated in Delaware.
A Department of Defense spokesperson told the AP in a statement that the government was publicizing the space to "assess, evaluate and prevent unauthorized use of DoD IP address space."
On Twitter on Saturday, the AP posted: "What a Pentagon spokesman could not explain is why the Defense Department chose Global Resource Systems LLC, a company that seems not to have existed until September, to manage the address space."
A Saturday blog post from Doug Madory, director of internet analysis at Kentik, a networking information provider, detailed the "great mystery."
On inauguration day, at 16:57 UTC, or 11:57am in Washington, a message was posted by an "entity that hadn't been heard from in over a decade," Madory wrote.
The post came from AS8003, announcing it had taken over unused ranges of the IPv4 internet space owned by the Department of Defense, according to Madory.
He wrote that the timing was "moments after the swearing-in of Joe Biden as the President of the United States and minutes before the statutory end of the administration of Donald Trump at noon Eastern time."
The AP and Post sent reporters to the listed address for the Global Resource Systems, according to reports. Both times, the reporters were turned away without information.
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