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2022-01-12 at 8:54 PM UTC in Why I perceive British people as weak.
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2022-01-12 at 8:51 PM UTC in what's the last thing you bought?
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2022-01-12 at 8:49 PM UTC in STICK IT, Damn It!
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2022-01-12 at 8:46 PM UTC in STICK IT, Damn It!
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2022-01-12 at 5:32 PM UTC in STICK IT, Damn It!Trump totally fucked up the New World Order's plan by coming up with the jabs. They had only planned to bring out the jabs and the passport much later, only after the lockdowns killed off all the small businesses and put most the population into poverty. Trump forced them to accelerate their scheme, which caused them to appear hasty and sloppy. He fucked them right up the ass.
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2022-01-12 at 5:21 PM UTC in what's the last thing you bought?Costs less than a dollar to make that and they charge $7.50.
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2022-01-12 at 5:19 PM UTC in STICK IT, Damn It!Biden wouldn't have been able to pull off Operation Warp Speed at all. About all he can do is read off a teleprompter and shit his pants and wonder where he is.
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2022-01-12 at 5:18 PM UTC in Why I perceive British people as weak.
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2022-01-12 at 5:13 PM UTC in STICK IT, Damn It!
Originally posted by stl1 Stop your lying.
Rump was never exonerated (especially by the American electorate who chose Biden by over seven million more votes).
What Rump was was protected by his own party refusing to even hear or see any evidence against him.
Tell the truth, if you even can any more.
Not true, gaslighter. He was found not guilty on both feeble attempts. Not guilty means exonerated. Look it up. -
2022-01-12 at 5:12 PM UTC in Welcome to the Metaverse. There is no escape.
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2022-01-12 at 5:11 PM UTC in THE MAGA PARTY!,,, the GOP is dead, republicans are going down with the dems,, get ready for THE MAGA PARTY lefty's
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2022-01-12 at 5:11 PM UTC in How long can you leave an infection before it's bad
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2022-01-12 at 5:09 PM UTC in STICK IT, Damn It!
Originally posted by stl1 Newsweek
Father Dies of COVID After Refusing To Get Vaccinated Despite Wife's Pleas
Gerrard Kaonga
Gligor Kedioski died of coronavirus earlier this year and had previously refused to get the COVID-19 vaccine, despite his wife's best efforts to convince him.
Kedioski died on January 2 after being admitted to hospital in December. He lived in the city of Liverpool in the U.K. with his wife Bilyana and their 5-year-old daughter.
His family and friends have since come out to insist they want to raise awareness about the vital importance of getting vaccinated.
A friend of Kedioski, Robert Karalioski, has set up a GoFundMe page to send his body back to his home city of Prilep in Macedonia.
Karalioski spoke to the Liverpool Echo and highlighted the difficulty facing Kedioski's family and friends at this time.
"Gligor wasn't vaccinated. Bilyana was fully vaccinated but he wasn't," Karalioski said. "He was afraid of the vaccine, he wasn't sure how it would work. He was afraid that he would get some kind of health complication from the vaccine.
"Bilyana tried everything to convince him to take the vaccine, but she couldn't persuade him. Now, we really want to raise awareness of the importance of the vaccines. He also said it was Kedioski and his parent's wish that his body be buried in his home country to give them closure.
"His father is still alive. It was Gligor and his family's wish for him to be transported back to Macedonia," Karalioski said.
He added: "Every day, his family back home are calling Bilyana to ask when everything will be finalized and when the body will arrive there. It's been a nightmare for the whole family, they need closure.
"Everyone is trying to help. It is a really hard time, especially for his daughter. She's always asking when her father is coming back from the hospital and that's the most difficult part to answer."
According to the U.K. government website, the country has seen the majority of the population receive at least two COVID-19 vaccines since they were introduced.
As of January 10, 2022, 51,992,559 people in total have received their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. While 47,745,458 people have received their second dose and 35,813, 659 people have had their third dose or booster vaccine.
Ahead of Christmas, Prime Minister Boris Johnson urged people to get the vaccine to help protect their country and family members.
"There is still a wonderful thing you can give your family and the whole country. That is to get that jab, whether it is your first or second, or your booster," he said on Christmas Eve.
He added: "If the pile of scrumpled wrapping paper is bigger this year it is precisely because across the country, in the run-up to Christmas, we have been giving each other an invisible and invaluable present.
"We have been getting that vaccination that protects us and stops us infecting others. I hope I can be forgiven for taking pride in the immense spirit of neighborliness that the people of this country have shown."
Sounds like another death-by-ventilator-for-cash. Nothing to do with covid. -
2022-01-12 at 10:58 AM UTC in What are you thinking about....*Kroz laugh loop*
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2022-01-12 at 2:39 AM UTC in The fat pigs upstairs aka my neighbors"Man Murders Fake Landlord In Blood Soaked Revenge Attack". Stay tuned for details at 11.
*Nile pic inserted here* -
2022-01-11 at 8:05 PM UTC in THE MAGA PARTY!,,, the GOP is dead, republicans are going down with the dems,, get ready for THE MAGA PARTY lefty's
Originally posted by stl1 Man, wouldn't you want to be
A man who could not
Get to be held to
Account for your actions?
Business Insider
'Let's stick with the facts': A federal judge rebuked Trump's lawyer's claim that he urged his supporters to be peaceful on January 6
ssheth@businessinsider.com (Sonam Sheth,C. Ryan Barber)
A judge dismissed Trump's lawyer's claim that he urged supporters to be peaceful on January 6, 2021.
"Let's stick with the facts," Judge Amit Mehta told Jesse Binnall, Trump's lawyer.
Mehta added that he wasn't interested in "whataboutism" or other hypotheticals.
A federal judge on Monday forced lawyers for former President Donald Trump to reckon with his hours of silence during the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, asking in court whether the president's initial inaction could be considered a tacit endorsement of the day's violence.
US District Judge Amit Mehta also rejected one lawyer's claim that Trump urged his supporters to be peaceful on that day, telling the attorney to "stick with the facts."
During a court hearing Monday, Mehta said that for a "two-hour period" on the day of the siege, Trump did not "take to Twitter or to any other type of communication and say, 'Stop. Get out of the Capitol. What you are doing is not what I wanted you to do.'"
"What would you have me do with the allegation that the president did not act?" Mehta, an Obama appointee who joined the federal bench in 2014, asked.
His question came during oral arguments over a trio of civil lawsuits filed by House Democrats and Capitol Police officers that allege Trump's incendiary rhetoric incited the Capitol breach. At a rally that preceded the siege, Trump told his supporters, "If you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore."
In court Monday, Mehta asked whether Trump's inaction could be considered "ratification" of that statement.
Trump's lawyer Jesse Binnall pushed back against the assertion that the former president could face legal consequences for action he didn't take.
"The president cannot be subject to judicial action for any sort of damages for failing to do something," Binnall said.
He added that the president told his supporters to "peacefully and patriotically" make their voices heard on January 6, 2021.
But that statement was outweighed, Mehta said, by Trump's earlier calls to "fight like hell" against the 2020 election results. Mehta said there was no doubt "threats" and "intimidation" were used on the day of the insurrection. He also said the main question was whether Trump's actions and statements incited the violence.
"Let's stick with the facts," Mehta said, adding that he wasn't "interested" in "whataboutism."
He continued pressing Binnall on whether Trump's call for his supporters to march to the Capitol and his use of words like "fight" and "show strength," which were followed by Trump's supporters storming the Capitol, satisfied the standards required to establish conspiracy.
"No," Binnall said.
"So the president, in your view, is both immune to inciting the riot and failing to stop it?" Mehta asked.
Binnall replied that "the president cannot be subject" to any judicial action because he "failed to do something."
Joseph Sellers, a lawyer for House Democrats, countered that claim and said the "fervor" and "energy" of Trump's supporters directly before the Capitol riot indicated that the president knew what they were planning to do.
But Mehta pushed back, telling Sellers the allegation of a conspiracy in this case was "unusual" and could be "problematic" because the lawsuit did not allege there was a direct meeting between the defendants, which include Trump, his then-lawyer Rudy Giuliani, and the far-right groups Proud Boys and Oath Keepers.
Alleging a conspiracy in the absence of such a link is "dangerous" because the defendants couldn't necessarily have controlled the reaction of Trump's supporters, the judge said.
Sellers conceded the point but added that Trump "ratified" his supporters' actions after the Capitol riot.
Trump's initial silence during the Capitol breach has also come under scrutiny from the special House committee investigating the January 6, 2021, attack. The panel's top Republican, Rep. Liz Cheney, said last month that the committee was exploring the question of whether Trump, "through action or inaction," sought to impede Congress' certification of now-President Joe Biden's electoral victory.
The committee has released texts showing that Trump's allies — including his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., and Fox News hosts — pleaded with former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows to have Trump order the violent mob to stand down. In the lawsuits against Trump, House Democrats pointed to his initial silence during the attack as evidence of an agreement with the mob to block the certification of Biden's victory.
Talk about scraping the bottom of the barrel. Give it up, loser. Your farces aren't going anywhere. -
2022-01-11 at 7:31 PM UTC in Hunting down and killing internet transsexuals
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2022-01-11 at 7:30 PM UTC in What are you doing at the moment"I honestly thought he was a rat, Your Honor!"
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2022-01-11 at 7:29 PM UTC in Why I perceive British people as weak.You guys also burnt down the White House a bunch of other major US government buildings at some point, didn't you?
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2022-01-11 at 7:26 PM UTC in Buy oil, thank me later.
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Non sequitur. The VAST majority of the Saudi public never owned any land producing oil…nothing was stolen from them as they never owned it.
Wriggle some more and see if you can get out of your incorrect statement.
The people of the country own everything by default.