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i listened to the new Wu-Tang album last week and a line on one of the first tracks: "My price hiking like the pills Martin Shkreli sell"malchior wrote: Fri Dec 01, 2017 12:29 pm A little levity on such a fun day - remember Wu Tang Ain't Nothing to Fuk wit! And we will all be owners shortly hopefully!
https://twitter.com/davidmackau/status/ ... 3841619968
As chairman of the House Select Committee on Benghazi, Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.) used $150,000 in taxpayer dollars to settle with a former aide who alleged he was fired in part because he was not willing to focus his investigative work on Hillary Clinton.
The Post confirmed the confidential settlement reached between Gowdy and the Benghazi panel and Bradley Podliska after it appeared in a list of settlements released Friday by the congressional Office of Compliance. Gowdy is now the chairman of the House Oversight Committee.
I'm sure we will be seing a lot of mea culpas today, right?Sepiche wrote: Fri Dec 01, 2017 10:00 pm You don't say...
Gowdy, Benghazi panel settled wrongful firing suit with $150,000 in public funds
As chairman of the House Select Committee on Benghazi, Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.) used $150,000 in taxpayer dollars to settle with a former aide who alleged he was fired in part because he was not willing to focus his investigative work on Hillary Clinton.
The Post confirmed the confidential settlement reached between Gowdy and the Benghazi panel and Bradley Podliska after it appeared in a list of settlements released Friday by the congressional Office of Compliance. Gowdy is now the chairman of the House Oversight Committee.
Wait, what happened to "I believe the women" and the promise of an immediate ethics inquiry?Smoove_B wrote: Sun Dec 03, 2017 2:32 pm Not surprisingly, now that human shaped pile of excrement Mitch McConnell has pushed his agenda through the Senate, he's perfectly content to slink back into the shadows and "let the people of Alabama decide" whether or not Moore should be their representative.
Apparently they were tightly wound.Holman wrote: Sun Dec 03, 2017 5:06 pmWait, what happened to "I believe the women" and the promise of an immediate ethics inquiry?Smoove_B wrote: Sun Dec 03, 2017 2:32 pm Not surprisingly, now that human shaped pile of excrement Mitch McConnell has pushed his agenda through the Senate, he's perfectly content to slink back into the shadows and "let the people of Alabama decide" whether or not Moore should be their representative.
Maybe Trump's plans have something to do with it?Holman wrote: Sun Dec 03, 2017 5:06 pmWait, what happened to "I believe the women" and the promise of an immediate ethics inquiry?
Less than a week after making clear that he would not go to Alabama to campaign for embattled Senate nominee Roy Moore, President Donald Trump is doing the next best thing: He's going to Pensacola, Florida, to hold a campaign event next Friday -- just four days before the December 12 special election.
Pensacola -- for you amateur geographers out there -- is 25 miles from the Alabama border. It's closer to the capital of Alabama (164 miles to Montgomery) than it is to the capital of Florida (196 miles to Tallahassee). And the Pensacola-Mobile media market reaches more than 15% of the state.
Is there a difference anymore?
A solid analysis; there is a lot to be dismayed about in there.El Guapo wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2017 11:02 am Lots Of Alabama Voters Care About Roy Moore’s Scandals. But it might not be enough to stop him from winning.
“I think not having the estate tax recognizes the people that are investing, as opposed to those that are just spending every penny they have, whether it’s on booze or women or movies,”
Guilty as charged! Though in my case, the women in question are my wife and daughter. And I'd have to throw "video games" in there as well.LordMortis wrote:just spending every penny they have, whether it’s on booze or women or movies
And don't forget the 311,000 bottles of whiskey that you purchased this year.YellowKing wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2017 4:50 pmGuilty as charged! Though in my case, the women in question are my wife and daughter. And I'd have to throw "video games" in there as well.LordMortis wrote:just spending every penny they have, whether it’s on booze or women or movies
Holy shit.El Guapo wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2017 4:51 pmAnd don't forget the 311,000 bottles of whiskey that you purchased this year.YellowKing wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2017 4:50 pmGuilty as charged! Though in my case, the women in question are my wife and daughter. And I'd have to throw "video games" in there as well.LordMortis wrote:just spending every penny they have, whether it’s on booze or women or movies
Now that piece is top-notch quality trolling or as it used to be known satire.El Guapo wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2017 4:51 pmAnd don't forget the 311,000 bottles of whiskey that you purchased this year.YellowKing wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2017 4:50 pmGuilty as charged! Though in my case, the women in question are my wife and daughter. And I'd have to throw "video games" in there as well.LordMortis wrote:just spending every penny they have, whether it’s on booze or women or movies
Or Health Care...YellowKing wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2017 4:50 pmGuilty as charged! Though in my case, the women in question are my wife and daughter. And I'd have to throw "video games" in there as well.LordMortis wrote:just spending every penny they have, whether it’s on booze or women or movies
If they decide to go another way, they should at least do a mockup and drop it off at the whitehouse before publishing the real one.
I honestly don't know how people can wholeheartedly support any of this without being deeply ashamed. It's such baldfaced awfulness I do not understand the mental gymnastics those people must go through to sleep at night.Holman wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2017 10:52 pm Following Trump's endorsement, the RNC has reinstated its support for Moore's campaign.
Journalists are pointing out that not a single GOP senator has spoken up in response to the endorsement or to this.
...
Once upon a time I was a Republican supporter, by the way. I really was.
I'm glad it was decades ago. I'd be ashamed otherwise.
Particularly when you consider the GOP has represented themselves in the recent past as the party of "family values". That they were fixated on the "sanctity of marriage" and keeping transgendered individuals out bathrooms to protect the children. Honestly, when you string it all together, full support of Roy Moore makes complete sense.gbasden wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2017 11:13 pmI honestly don't know how people can wholeheartedly support any of this without being deeply ashamed. It's such baldfaced awfulness I do not understand the mental gymnastics those people must go through to sleep at night.
It's not a popularity contest. If Drumpf wasn't bucking for it so hard, he'd easily be person of the year. His mistake would be in thinking it was because he was just so darn good at everything, damn it.Daehawk wrote: Mon Dec 04, 2017 11:36 pm Time PotY only choice is Bezos. The rest are either not people or crap. But seriously Un?? WTF Time!?
{Written by a Republican and published in Forbes, btw.}Republican Roy Moore, removed from the Alabama Supreme Court for his erratic behavior and banned from the mall for harassing teenage girls, has cloaked his campaign for the Senate in the language of “spiritual warfare.” As such, he is the most apt representative of the Republican Party in our age of cult politics. Moore is pitching himself as God’s candidate and his voters are slopping it up like poisoned applesauce. The party of “family values” is about to send a known sexual predator to the Senate because God wants them to. This would be startling, except they already used the same reasoning to put a known sexual predator in the White House.
The same magical reasoning infects Republicans tax reform plans. We are in the eighth year of continuous job growth, the eighth year of economic expansion, and the eighth year of a head-spinning stock market boom. Corporate profits are at record levels and the economy has been redlining at full-employment for almost three years. By any marginally credible economic reasoning, this would be an ideal moment to raise taxes, curb debt, make investments in public infrastructure, and just generally do the things one does at the peak of a long economic expansion.
At this moment, why are Republicans trying to slash taxes for the wealthy? Why would someone castrate themselves and commit suicide? Because that’s what the cult demands.
Not for lack of trying, I'm sure. There are just only so many hours in the day, miles a man can travel, and opportunities to exploit.Holman wrote: Tue Dec 05, 2017 10:39 am"Let's remember that there are literally millions of teens that Judge Moore *hasn't* molested."
A trick learned from the women of SNL stating that Al Franken didn't grope them.pr0ner wrote: Tue Dec 05, 2017 10:21 am Hey everyone, Roy Moore did nothing wrong because there's a group of non-accusers out there!
What, leaving the Clinton angle for rip? Or perhaps not wanting to go with Phylicia Rashad's defense of Cosby? It's not a new phenomenon, and it's not a political phenomenon, either.