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UnevenEdge

1pooh4u

1pooh4u
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Everything posted by 1pooh4u

  1. “Sawdsy Assists Sponges in Ruining Everything” is such a long title 😬😆
  2. Well, it’s called “Sponges Ruins Everything” from now on 😬😆
  3. I don’t think Sesshomuru legally adopted Rin. He frequently left her for months on end with some green goblin looking thing. But whatever, I like the woody Allen question so fuck it. Yes. Sesshomaru pulled a Woody Allen, only worse cuz it’s got hints of beastiality in there. damn. Anime is fuckin weird and a little gross. This one is anyway. Fuckin sponges needs to take over that show. You know the one. The dude that ruins everything. Sponges is perfect for it 😆
  4. 😬 why you gotta out it that way 😬 it’s not wrong, but still it’s just weird that he raised Rin and had a kid with her. Does not mean she was still a kid when he did.
  5. A lot of times I accuse you of hyperbole, but in this instance I think you’re being realistic. A lot of the civilians involved seem to be getting hit with the lesser charges, and it seems no politicians will be held accountable at all. No one is getting in trouble for their tweets prior to the 6th, tours given the day before, or the live tweets of certain people’s locations during the siege. Getting away with any of these things is a recipe for disaster. They can just be more organized next time. The National guard and high security won’t be in DC forever. It’s a huge mistake this bullshit notion that the electors has to be objected to because the people needed to be heard, but somehow that does not apply to convicting a former President of sedition. Do they really want us to buy this “Trump is a private citizen now we don’t have jurisdiction” shit they’re trying to peddle. That the only way to move forward and unite as a nation is by holding no one accountable? Everyone gets a mulligan?
  6. So a second DC capitol riot responding cop has killed themselves and I can’t help but be enraged that the “law and order/blue lives matter” people don’t, and won’t hold Trump responsible for any of it. People thinking this won’t happen again are dead wrong. It’s becoming more likely to happen again as we see there won’t be much accountability for it. No one learned anything from any of this other than to not piss off Trump’s base because you need them, and you want them to remain republicans
  7. “Human smuggling” so he was directly involved in the activities that the proud boys say democrats are involved in? ***Well color me shocked!😮 *** indicates exclamation said in sarcasm
  8. It would be kinda cool if the left was just as fuckin crazy as the right (they are, just not in the same numbers as the right) McConnell purposely waited until the inauguration so they can use Trump not being in office anymore as an excuse to not convict. I would love to see the left storm the Capitol and pull McConnell out of the senate by his hair. Republicans are so disgustingly slimy and crooked that they would rather risk Trump running again and being successful next time (with his sedition) than risk losing voters by doing the right thing. I want legislation written right now, that will apply to Trump, and take his special perks away. This man is entitled to daily briefings, he should not have access to any of that.
  9. He looks like one broke inside him 😬😆
  10. Brazilian Big Bird MIGHT need rehab 😬
  11. In 4 days it lost all its context?
  12. Where’s the smart joke? 💩
  13. Your idol is a piece of shit. Congratulations
  14. Fuck Tom Brady. Not only is he a Trump supporter. He’s a big bag of dicks. Terrible person.
  15. True and pathetic 💩 (From NFL memes) Patriots fans be like....
  16. March 5-11 various Qanon suicides when all their bullshit comes crashing down.
  17. He is. Brady can’t fuck with the younglings in post game play.
  18. Mahomes is gonna beat Brady’s dick into the ground come super bowl.
  19. I’m so done with Brady and the nfl. Horrible officiating. They let them play, which is great, but suddenly when it looked like GB could do it all sorts of calls were made against GB. Including a replay after the fact to call 12 men on the field. Totally bullshit.
  20. I keep switching my pick for the 6:30 game. Fuckin can’t decide 💩
  21. This is definitely starting to look worse than we thought. They were going to gas members of Congress regardless of who they were. The ones telling them where to go could’ve been Reps hiding in that very room not caring if they died too. Martyrs for their cause, maybe? Maybe they thought they’d be rescued? Idk, I don’t wanna say it possibly sounds like the same behaviors as suicide bombers, but yeah kinda feels similar?
  22. Our military is getting radicalized by having nothing but Fox News blasting at them 24/7. That 1 in 5 of the rioters were military affiliated, while one 7% of Americans serve in the military is really something. How are we different than any other fundamentalist country. I’ll tell you....we aren’t. ☹️
  23. https://www.facebook.com/241446929332714/posts/january-22-2021-fridayfor-all-that-the-news-has-gotten-much-calmer-and-more-stra/2578923498918367/ and still we are finding out it just gets worse and worse analysis from Heather Cox Richardson: January 22, 2021 (Friday) For all that the news has gotten much calmer and more straightforward since Wednesday, we did indeed get an old-fashioned (or at least a past-administration typical) news dump tonight. It turns out that, in the last, desperate days of his attempt to keep his grip on the presidency, Trump plotted with a lawyer in the Department of Justice, Jeffrey Clark, to oust the acting attorney general. The plan was to replace Jeffrey A. Rosen, who replaced Attorney General William Barr when he left on December 23, with Clark himself. Clark would then press Trump’s attacks on the election results. A story by Katie Benner in the New York Times explains that as soon as Rosen replaced Barr, Trump began to pressure Rosen to challenge the election results, appoint special counsels to investigate disproven voter fraud, and look into irregularities in the Dominion voting machines (Dominion is now suing pro-Trump lawyer Sidney Powell for defamation). Rosen refused. He told Trump the Justice Department had found no evidence of anything that would have changed the election results. Trump complained about Rosen and moved to replace him with Clark, who promised to stop Congress from counting the certified Electoral College votes on January 6. This struggle came to a crisis on Sunday, January 3, 2021, when the news broke that Trump had called Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to pressure him to “find” the votes Trump needed to win the state. That evening, the senior officials at the Department of Justice agreed to resign as a group if Trump put Clark in as the new acting attorney general. The vow that the leaders of the Department of Justice would quit if Trump tried to demote Rosen and put Clark in his place made Trump back off from his plan to pervert the Department of Justice. Three days later, rioters stormed the Capitol. In addition to this bombshell story, there is more news about the Capitol attack. Court documents filed on Tuesday reveal that some of the rioters had made plans ahead of time to attack the Capitol, and had planned to “arrest” lawmakers on charges of “treason” and “election fraud.” An investigation by NPR reveals that nearly 1 in 5 of the rioters charged so far have a history of serving in the military (only about 7% of Americans in general are military veterans). Prosecutors have indicated they are planning to bring charges of seditious conspiracy against some of the suspects, charges that, if proven, bring up to 20-year jail terms. President Biden has asked new Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines to assess the dangers of domestic violent extremism. Press Secretary Jen Psaki today said of the effort: "We are committed to developing policies and strategies based on facts, on objective and rigorous analysis and on our respect for constitutionally protected free speech and political activities." Congress today set the calendar for the impeachment trial of the former president for incitement of insurrection. The House will formally deliver the article of impeachment to the Senate on Monday evening. The senators will be sworn in as jurors on Tuesday, and then the Senate will turn to confirming Biden’s nominees and considering the coronavirus stimulus package Biden wants while Trump’s lawyers and the House impeachment managers prepare their briefs and arguments. The trial will begin February 9, and is expected to be shorter than Trump’s first impeachment trial, since the charges are simpler and the evidence clearer. At stake in this impeachment trial is more than the fate of Donald Trump, who is, after all, no longer president. At stake is, in part, the fate of the Republican Party. A number of Republicans who themselves egged on the rioters by claiming to distrust the election results are trying to discredit the trial and say it is pointless. This wing of the party is led by former chair of the Judiciary Committee Lindsey Graham, who is especially eager to have the issue go away since one of its charges reflects on him. The article of impeachment notes that Trump had tried “to subvert and obstruct the certification of the results of the 2020 Presidential election” with, among other things, “a phone call on January 2, 2021, during which President Trump urged the secretary of state of Georgia, Brad Raffensperger, to ‘find’ enough votes to overturn the Georgia Presidential election results and threatened Secretary Raffensperger if he failed to do so.” We know about that phone call because Raffensperger recorded it, and Raffensperger said he did so because Lindsey Graham had made a similar call. Raffensperger said he wanted some insurance in case Trump misrepresented his call as Graham had. As pro-Trump Republicans are defending the former president and downplaying the attempted coup, along with their own role in the discrediting of Biden’s victory, other party members would very much like to see the party purged of the Trump element. With his speech condemning Trump for feeding lies to the rioters and provoking them, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) seems to be trying to lead his party away from the Trump personality cult. Meanwhile, the Senate still has not begun to organize since McConnell is insisting on a promise from Democrats that they will not end the filibuster. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) says that proposal is unacceptable. Press Secretary Psaki reiterated today that Biden’s position on the filibuster hasn’t changed; he does not want to end it. But she tied that declaration to his desire to get a coronavirus relief package through Congress on a bipartisan basis. There is a carrot and a stick in that statement: the carrot is that Biden is offering to share the credit for such a package with Republicans; the stick is that if they block such a measure entirely, Biden will likely back whatever Schumer does to get a bill through. There are two places where lawmakers have agreed lately, though. Last night, the leadership of the Capitol Police abruptly moved National Guard soldiers to a garage for their break time. These troops are deployed to protect Washington, D.C., against domestic insurrectionists and have worked grueling hours. When news of the soldiers lying down in parking spaces reached lawmakers of both parties, they rushed to get the service members back indoors. This morning, First Lady Dr. Jill Biden visited the troops bearing chocolate chip cookies. This move was reminiscent of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt’s 1933 visit to the Bonus Marchers after the Herbert Hoover administration had tried to destroy their encampment with troops. Dr. Biden thanked the soldiers and recalled her son Beau’s time with the Delaware Army National Guard in Iraq. “The National Guard always holds a special place in the hearts of all the Bidens,” she told them. Dr. Biden’s visit was an important indicator of the tenor of this White House. In another bipartisan move, lawmakers of both parties have introduced measures in both houses of Congress to award Officer Eugene Goodman a Congressional Gold Medal. Goodman is the Capitol Police officer who led rioters away from the Senate chamber on January 6 and thus bought enough time for the senators there to escape to safety. The Congressional Gold Medal is one of the two highest civilian awards in the United States. In our history, only 163 of them have been cast. The Senate bill reads: “By putting his own life on the line and successfully, singlehandedly leading insurrectionists away from the floor of the Senate Chamber, Officer Eugene Goodman performed his duty to protect the Congress with distinction, and by his actions Officer Goodman left an indelible mark on American history.”
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