The issue imo is that you kinda like Zelda but went and bought Dark Souls.
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Honestly, how do you survive the Mueller obstruction case, make the prosecution lose face, get a whole treasure trove of witch-hunt talking points for the next election, and then proceed to immediately fuck it up by doing all this stuff? How dumb do you have to be?
Quote from: Crash Dummy on September 30, 2019, 03:49:32 PMi think they also got a refund of whatever tariffs they paid before too well clearly someone can't stop winning
i think they also got a refund of whatever tariffs they paid before too
No matter the outcome of Ukrainegate, I think it just further proves that there’s only been one perfect phone call in the history of the White House, and that is LBJ ordering some Haggar pants.
The $25.3 million taken in by the Vermont independent marks the biggest fundraising quarter for a Democratic presidential hopeful so far in the election. It tops the $18 million Sanders raised in the second quarter. His campaign has touted its ability to raise large sums from small individual donations rather than big-dollar fundraisers.The campaign did not say how much cash it had on hand at the end of September. It entered July with $27.3 million on hand — the most among Democratic candidates — setting Sanders up for a potentially long run in the primary
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1178989254309011456Sad.
Quote from: OnlyRegret on September 30, 2019, 04:17:05 PMQuote from: Crash Dummy on September 30, 2019, 03:49:32 PMi think they also got a refund of whatever tariffs they paid before too well clearly someone can't stop winningshows where actual power is right? similarly, when france was proposing a digital services tax, amazon flat out said it would pass on any cost this resulted in to its french trading partners
According to the campaign, "teacher" was the most common occupation listed for a person donating to Sanders in the third quarter. The three most common employers were Starbucks, Amazon and Walmart.
Support for Trump impeachment surges 9 points in new pollSupport for impeaching President Trump and removing him from office has surged by 9 points in the latest Monmouth University national poll, driven by a double-digit spike in support among independent voters.The new survey finds that 44 percent of voters believe that Trump should be impeached and removed, against 52 percent who disagree.The previous survey from August found only 35 percent support for impeachment and removal, marking a 9-point month-over-month gain....
What the link actually goes to:QuoteSupport for Trump impeachment surges 9 points in new pollSupport for impeaching President Trump and removing him from office has surged by 9 points in the latest Monmouth University national poll, driven by a double-digit spike in support among independent voters.The new survey finds that 44 percent of voters believe that Trump should be impeached and removed, against 52 percent who disagree.The previous survey from August found only 35 percent support for impeachment and removal, marking a 9-point month-over-month gain....Then somewhere further down, it goes into Biden. What's the deal?
The new survey finds that 44 percent of voters believe that Trump should be impeached and removed, against 52 percent who disagree.
Breh, do you really want to taunt Obama's drones
Even Clinton is back for the Trump re-election campaign https://twitter.com/colbertlateshow/status/1178824027688853504
Quote from: Nintex on October 01, 2019, 04:18:41 PMEven Clinton is back for the Trump re-election campaign https://twitter.com/colbertlateshow/status/1178824027688853504holy shit, go away.spoiler (click to show/hide)That was for clinton not nintex[close]
What did Obama raise in Q3 2011?That is the proper comparison.
Seriously though, who are these people who support Biden still?
Maddow’s typical fan has been branded (by Kat Stoeffel in The New York Times) as the “MSNBC Mom,” a woman who feels that the election has radicalized her; even if she has not moved to the left politically, her liberal sympathies and news consumption have swelled into a suddenly central part of her identity. (The network has monetized this lightly condescending label with a set of MSNBC Mom tote bags and latte mugs.) Molly Jong-Fast, a former novelist who once described her pre-Trump self as “completely selfish and disinterested in politics” and who is now a liberal Twitter influencer and columnist for the Never Trump site The Bulwark, told me that Maddow “made wonkiness cool.”
On TV, Maddow appears in slim black blazers over black shirts. She wears smoky eye shadow and subtly glossy lipstick, and her short hair is swept elegantly away from her forehead. The only tell that her business-casual femininity is a mirage created for television is that she has not modified her look for 11 years. It is a uniform she selected for work and steps into every day, so that she never has to make an aesthetic choice that can be picked apart by the commentariat and elevated above what she has to say. When the show is over, she wipes off her makeup, removes her contacts and changes into her civilian clothing.When I picked her up from rehab, she wore glasses, a denim shirt and jeans, and a vintage belt buckle engraved with the words “Texas Nuclear,” signaling one of her obsessions: This month, she publishes her second book, “Blowout,” about the political impact of the oil-and-gas industry. She has described herself as “a cross between the jock and the antisocial girl who bit people” in a John Hughes film, and it tracks: She could be the love child of Ally Sheedy and Emilio Estevez.
She leaned familiarly toward the lens and put a bright spin on the latest Trump scandal that was swiftly coming into view. “You will always be able to look back at this time in your life and say: ‘You know, I was alive during that presidency. I remember how crazy it was,’ ” she said. Then she segued into her signature move: a 25-minute soliloquy on the convoluted schemes swirling around the Trump-Ukraine incident, burrowing into a dense network of connections among Paul Manafort, Senator Mitch McConnell, Rudy Giuliani, the Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, the Ukrainian natural-gas billionaire Dmitry V. Firtash and the former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych. By the time she cut to her first commercial break, she had zoomed out so far that Trump’s July 25 phone call with the president of Ukraine appeared to be just one little pushpin on a map of vast global corruption.If Fox News’s biggest star, Sean Hannity, specializes in angry rants, magnifying internet conspiracy theories and coordinating with Trump, Maddow deals in high-toned if sometimes exasperated argumentation. Her mode is sunny rationalism and bemused exuberance — she is a former Rhodes scholar parsing a chaotic world. On her show, the news is “weird,” “nuts,” “absolutely bonkers” and “a clown car full of crazy.”
Appealing to those viewers means flattering their sense of intellectualism. Maddow’s is the rare television news show that requires an active listener. It feels participatory. When Robert Mueller submitted his special-counsel report on the Russia investigation in March, she said that “our job tonight as a country” is “trying to figure out what it means.” After Mueller testified before Congress, she gestured at “the paths that we next follow to try to get to the bottom of this still-open scandal.” She lends her viewers a cozy sense of mastery over a political situation that feels unmanageable. If today’s dominant political recreational metaphor is that of the three-dimensional chess game, Maddow is hunched over in the corner of the rec room, methodically putting together a jigsaw puzzle.
Placeholders waiting for Biden to step down due to "personal issues" and endorse Hillary entering the race to replace him and save The Party from itself.Watch a bunch of pro-Bernie sexists attack this post for speaking truth to power.
When Maddow’s old debate partner Tucker Carlson, who hosts the 8 p.m. hour over on Fox News, goes off the air, he told me, he often walks out the back of his studio and into his office, where he catches the beginning of Maddow’s show. In the TV news business, Maddow is known for her unique approach to the “A block,” the opening act of the show before it cuts to commercial break. Rarely does she lead with the news. Instead, she backs into it, charging into a tale of some seemingly unrelated historical anecdote or long-lost news figure that zags unexpectedly toward a news peg. As her show dilates time, it imbues the day’s news with a sense of world-historical climax. The day after the sitting president was targeted for impeachment, one of her chyrons read, “LEAD PROSECUTOR IN AGNEW CASE WAS REPUBLICAN GEORGE BEAL.”Recently, as Carlson was taking off his makeup and chatting with producers, they turned the volume up and watched her for 15 minutes, transfixed. “It was a legitimately esoteric story,” he told me in a tone of genuine admiration. “It was about Donald Trump’s campaign plane or something. I never fully understood the point she was making, but I found it totally compelling.”