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I was picturing a closed barn door from what little was visible above the paywall.Or you can link to Mary Trump's blog.
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He certainly has that any press is good press Hollywood relevance routine down pat.
I take solice in the realization that, as more voters become better informed on DJT, the bigger he loses.I don’t even have words for how fucking awful that nazi rally was in NYC. How is this happening?
That GIF says much with few words. Thank you, I'm borrowing and will return it after VT day (Victory over Trump).
I think I prefer this oneThat GIF says much with few words. Thank you, I'm borrowing and will return it after VT day (Victory over Trump).
California is not a swing state. Swing states are states that could go Democratic or Republican -- California is pretty solidly Democratic, despite those suppurating pustules of redneck malice that are the Central Valley (where I grew up), Orange County, and parts of San Diego.I don't vote and have explained why ad-nauseum. I don't know what a swing state is. I don't know if Cali is a swing state.

Wildly speculating here, (and not that it matters in any way other than possible malign setup for him to show his 'huge' crowd, because the hate and racism is still the hate and racism), but seriously, is anyone checking what proportion of that sickly supremacist crowd was in reality from New York?
Is it possible that they've engineered some nefarious cheating vote mechanism behind the scenes that makes them certain of a win? Thankfully that would not seem feasible to work in reality, but I don't put anything past this bunch.This is somewhat unnerving
It is particularly so because, as a British commentator I follow remarked today, Trump and the Republicans aren't behaving like a campaign that thinks it's going to win. If you think you're winning, you don't tell your supporters that it's in the bag. On the contrary, you tell them that it's neck and neck, and they've got to make every effort to get to polls and to encourage others to vote, because otherwise you risk their feeling comfortable with staying and home and not bothering to turn out.
In our recent general election, where Labour clearly was going to flatten the Conservatives, it's thought this effect cost Labour 10 or so seats, precisely because, no matter how much they warned people that it was neck and neck, it clearly wasn't, so people who weren't particularly enthused about Keir Starmer's Labour felt safe either not voting or voting Green or Independent, since everyone knew the result was a foregone conclusion.
Trump and his minions, however, are telling people it's all over bar the shouting and are getting into the minutiae of whom they're going to appoint to what role.
It strengthens my fear that they've given up on the ballot box and, instead, when they don't, in fact, win by a landslide, their supporters are all the more fired up to believe it was all rigged, and all the more prepared to lynch Mike Johnson if he doesn't go along with whatever electoral and constitutional shenanigans Trump's lawyers have planned this time round.
This was the substance of my laughing fit this morning. NOW you f*ers wake up and smell the coffee!? NOW!?!?Trump: Blathers racist rhetoric and commits overtly racist acts for decades, then holds a rally in NYC an hour-and-a-half before the election.
Press: HOLY SHIT! STOP THE PRESSES! THIS GUY MIGHT BE KINDA RACIST!![]()
Huh, weird. I'm using stock Chrome on my phone. Anyways, Free's link covers it pretty well.There was a paywall for me.
Trump sounds like he and his minions in Congress are again planning to block the House from certifying the election and passing the vote back to the state legislatures.This is somewhat unnerving
It is particularly so because, as a British commentator I follow remarked today, Trump and the Republicans aren't behaving like a campaign that thinks it's going to win. If you think you're winning, you don't tell your supporters that it's in the bag. On the contrary, you tell them that it's neck and neck, and they've got to make every effort to get to polls and to encourage others to vote, because otherwise you risk their feeling comfortable with staying and home and not bothering to turn out.
In our recent general election, where Labour clearly was going to flatten the Conservatives, it's thought this effect cost Labour 10 or so seats, precisely because, no matter how much they warned people that it was neck and neck, it clearly wasn't, so people who weren't particularly enthused about Keir Starmer's Labour felt safe either not voting or voting Green or Independent, since everyone knew the result was a foregone conclusion.
Trump and his minions, however, are telling people it's all over bar the shouting and are getting into the minutiae of whom they're going to appoint to what role.
It strengthens my fear that they've given up on the ballot box and, instead, when they don't, in fact, win by a landslide, their supporters are all the more fired up to believe it was all rigged, and all the more prepared to lynch Mike Johnson if he doesn't go along with whatever electoral and constitutional shenanigans Trump's lawyers have planned this time round.