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Post by revirdsuba99 on Feb 8, 2022 22:24:01 GMT
Sidney Powell submitted error filled appeal... One-time "Kraken" attorney Sidney Powell just flopped again with a legal filing to appeal a U.S. District Court Judge's penalty for ethics violations in court. www.rawstory.com/sidney-powell-appeal-slapped-down/
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 8, 2022 23:53:57 GMT
A really really good question…
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 9, 2022 0:31:11 GMT
This is probably why some cities in CA are starting to band gas stoves in new built homes.
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 9, 2022 0:35:13 GMT
Not political but son of a gun the Warriors have two. 👍🏻
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Feb 9, 2022 2:31:11 GMT
Matt Gaetz shares his 'wisdom', on the house floor, no less...about sexual predators not facing consequences! While speaking out in favor of a bill that would end mandatory arbitration for workplace sexual harassment cases, scandal-plagued Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) talked about the importance of holding sex offenders accountable.youtu.be/OMorCe6zJ7c
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Post by dizzycheermom on Feb 9, 2022 4:21:42 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 9, 2022 4:39:36 GMT
Sound advice…
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 9, 2022 14:31:16 GMT
2-9-2022
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 9, 2022 17:16:10 GMT
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Feb 9, 2022 18:26:05 GMT
Where do these 'people' come from?!?!? Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) has both undergraduate and post-graduate degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), but the GOP lawmaker was ridiculed for his lack of reasoning after he posted an outrageous attack on Medicare. (They get better!!!) www.rawstory.com/thomas-massie-2656608339/
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Feb 9, 2022 18:31:36 GMT
Prepare for this.... An Ohio mayor prompted stunned silence and then awkward laughter after warning city council that ice fishing would lead to prostitution. Hudson mayor Craig Shubert told a council work session Tuesday evening that ice fishing shouldn't be allowed in the city because fisherman would set up ice shanties to keep warm, and he feared sex workers would set up shop inside, reported the Cleveland Scene. www.rawstory.com/craig-shubert-hudson/
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 9, 2022 21:56:43 GMT
Only the brightest.,,
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Post by mollycoddle on Feb 9, 2022 22:13:49 GMT
I laughed for at least 5 minutes. The woman is dumber than Gohmert.
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Gem Girl
Pearl Clutcher
......
Posts: 2,686
Jun 29, 2014 19:29:52 GMT
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Post by Gem Girl on Feb 9, 2022 22:38:50 GMT
MTG is as stupid as a box of rocks. Oddly, she regularly wears a self-satisfied smirk. If she comes on TV, I hit mute. Hoping for better for the people of her district in the future.
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 9, 2022 22:43:59 GMT
No kidding…
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Feb 10, 2022 0:21:19 GMT
And what legislative work is she doing in the House? In fact, any of the GQP doing? Did I miss something they passed?
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Feb 10, 2022 1:08:23 GMT
The 'new' party of threats, the GQP!! Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-NC) warned officials in North Carolina that they could face "dangerous" consequences if he is removed from the ballot for his role in inciting a failed insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021.Cawthorn's opponents have pushed for the congressman to be disqualified by the NC Board of Elections based on an "insurrection" clause that was added to the U.S. Constitution following the Civil War. *** The NC lawmaker predicted "Donald Trump will never be able to be president again" if NC officials successfully remove him from the ballot *** He also said that he had no regrets about his role on Jan. 6."They are specifically arguing that I engaged in insurrection or incited some kind of violence here on Jan. 6," Cawthorn explained. "Now as you know, I was very proud to go speak at the Stop the Steal rally. I was very proud to debate on behalf of Wisconsin and and try and block the electors in that state. And apparently that -- even though it's a constitutionally protected right for me to do that as a congressman from North Carolina -- they're saying that that disqualifies me." youtu.be/2UelgchQOTQwww.rawstory.com/madison-cawthorn-nc-ballot/
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Post by aj2hall on Feb 10, 2022 2:07:23 GMT
www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/02/09/trump-archives-justice-department/The request came amid revelations that officials recovered 15 boxes of materials from the former president’s Mar-a-Lago residence that weren’t handed back to the government as they should have been Boxes of newspapers, documents and other items are loaded onto a truck at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in January 2021. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post) By Matt Zapotosky, Jacqueline Alemany, Ashley Parker and Josh Dawsey Today at 3:05 p.m. EST|Updated today at 4:05 p.m. EST The National Archives and Records Administration has asked the Justice Department to examine Donald Trump’s handling of White House records, sparking discussions among federal law enforcement officials about whether they should investigate the former president for a possible crime, according to two people familiar with the matter. The referral from the National Archives came amid recent revelations that officials recovered 15 boxes of materials from the former president’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida that were not handed back in to the government as they should have been, and that Trump had turned over other White House records that had been torn up. Archives officials suspected Trump had possibly violated laws concerning the handling of government documents — including those that might be considered classified — and reached out to the Justice Department, the people familiar with the matter said. The people spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a politically sensitive request. The two people said the discussions about the matter remained preliminary, and it was not yet clear whether the Justice Department would investigate. The department also might be interested in merely reclaiming classified materials. A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment. ‘He never stopped ripping things up’: Inside Trump’s relentless document destruction habits Trump’s years-long defiance of the Presidential Records Act, which requires the preservation of memos, letters, notes, emails, faxes and other written communications related to a president’s official duties, has long raised concerns among historians and legal observers. His penchant for ripping up official documents was first reported by Politico in 2018, but it has drawn new scrutiny in recent weeks because of a House select committee’s investigation of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. The Washington Post reported late last month that some of the White House records the National Archives turned over to the committee appeared to have been torn apart and then taped back together. The Post later found — and the Archives confirmed — that officials had recovered 15 boxes of presidential records from Mar-a-Lago. The materials they recovered included correspondence with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that Trump once described as “love letters,” as well as a letter left for Trump by President Barack Obama, people familiar with the matter said. The National Archives also retrieved a map of Hurricane Dorian that had been altered with a black marker by Trump in a failed attempt to show he had not been wrong about the storm’s path, according to a person familiar with the contents of the boxes. The Archives in a statement earlier this week said Trump representatives were “continuing to search” for additional records. In a statement Wednesday, Trump said he had engaged in “collaborative and respectful” discussions with the Archives and had arranged for the “transport of boxes that contained Presidential Records in compliance with the Presidential Records Act.” He said that the media had falsely characterized his relationship with the National Archives and Records Administration as hostile and that it was a “great honor” to work with the agency. “Much of this material will someday be displayed in the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library for the public to view my Administration’s incredible accomplishments for the American People,” he said. Democratic congressional committee chairs this week have expressed concern about Trump’s adherence to the presidential records law and archive requirements. Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.), chair of the House Oversight Committee, said this week that the records removal from Trump’s Florida club will be investigated. Trump’s reported actions regarding White House records were “deeply troubling but not surprising,” she said in a statement. Earlier this week, Sen. Gary C. Peters (D-Mich.) said in a statement that “Congress must take action … to ensure that every administration is appropriately handling and preserving important records related to the President’s official duties.” Peters — chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, which has jurisdiction over the National Archives — is working on legislation to strengthen records laws and plans to hold hearings on the topic in coming months, a Peters staffer said. Substantiating a criminal case against Trump — and perhaps even launching a criminal investigation — could be difficult. Legal experts and analysts have noted that the National Archives lacks a real enforcement mechanism, and all recent administrations have had some violations of federal records laws — most often involving the use of unofficial email and telephone accounts. Anne Weismann, the longtime chief counsel for Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility in Washington, said that Trump “clearly violated the records act in multiple ways, and that — even if the statute was essentially not enforceable — the Justice Department should still investigate.” “If they don’t investigate, given how flagrant these violations appear to be, it would basically be saying there is no accountability under the statute,” she said. “Imagine the scenario if Trump was reelected and what that would mean, and there was no consequences for all of these violations. He could have an entire White House that just thumbed their nose at the Presidential Records Act. I understand through the climate we live in, everything is viewed through a political lens. But I don’t think that should stop the Justice Department at all.” Federal law makes it a crime to destroy government records, but it requires that a person know specifically they are breaking the law when doing so. That could be difficult to do for Trump, who advisers say tore up documents out of habit, leaving staffers to retrieve and reassemble piles of torn paper. According to people familiar with the matter, Trump had been counseled by at least two chiefs of staff and the White House counsel to follow the law on preserving documents. In January 2021, in the waning days of the Trump presidency, some administration staffers also raised flags that some of the gifts Trump had received as president still remained in the White House rather than being properly turned over to the National Archives, said two former staffers familiar with the warning who, like others interviewed for this report, spoke on the condition of anonymity to share details of a potentially problematic practice. In the final days of the Trump administration, the packing was rushed and aides were concerned that personal items were being mixed with official items, according to former administration officials. The Justice Dept. alleged Jan. 6 was a seditious conspiracy. Now will it investigate Trump? “There was quite a bit of concern about the amount of mixing of personal effects with gifts that had been received during his time in office, which I’m sure in a traditional White House would have immediately been processed and given to the Archives,” one of the former staffers said. “But in the Trump White House, it was scattered throughout the West Wing, displayed behind glass, in the private dining room and in the private residence on the second floor.” The concern now is that many of those gifts and other government documents improperly made their way to Trump’s private Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Fla. This former staffer said, for instance, that after leaving the White House, Trump displayed a mini model of one of the black border-wall slats — with an engraved plaque on top — on his desk in his private office at Mar-a-Lago. Previously, as president, Trump had kept the item on the credenza in the private dining room just off the Oval Office, next to some challenge coins he had been given. During Trump’s 2016 campaign, as well as his presidency, building a wall at the nation’s southern border became a rallying cry for Trump and his supporters, and as president, Trump become deeply involved with the minutia of the wall’s design. Trump specifically wanted the wall to be a steel bollard fence painted in “flat black” — a dark color known to absorb heat that could make the wall too hot for climbers to scale — and with sharp spikes on top, to appear more intimidating to would-be climbers. Trump also took with him a model of the Air Force One redesign he had proposed — replacing the Boeing 747’s baby blue with a dark blue belly and a similarly dark red stripe — when he left the White House. As president, Trump displayed the model redesign of Air Force One on a table in the Oval Office; now, it sits in a similar place of honor at his private Florida club, atop a coffee table at the entrance to Mar-a-Lago’s opulent gold-plated lobby room, which guests pass through to get to the patio. It also could be a legal problem if significant amounts of classified material were among the materials at Mar-a-Lago, though it is hardly unheard of for former government officials to have such material outside appropriate government storage channels. It was not immediately clear whether classified documents were among those at Mar-a-Lago. As president, Trump would have had virtually unlimited ability to disseminate classified materials, and prosecuting him even as a former official would bring significant challenges. To substantiate a criminal case, prosecutors would have to prove that, once out of office, he intentionally mishandled the material or was grossly negligent in doing so. A former senior administration official said the staff was careful not to leave classified or particularly sensitive information with Trump, because there was a widespread belief he may mishandle it. “We would brief him on information, but we wouldn’t leave him the papers,” said the official, who worked for Trump for several years. “He usually wouldn’t care.” Hillary Clinton, Trump’s opponent in 2016, was famously investigated by the FBI for possibly mishandling classified information in connection with her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. That investigation began after a referral from the intelligence community’s inspector general. Investigators found 110 emails that contained classified information at the time they were sent or received in the group of 30,000 that Clinton later turned over for review. The Justice Department ultimately did not bring criminal charges, after the FBI decided that Clinton did not act with the intent necessary to substantiate a case. On the campaign trail, Trump called for Clinton to be jailed over the matter. Two Trump advisers said that they were aware of no investigation and that their conversations had been cordial with the National Archives. Alex Cannon, a longtime Trump lawyer, has been a point of contact for the Archives, two people familiar with the matter said. Tom Hamburger contributed to this report.
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 10, 2022 3:03:42 GMT
And here is another thing trump screwed up..
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 10, 2022 14:37:10 GMT
2-10-2022
“From the White House down,’ pleas for help disrupted Afghan evacuation, top U.S. commander says”
By Dan Lamothe Today at 9:00 a.m. EST
The U.S. military mission to evacuate American citizens and foreign allies from Afghanistan was hampered by continuous appeals for help from an array of advocates, including White House officials, members of Congress, veterans of the war, media outlets and even the Vatican, according to the operation’s senior commander.
Rear Adm. Peter Vasely called the outreach a “distraction” that “created competition for already stressed resources.” His comments appear in sworn testimony provided for a U.S. Army investigation of the Aug. 26 suicide bombing that killed an estimated 170 Afghan civilians and 13 U.S. service members outside Kabul’s international airport.
The declassified report, spanning 2,000 pages and comprising dozens of interviews with military officials, was obtained by The Washington Post through a Freedom of Information Act request. It contains the most detailed official account to date of the 17-day evacuation, hastily orchestrated as the Taliban swept into Afghanistan’s capital Aug. 15, and reveals that military leaders had deep misgivings about the Biden administration’s management of the crisis. Documents reveal U.S. military’s frustration with White House, diplomats over Afghanistan evacuation
Thousands of phone calls, text messages and emails flooded the U.S. operations center at Kabul’s airport throughout the evacuation, prompting Vasely, a Navy SEAL, to divert personnel and establish a “coordination cell” responsible for processing the overwhelming volume of communication from Washington and beyond, he told investigators. Vasely said that social media exacerbated the problem, broadening the “aperture of ambition” to the point that people even campaigned for the military to rescue specific dogs.
The stated priority, the admiral said, had been first to evacuate American citizens, followed by lawful permanent residents, and then Afghans who had aided the United States throughout its 20-year war.
“But you had everyone from the White House down with a new flavor of the day for prioritization,” Vasely told the Army investigators.
The requests came from people or groups seeking to work through official and unofficial channels. In other interviews contained in the investigation report, U.S. troops described being inundated with pleas for help — voice mails and emails from people they had, in some cases, never met but who had discovered they were a part of the rescue operation.
The calls for help became more frantic as it became clear the evacuation would not be extended. Among those who sought the U.S. government’s assistance were media outlets, including The Washington Post, who had Western journalists and Afghan staff members in harm’s way. This outreach is detailed within the report, and Biden administration officials underscored the point in responding to questions about the documents.
Vasely could not be reached for comment. As The Post first reported earlier this week, he and other military leaders involved in the effort also told investigators that senior White House and State Department officials had failed to grasp the Taliban’s steady advance on Afghanistan’s capital and resisted efforts by the Pentagon to prepare the evacuation of embassy personnel and Afghan allies weeks before Kabul’s fall.
Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said that the report shows that a lot of good people across the U.S. government “were working hard under incredibly difficult circumstances to make the best decisions they could in real time,” and that effort was unprecedented.
“Nothing like this had been attempted since the end of the Vietnam War,” he said. “Everyone’s heart, up and down the chain, was in the right place.”
A U.S. official, who like others spoke on the condition of anonymity citing the issue’s continued sensitivity, said that “it’s important to keep in mind that these are interviews with investigators, not reporters.”
“The people being interviewed weren’t trying to score points, weren’t messaging anyone,” this official said. “They were simply doing their level best to help investigators get to the bottom of a terrible attack.”
Biden administration officials have defended their planning in the lead-up to August’s withdrawal, with White House press secretary Jen Psaki saying this week that the National Security Council convened meetings for months to assess the situation in Afghanistan and directed the pre-positioning of U.S. troops elsewhere in the region in case a crisis erupted. They could not have anticipated that the Afghan security forces would so completely wilt in the face of the Taliban’s stunning advance, she said.
President Biden sought to ensure the military had everything it needed to carry out the evacuation as it played out, administration officials said.
“The president, at least once at each meeting — and these meetings were daily — would directly ask the people who were on the ground in Kabul, ‘Is there anything else that you need to execute what you’ve been asked to do?’” said Jon Finer, the White House principal deputy national security adviser.
The evacuation succeeded in extracting about 124,000 people before it ended around midnight on Aug. 31. But it required the U.S. military to strike an unusual security deal with the Taliban and surge more than 5,000 troops into the war zone to shore up the skeleton force of about 600 who were left in Kabul to protect American diplomats.
Vasely, in his interview for the investigation, acknowledged that not all of the outside intervention was problematic.
“There was all goodness in this, but the lesson learned is it was a distraction from the main effort as they were coming directly to the individuals on the ground trying to accomplish the task at hand,” he said, adding that he “only can speculate” whether the confusion and competition was responsible for some American citizens and foreigners being left behind.
The Army’s lead investigator, Brig. Gen. Lance Curtis, asked Vasely whether reports were true that Pope Francis and first lady Jill Biden had requested help on behalf of specific people who remained in harm’s way.
“That’s accurate,” Vasely responded. “I was being contacted by representatives from the Holy See to assist the Italian military contingent … in getting through groups … of special interest to the Vatican. That is just one of many examples.
“I cannot stress enough,” the admiral added, “how these high profile requests ate up bandwidth and created competition for already stressed resources.” Military leaders, refusing to fault Biden, say troop withdrawal ensured Afghanistan’s collapse
A White House official said that operational control of the mission was left to Vasely. Like lawmakers and others with ties to Afghanistan, White House officials sought to send U.S. troops in Kabul information that might help the effort. “That was people in good faith trying to facilitate the evacuation of people they were concerned about,” the official said.
Vasely told investigators that by Aug. 22 or 23, “it was clear we weren’t going to get all Americans out” and that he “started having conversations at senior levels” of the U.S. government about extending the mission beyond the Aug. 31 deadline.
In Washington, Biden pledged in a news conference on Aug. 22 that no American who wanted to leave would be left behind. “I will say again today [what] I have said before: Any American who wants to get home will get home,” the president said.
The White House official said the situation on the ground was changing rapidly, and the administration has continued to evacuate Americans since the military operation ended.
When the mission ended, State Department officials said they believed there were about 100 American citizens left in Afghanistan who wanted to leave. They revised that several times, eventually saying that more than 450 left with American assistance after the military evacuation concluded. The White House official said it is believed that everyone who wanted to leave now has.
Vasely told investigators that the administration briefly considered extending the evacuation operation into September, but the idea was scuttled after Taliban leaders had a “visceral response” to the proposal. While the militants had been helpful in providing security at the airport perimeter, Vasely said he feared they could shift to hostage-taking or trigger a surge of civilians onto the runway by launching indirect fire at parked aircraft and the runway.
Vasely said he advised Biden it would be prudent to stick with the agreed-upon deadline. The White House official said that senior leaders in Washington, including at the Pentagon, all thought it wise to end the operation in August.
Mark Jacobson, a former Pentagon official during the Obama administration, said Wednesday that he had heard frustrations from military officials about the unsustainable number of requests for help. The frenzy, he said, led several volunteer groups — many led by American veterans of the Afghanistan war — to pass along the names of Afghans who had helped the United States and “were supposed to be at the front of the queue.”
“Once it became the ‘Hunger Games,’” volunteers “tried to get whomever we could through the gates,” as former interpreters and other Afghan allies were being hunted by Taliban fighters outside, Jacobson said, alluding to the book and movie series in which people fight to the death.
Scott Mann, co-founder of Task Force Pineapple, a volunteer group that assisted Afghans during the evacuation, said he could see that military officials at the airport were swamped. His group sought to limit their communications with military officials to agreed-upon times, he said.
Mann, a retired Special Forces officer, said that he has discussed with U.S. troops who were at the airport whether his task force was helpful, and was assured that it was. Mann said the group received calls from lawmakers and very senior military officials who wanted to evacuate certain people, and that some of them had influence but chose to keep quiet through the chaos.
“Just about every volunteer group can tell you stories about lawmakers and other people with authority calling and saying, ‘You need to get my guy out,’" Mann said.”
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 10, 2022 14:38:36 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 10, 2022 14:42:00 GMT
Now we know why he had to keep flushing the toilet…
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 10, 2022 14:47:42 GMT
CA had its first wildfire of the season a couple of weeks ago at Big Sur and now another one. This is suppose to be CA rainy season yet up here in No Ca we haven’t had any rain since the first of January and So CA hasn’t had any since December.
My point is climate change is real
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 10, 2022 14:50:25 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 10, 2022 16:54:38 GMT
The more that comes out the worse it gets. If this is true….
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 10, 2022 16:56:22 GMT
The 'new' party of threats, the GQP!! Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-NC) warned officials in North Carolina that they could face "dangerous" consequences if he is removed from the ballot for his role in inciting a failed insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021.Cawthorn's opponents have pushed for the congressman to be disqualified by the NC Board of Elections based on an "insurrection" clause that was added to the U.S. Constitution following the Civil War. *** The NC lawmaker predicted "Donald Trump will never be able to be president again" if NC officials successfully remove him from the ballot *** He also said that he had no regrets about his role on Jan. 6."They are specifically arguing that I engaged in insurrection or incited some kind of violence here on Jan. 6," Cawthorn explained. "Now as you know, I was very proud to go speak at the Stop the Steal rally. I was very proud to debate on behalf of Wisconsin and and try and block the electors in that state. And apparently that -- even though it's a constitutionally protected right for me to do that as a congressman from North Carolina -- they're saying that that disqualifies me." youtu.be/2UelgchQOTQwww.rawstory.com/madison-cawthorn-nc-ballot/I just saw this. So now he is threatening people? Then he should be investigated for his threats.
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 10, 2022 17:02:18 GMT
I think he’s getting desperate here….
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Feb 10, 2022 17:03:25 GMT
onelasttime yes he should, they all should!! As I said the New party of threats! Or maybe, since former the old party of threats!!
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Post by onelasttime on Feb 10, 2022 18:13:50 GMT
Anyone surprised that there are gaps in the phone records?
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Post by dizzycheermom on Feb 10, 2022 18:54:34 GMT
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