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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 13:46:49 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 15:02:28 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 15:22:51 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 15:25:07 GMT
He rants and raves then gets up and leaves. What a rude little child.
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Post by cindosha on Mar 22, 2022 15:35:28 GMT
Two things are going to happen today. Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation hearings start today. And the Republican Senators will bend over backwards to try and “show” this more then qualified woman to sit on the Supreme Court is not. And they are going to be less then honest in their attempt to show she is not fit to be a Supreme Court Justice. “Opinion: The two phoniest words you’ll hear during Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation”By Paul Waldman Over the multiple days of her confirmation hearings for a seat on the Supreme Court, Ketanji Brown Jackson will have to sit attentively for hours while the 22 members of the Senate Judiciary Committee speechify at her, testing both her endurance and her ability to refrain from rolling her eyes when the likes of Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) ascend the heights of inane demagoguery at her expense. Amid all that pontification, there’s a particular phrase you should watch out for that will likely be repeated dozens of times: “judicial philosophy.” The phrase should raise red flags because it’s a signal that the person using it is about to pull a fast one, either to claim they themselves believe something they really don’t, or to pretend that an attack they’re making on Jackson is far more high-minded than it actually is. “I want us to vet Judge Jackson’s judicial philosophy,” said Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), one of the many potential presidential aspirants who sits on the Judiciary Committee. “I don’t want us to attack her as a human.” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) claimed, “Judicial philosophy is a key qualification for the Supreme Court.” While noting that there are plenty of “smart lawyers” out there, McConnell argued that instead of applying laws neutrally, “some would rather start with liberal outcomes and reason backwards.” There you have it: The idea that a judge might have a conservative outcome they want to achieve isn’t even worthy of consideration; only liberals would be so crass. Conservatives, you see, have a judicial philosophy. This is comfortable terrain for Republicans because they know that dressing up policy preferences in a phony “philosophy” is a game only they usually play; liberals tend not to bother. Jackson herself was asked about this during her confirmation to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit; she replied, “I do not have a judicial philosophy per se, other than to apply the same method of thorough analysis to every case, regardless of the parties.” While liberals sometimes talk about the “living Constitution” — the idea that as society evolves, our understanding of the Constitution changes — they don’t pretend that it’s some kind of guidebook that tells you the “right” ruling in any given case. But that’s what conservatives claim to possess in their favored “philosophy,” originalism. They say that the original intent of the Framers should be paramount when deciding constitutional questions, and once that intent has been located, the answers to legal questions will reveal themselves, lit from within with the glowing light of divine wisdom. The truth is that the overwhelming majority of the time, the Framers’ intent is either impossible to discern or utterly irrelevant to the question before us, for the simple reason that they wrote the Constitution almost two and a half centuries ago. What would the Framers think of voter file purges, or regulations on carbon emissions, or the use of facial recognition by police? To even ask is preposterous. Yet conservatives claim to know what Madison and Jefferson would say — and by fortuitous coincidence, their seances with the Framers’ spirits always lead right to their preferred policy outcomes. Funny how that works. There are other variants of conservative judicial philosophy that are just as likely to demand conservative rulings. “Textualism” requires close readings of the Constitution and legislative texts — unless conservatives don’t like what the text says, at which point the text is discarded. They passionately oppose “judicial activism” and “legislating from the bench,” until the court considers laws they don’t like. The alternative to all this hogwash would be a little candor. If they wanted to be honest, Republicans could just say that they oppose Jackson because they’re hoping for Supreme Court rulings that advance conservative policy goals — striking down Roe v. Wade, limiting the federal government’s power to regulate, weakening voting rights, diminishing the ability of unions to organize workers — and she is unlikely to provide them. Instead, Republicans claim with a straight face that they’re deeply concerned that like other liberal court nominees she might be contaminated by policy preferences. This is after insisting the conservative nominees about whom they were so rapturous had no such preferences at all; the likes of Amy Coney Barrett or Brett M. Kavanaugh, they told us, were unsullied by politics, possessed only of an admirably neutral “philosophy.” When you hear them invoke the words “judicial philosophy,” that’s when you know the scam is afoot. By now, none of us should be foolish enough to fall for it.” And the Republican Senators will bend over backwards to try and “show” this more then qualified woman to sit on the Supreme Court is not. And they are going to be less then honest in their attempt to show she is not fit to be a Supreme Court Justice.
Because that didn't happen by the dems when they elected the last two justices.....
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Anita
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,727
Location: Kansas City -ish
Jun 27, 2014 2:38:58 GMT
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Post by Anita on Mar 22, 2022 16:01:39 GMT
Two things are going to happen today. Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation hearings start today. And the Republican Senators will bend over backwards to try and “show” this more then qualified woman to sit on the Supreme Court is not. And they are going to be less then honest in their attempt to show she is not fit to be a Supreme Court Justice. “Opinion: The two phoniest words you’ll hear during Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation”By Paul Waldman Over the multiple days of her confirmation hearings for a seat on the Supreme Court, Ketanji Brown Jackson will have to sit attentively for hours while the 22 members of the Senate Judiciary Committee speechify at her, testing both her endurance and her ability to refrain from rolling her eyes when the likes of Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) ascend the heights of inane demagoguery at her expense. Amid all that pontification, there’s a particular phrase you should watch out for that will likely be repeated dozens of times: “judicial philosophy.” The phrase should raise red flags because it’s a signal that the person using it is about to pull a fast one, either to claim they themselves believe something they really don’t, or to pretend that an attack they’re making on Jackson is far more high-minded than it actually is. “I want us to vet Judge Jackson’s judicial philosophy,” said Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), one of the many potential presidential aspirants who sits on the Judiciary Committee. “I don’t want us to attack her as a human.” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) claimed, “Judicial philosophy is a key qualification for the Supreme Court.” While noting that there are plenty of “smart lawyers” out there, McConnell argued that instead of applying laws neutrally, “some would rather start with liberal outcomes and reason backwards.” There you have it: The idea that a judge might have a conservative outcome they want to achieve isn’t even worthy of consideration; only liberals would be so crass. Conservatives, you see, have a judicial philosophy. This is comfortable terrain for Republicans because they know that dressing up policy preferences in a phony “philosophy” is a game only they usually play; liberals tend not to bother. Jackson herself was asked about this during her confirmation to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit; she replied, “I do not have a judicial philosophy per se, other than to apply the same method of thorough analysis to every case, regardless of the parties.” While liberals sometimes talk about the “living Constitution” — the idea that as society evolves, our understanding of the Constitution changes — they don’t pretend that it’s some kind of guidebook that tells you the “right” ruling in any given case. But that’s what conservatives claim to possess in their favored “philosophy,” originalism. They say that the original intent of the Framers should be paramount when deciding constitutional questions, and once that intent has been located, the answers to legal questions will reveal themselves, lit from within with the glowing light of divine wisdom. The truth is that the overwhelming majority of the time, the Framers’ intent is either impossible to discern or utterly irrelevant to the question before us, for the simple reason that they wrote the Constitution almost two and a half centuries ago. What would the Framers think of voter file purges, or regulations on carbon emissions, or the use of facial recognition by police? To even ask is preposterous. Yet conservatives claim to know what Madison and Jefferson would say — and by fortuitous coincidence, their seances with the Framers’ spirits always lead right to their preferred policy outcomes. Funny how that works. There are other variants of conservative judicial philosophy that are just as likely to demand conservative rulings. “Textualism” requires close readings of the Constitution and legislative texts — unless conservatives don’t like what the text says, at which point the text is discarded. They passionately oppose “judicial activism” and “legislating from the bench,” until the court considers laws they don’t like. The alternative to all this hogwash would be a little candor. If they wanted to be honest, Republicans could just say that they oppose Jackson because they’re hoping for Supreme Court rulings that advance conservative policy goals — striking down Roe v. Wade, limiting the federal government’s power to regulate, weakening voting rights, diminishing the ability of unions to organize workers — and she is unlikely to provide them. Instead, Republicans claim with a straight face that they’re deeply concerned that like other liberal court nominees she might be contaminated by policy preferences. This is after insisting the conservative nominees about whom they were so rapturous had no such preferences at all; the likes of Amy Coney Barrett or Brett M. Kavanaugh, they told us, were unsullied by politics, possessed only of an admirably neutral “philosophy.” When you hear them invoke the words “judicial philosophy,” that’s when you know the scam is afoot. By now, none of us should be foolish enough to fall for it.” And the Republican Senators will bend over backwards to try and “show” this more then qualified woman to sit on the Supreme Court is not. And they are going to be less then honest in their attempt to show she is not fit to be a Supreme Court Justice.
Because that didn't happen by the dems when they elected the last two justices..... Two words: Merrick Garland
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Post by iamkristinl16 on Mar 22, 2022 16:52:54 GMT
And the Republican Senators will bend over backwards to try and “show” this more then qualified woman to sit on the Supreme Court is not. And they are going to be less then honest in their attempt to show she is not fit to be a Supreme Court Justice.
Because that didn't happen by the dems when they elected the last two justices..... Two words: Merrick Garland Not to mention that there were legitimate concerns about both of them in regards to character, values, and their ability to be impartial and not bring their religion into their decisions.
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 16:58:21 GMT
Two things are going to happen today. Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation hearings start today. And the Republican Senators will bend over backwards to try and “show” this more then qualified woman to sit on the Supreme Court is not. And they are going to be less then honest in their attempt to show she is not fit to be a Supreme Court Justice. And the Republican Senators will bend over backwards to try and “show” this more then qualified woman to sit on the Supreme Court is not. And they are going to be less then honest in their attempt to show she is not fit to be a Supreme Court Justice.
Because that didn't happen by the dems when they elected the last two justices..... Let’s talk about the last two individuals that were put on the Supreme Court shall we. First we have Kavanaugh. Who never provided an answer to exactly where he got the money to pay these off just before his hearings started. The Democrats asked him once at a hearing and again by written question and he did not provide an answer. Now it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to understand the potential of Kavanaugh being blackmailed by whoever paid of this bills and mortgage especially since he refused to explain how it came about. A $92,000 country club balance, $200,000 in credit card debt, and $1,200,000 mortgage — all of which were mysteriously paid off for Brett Kavanaugh by an anonymous benefactor who’s never been identified.
Then there are his, as Ted Cruz labeled his behavior, as “teenage dating habits” when drunk he held women down and tried to have sex with them. The key phrase here is “he held women down” As to Cruz’s term for Kavanaugh’s behavior I wonder if Cruz would feel the same way if what Kavanaugh did to these women another “boy” did it to one of his two daughters? What do you think? And if I remember correctly Kavanaugh was insulted because he was asked about these issues. As far as Barrett goes she should never had been given a hearing or confirmed. The reason is because it went against the new “norm” set by McConnell during President Obama’s last year in office. What was McConnell said? Oh yea something about because there was a presidential election coming up that year the “people” should decide who the next Justice should be by who they elect as president. There was over 10 months until the election. 45 days from the 2020 election old McConnell broke a land speed record to have hearings and to get her confirmed. I don’t have a problem with any Senator asking legitimate questions, after all that’s their job. But that is not what the Republicans are doing. They are as one person pointed out “working hard for a perfect twenty second clip of owning the libs for Fox News”. And I’m pretty sure Lindsey Graham’s rant then leaving the hearing will get him an invite to be on Fox News sometime today. And maybe you can explain what this question has to do with anything.
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 17:12:20 GMT
All class. If you watch the video they cross out her initials and put in CRT.
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Mar 22, 2022 17:29:01 GMT
Does anyone have credible sources about all the negative comments about Judge Michelle Childs that Graham was quoting?
I know initially the 'lawyers' here said the top three were very accomplished candidates.
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 17:35:13 GMT
Paul Waldman’s opinion column in the Washington Post…
“Opinion: Republicans make Ketanji Brown Jackson’s hearing all about their own victimhood”
By Paul Waldman Columnist
“Republicans know they can’t stop Ketanji Brown Jackson from being confirmed to the Supreme Court. Since they don’t hold a majority in the Senate, they cannot simply refuse to allow her nomination to be considered. Given her sterling record and lack of disqualifying misconduct, they won’t be able to turn any Democrats against her.
What they can do is use her confirmation hearings for other political purposes, as both parties always do in these situations. Some Republicans have chosen to do so with bad-faith attacks on Jackson; Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), in an apparent attempt to secure the QAnon vote when he runs for president, tore a few sentences in previous rulings and writings out of context to make the repulsive accusation that she is “soft” on child porn.
But so far, their clearest focus has been on their own victimization. You may be under the hot lights and being cross-examined, they are telling Jackson, but we are the real victims here.
You can see it in the multiple times senators have brought up prior judicial nominees who were either deprived of their supposedly deserved place on the high court or mistreated by cruel Democrats before taking their seats. The average voter may not recognize all the names in the GOP’s parade of decades-old judicial martyrs (Miguel Estrada, Janice Rogers Brown), but the activist base knows them, if only as victims of some long-ago Democratic treachery.
It all culminates with Brett Kavanaugh, the victim to beat all victims, his name invoked again and again. How can the poor Supreme Court justice even bear to get out of bed in the morning, knowing only that he’s a hero to his party and will be making the country’s laws for the next thirty years or so? What a nightmare it must be for him.
So GOP senators repeated again and again that they would never abuse Judge Jackson the way Kavanaugh was treated. “You’re the beneficiary of Republican nominees having their lives turned upside down,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told her, adding that “Most of us couldn’t go back to our offices during Kavanaugh without getting spit on.”
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) agreed, telling Jackson that “No one is going to inquire into your teenage dating habits,” though “dating habits” is an interesting way to refer to what Kavanaugh was accused of. “We won’t get down in the gutter like Democrats did during the Kavanaugh confirmation hearings,” said Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa).
To all this umbrage, one might respond, “Let us know when Judge Jackson is credibly accused of sexual assault.” But this has nothing to do with her. The point is that Republicans know the sense of victimhood ties their entire movement together, and the more it is nurtured, the greater their chances of keeping that movement mobilized in November’s midterm elections, the 2024 presidential campaign, and everything that happens between and beyond.
So of course this has become yet another forum for Republicans to claim victim status, given the absolutely central place this occupies in their political project.
As conservatives have learned well in recent years, in the right circumstances, adopting the stance of victimhood can be thrilling, particularly if you don’t have to suffer any actual victimization along the way. You can take the normal unpleasantness that comes with politics — having people disagree with you, or watching as a figure you admire gets criticized in ways you consider unfair — and turn it into something noble, profound, even epic.
Are people calling me a jerk for something repugnant I said? I’m not a jerk, I’m a victim of cancel culture, persecuted for my devotion to free expression! Are people opposing my legislation to ban books and target the families of transgender kids? I’m a victim of the woke mob! Proclaim yourself a victim and not only do you become the hero of the story, you can claim moral absolution for your own grimy choices.
And of course, no one claims to be a victim more than the leader of the Republican Party, Donald Trump, who seems to whine endlessly about everyone who has done him wrong, whether it’s the media that doesn’t give him sufficient adulation, the dozens of women who have accused him of sexual misconduct, the prosecutors who investigate him for possible crimes, or the electorate that denied him a second term.
In his 2016 campaign, Trump taught all Republicans the power of the victimization narrative. He told voters they were the victims of a “rigged” system, of immigrants, of outsiders, of racial minorities, of “elites.” Your hate and resentment is not ugly and shameful, he said; you’ve earned it by the injustices visited upon you. Be proud of it, wield it like a weapon, and know that you’re in the right.
So Judge Jackson will have to suffer through a few more sessions of Republicans beating their breasts about the terrible trials they have endured, with the gripping tale of Kavanaugh, that modern-day Job, told again and again.
Throughout, Republicans will congratulate themselves for how graciously they are conducting themselves. Even though the most gracious person in the room is the nominee sitting in front of them, patiently listening to all their nonsense.”
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Post by Merge on Mar 22, 2022 18:44:39 GMT
Republicans have nothing to run on but fake victimhood and grievance. No ideas, no suggestions to move the country forward. Just no rights for people their religion doesn't like and make sure the rich stay rich.
I saw in another article that John Cornyn apparently decided Ted Cruz should no longer be the biggest asshole in Texas, and laid out a really offensive line of questioning re: the Obergefell decision. Sounds to me like he and Graham are ramping up their presidential bids.
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 19:08:24 GMT
Well said.,
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 19:16:48 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 19:17:45 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 19:20:45 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 19:22:32 GMT
Here we have the Republicans living up to their reputation as assholes.
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Post by aj2hall on Mar 22, 2022 20:17:28 GMT
great opinion on the hearings and the ridiculousness of some of the Republican questions. Not to mention some questionable ethics by sitting justices. You can read the article at the link without a subscription. wapo.st/351lGHwOpinion: If only Ketanji Brown Jackson had a chance to answer these questions By Jennifer Rubin Ketanji Brown Jackson, in her confirmation hearings to be a Supreme Court justice this week, has so far provided moving statements about her personal life and detailed insight into her commitment to the rule of law. She has also batted down allegations from Republicans that she coddled child porn defendants as a federal judge. At times, she sounded far more devoted to judicial restraint than the Supreme Court’s right-wing justices. It’s clear Republicans have no legitimate reason to oppose her, as evidenced by the bizarre line of questioning from Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) on Tuesday concerning his notion that previous nominees were mistreated and whining about the recidivism rate of released enemy combatants. If only Jackson had a chance to answer these questions: If your husband had attended the rally in D.C. ahead of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, would you feel obliged to recuse yourself from cases related to what transpired that day? When right-wing justices proclaim, for example, that a “fetus has an interest in having a life," do you think they understand that they are improperly substituting their own religious views for constitutional analysis? Is it appropriate for a president to pick nominees from a preapproved list of candidates created by a group with a partisan agenda and whose funding sources are hidden? Shouldn’t people have to disclose whether they have contributed to groups that provide such a list to a president? Should justices own individual stocks? Why is it a problem to have a federal judiciary heavily dominated by former prosecutors? Why do you think the six-person majority of justices nominated by Republican presidents almost always wind up on the side of Republicans when it comes to cases on abortion, guns, federal regulation, etc.? Is the notion of “originalism” a way to minimize the rights of those excluded by the Framers (e.g., women)? Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. in Shelby County v. Holder opined that preclearance under the Voting Rights Act was no longer necessary since voting discrimination was a thing of the past. Was he wrong, considering the spate of legislation designed to minimize voting access for minorities? Do you think justices should stop giving speeches in partisan settings and whining about being labeled “partisan hacks”? In his majority opinion in Brnovich v. DNC, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. came up with “guideposts” for applying Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act that do not appear in the statute and in some instances contradict the express purpose of the statute. How is this not egregious judicial activism? If a justice previously signed on to an ad for an extreme anti-abortion group, should she recuse herself from abortion cases? When critics accuse you of being the beneficiary of “affirmative action,” what does it tell you about their views on race? If a Supreme Court nominee is credibly accused of sexual misconduct, doesn’t the Senate have an obligation to investigate? Don’t the partisan histrionics of this committee lend credence to the perception the court is simply a bunch of partisans in robes?
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 21:52:53 GMT
I had read that if Roe v Wade is overturned next on the Republicans hit list would be gay marriage.
And he’s right in that gay marriage hasn’t taken away anyone’s rights
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 22:24:41 GMT
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Mar 22, 2022 23:00:27 GMT
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Mar 22, 2022 23:05:35 GMT
I just posted on the today's thread Sen Braun is talking overturning Loving v Virginia.
According to The Times of Northwest Indiana, Sen. Mike Braun (R-IN) told reporters in a conference call that he would support the Supreme Court overturning the 1967 Loving v. Virginia decision, which struck down state bans on interracial marriage.
Braun admitted there are many Supreme Court decisions he believes improperly established federal rights that would be better handled on a state-by-state basis, including Loving v. Virginia that legalized interracial marriage, and Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) establishing a right to privacy concerning contraceptive use."
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 23:09:51 GMT
😀
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 23, 2024 14:03:20 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Mar 22, 2022 23:14:47 GMT
And he’s right in that gay marriage hasn’t taken away anyone’s rights Wrong. It's taken away white heterosexual Christians' rights to jam their beliefs down everyone else's throats. That's their favorite right. According to The Times of Northwest Indiana, Sen. Mike Braun (R-IN) told reporters in a conference call that he would support the Supreme Court overturning the 1967 Loving v. Virginia decision, which struck down state bans on interracial marriage. No Sh#($. Anything they can do to drag this country back to its shameful past, they will do.
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 23:17:53 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 22, 2022 23:23:25 GMT
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Post by aj2hall on Mar 23, 2022 1:33:19 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 23, 2022 1:57:22 GMT
It would be nice if people would quit cherry picking or deliberately misrepresent what someone said or wrote.
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 23, 2022 2:12:03 GMT
What in heaven’s name does this have to do with anything?
He’s right, one should listen to the video and her thought process…
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Post by onelasttime on Mar 23, 2022 3:13:23 GMT
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