- Kamala Harris had a chance to show her true colors - 1 Update
- And they all talked to their little boxes - 5 Updates
- Nearly every single Army National Guard Soldier turns their backs to Joe Biden as he drives past. - 14 Updates
- New mixer arrived - 3 Updates
- OT How long until Kamala takes over for Biden? | BIDEN GAFFES - 1 Update
- I don't know who all is doing all this impostering BS - 1 Update
| Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 23 08:46AM +1100 Even as late as 2014, when running for reelection as Attorney General, when Harris was asked about legalization, with the reporter noting her opponent's support of the issue, Harris simply laughed in the face of the reporter. https://freebeacon.com/politics/kamala-harris-packed-california-prisons-for-peddling-pot/ And this wasn't the first time, in 2010 when pressed on the issue at a forum defending her "Back on Track" program that advocated prosecuting first time drug and marijuana offenders, Harris similarly laughed off the question, going on to state "I'm not a proponent of that, but I know that there are a lot of people who are. It's not my issue." Kamala Is A Cop. No matter how excited Democratic voters may be about having the first woman of color on a presidential ticket, and no matter how liberal her Senate voting record may be, there is no escaping the fact that Senator Kamala Harris built her political career on her record as a prosecutor. In that position she oversaw the arrest and prosecution of thousands of people, mostly young people of color, for marijuana and other drug offenses. That record has her selection as Biden's running mate being roundly criticized, and not only by progressives who see her history as a "law-and-order" prosecutor and record of fighting to uphold wrongful convictions while in office. Conservatives, particularly libertarian leaning Republicans who have long been supportive of criminal justice reform have been harshly critical of her support for prosecuting so-called "quality of life" crimes that generally involve low level non-violent offenses like marijuana charges. Even the Trump campaign, in its drive to win over African American voters, has gotten in on the "Kamala Is A Cop" action. More @ https://www.forbes.com/sites/kriskrane/2020/08/19/a-vp-kamala-harris-would-be-a-disaster-for-marijuana-policy/?sh=2baa6a3dc3c8 |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jan 22 11:59AM -0800 > Have you read ANY of Shoshana Zuboff's book "Surveillance Capitalism and Democracy"? I have, and I'm damned glad I never GOT one of those infernal Spy Devices! > Just a Flip Phone from Puretalk.com! > John Kuthe... You could choose to see it that way. I don't need to read no stinkin' book to know what's going on. My phone has been tracking my whereabouts every day for the last 5 years or so. If I murder anybody, my goose is certain to be cooked. Luckily, I lead a pretty clean life. |
| Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jan 22 12:09PM -0800 > It's a fucking SPY DEVICE! > Have you read ANY of Shoshana Zuboff's book "Surveillance Capitalism and Democracy"? I have, and I'm damned glad I never GOT one of those infernal Spy Devices! > Just a Flip Phone from Puretalk.com! They're making smart flip phones now. You're going to have to find another way to refer to your dumb phone. Cindy Hamilton |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jan 22 02:56PM -0600 John Kuthe wrote: > Have you read ANY of Shoshana Zuboff's book "Surveillance Capitalism and Democracy"? I have, and I'm damned glad I never GOT one of those infernal Spy Devices! > Just a Flip Phone from Puretalk.com! > John Kuthe... The entire world spies on you! They are fools. They could simply use google to obtain a dossier on you. But there is nothing there. No dirt. You are clean as a whistle. Right? So why are you so damn paranoid? |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jan 22 02:58PM -0600 Cindy Hamilton wrote: > They're making smart flip phones now. You're going to have to find > another way to refer to your dumb phone. > Cindy Hamilton How about a Bell 500 rotary dial? |
| Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 23 08:42AM +1100 On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 11:50:36 -0800 (PST), John Kuthe >It's a fucking SPY DEVICE! >Have you read ANY of Shoshana Zuboff's book "Surveillance Capitalism and Democracy"? I have, and I'm damned glad I never GOT one of those infernal Spy Devices! https://www.forbes.com/sites/kriskrane/2020/08/19/a-vp-kamala-harris-would-be-a-disaster-for-marijuana-policy/?sh=2baa6a3dc3c8 Kamala Is A Cop. No matter how excited Democratic voters may be about having the first woman of color on a presidential ticket, and no matter how liberal her Senate voting record may be, there is no escaping the fact that Senator Kamala Harris built her political career on her record as a prosecutor. In that position she oversaw the arrest and prosecution of thousands of people, mostly young people of color, for marijuana and other drug offenses. That record has her selection as Biden's running mate being roundly criticized, and not only by progressives who see her history as a "law-and-order" prosecutor and record of fighting to uphold wrongful convictions while in office. Conservatives, particularly libertarian leaning Republicans who have long been supportive of criminal justice reform have been harshly critical of her support for prosecuting so-called "quality of life" crimes that generally involve low level non-violent offenses like marijuana charges. Even the Trump campaign, in its drive to win over African American voters, has gotten in on the "Kamala Is A Cop" action. These criticisms from the left and right should have supporters of legalization concerned, especially as they review her history and record from her time as a prosecutor, before it became politically advantageous and popular to support cannabis reform once she became a U.S. Senator. In a look back at her record as California Attorney General, the Washington Free Beacon concluded that 1,560 people were sent to prison in California for marijuana offenses between 2011 and 2016. Harris was unapologetic about her position on locking up non-violent offenders, writing in her 2008 book "Smart on Crime" that "Nonviolent crimes exact a huge toll on America's communities…It's important to fight all crime. Drug crimes in particular exact a terrible toll and rob people young and old of hope." It was during this time period that Kamala Harris had a chance to show her true colors on this issue, when California voters had the chance to vote on Prop. 19, a ballot initiative that would have legalized marijuana in the state. A candidate for state Attorney General in the same election, Harris not only spoke out in opposition to the initiative, she chose to author an opposition statement in the state's official ballot guide, claiming that legalization "seriously compromises the safety of our communities, roadways, and workplaces." It is fair to wonder if California politicians like Harris had shown the political fortitude to support reform, whether the initiative would have passed instead of falling only 3.5% short of victory. |
| Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 23 06:55AM +1100 On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 14:46:53 -0500, David Crossley >> as yoose. >Biden is a puppet,and things will only be worse once he gives up >the ghost and Cameltoe takes his place. Kamala Harris would be the best president the US ever had and will have for a long time. |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jan 22 03:01PM -0500 On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 14:46:53 -0500, David Crossley >> as yoose. >Biden is a puppet,and things will only be worse once he gives up >the ghost and Cameltoe takes his place. When Camel Toe has the power is when we really need to worry... what an ugli POS. |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jan 22 02:06PM -0600 Master Bruce wrote: >> It's back to business as usual/normal in the U.S. of A. That's probably not that good of a deal but it's the best we can get at the moment. Of course, it's the early days of the administration. I always prefer to hope for the best instead of the worst. > 8 years ago 'back to normal in the U.S. of A'. would have seemed like > a bad deal. After 4 years of Trump it sounds like a great idea. The good news is that in all cases, there will always be plenty of american's assholes for you to sniff, Master Gruce. |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jan 22 02:11PM -0600 David Crossley wrote: > -- > Regards > David Crossley Yeah. The gal doesn't have enormous titties. Probably no squirting pussy either. Popeye will be very disappointed. |
| Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jan 22 12:12PM -0800 On Friday, January 22, 2021 at 3:01:23 PM UTC-5, Sheldon wrote: > >> Biden wishes he was Trump... Biden is a nothing. Biden is a brain > >> dead POS. Biden has been a do nothing ass kisser for 50 years... same > >> as yoose. As long as Biden simply does no harm, he'll still be infinitely better than Trump. > >the ghost and Cameltoe takes his place. > When Camel Toe has the power is when we really need to worry... what > an ugli POS. What difference does her appearance make? Cindy Hamilton |
| Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 23 07:14AM +1100 On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 15:01:17 -0500, Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com> wrote: >>the ghost and Cameltoe takes his place. >When Camel Toe has the power is when we really need to worry... what >an ugli POS. After Trump, everybody looks good. |
| Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 23 07:19AM +1100 On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 12:12:06 -0800 (PST), Cindy Hamilton >> When Camel Toe has the power is when we really need to worry... what >> an ugli POS. >What difference does her appearance make? Sexism. I never heard him complain about Trump's ridiculous looks. A pig's face with orange skin and a rodent on his head. |
| Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jan 22 03:57PM -0500 On 2021-01-22 2:11 p.m., dsi1 wrote: > will try to divert your attention with any number of things. You > should leave them alone with their delusions. As far as I know, that > shit is incurable. I had to wonder last week when I was watching the impeachment debate. One by one, the Democrat and Republican representatives got up and made impassioned pleas to impeach Trump or to block the motion. It went on for hours and hours. As convincing as some of them were, I am willing to bet that not one of them managed to change anyone's mind. |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jan 22 03:01PM -0600 Sheldon Martin wrote: >> the ghost and Cameltoe takes his place. > When Camel Toe has the power is when we really need to worry... what > an ugli POS. And no big ass jewish titties Popeye! |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jan 22 03:03PM -0600 Cindy Hamilton wrote: >> an ugli POS. > What difference does her appearance make? > Cindy Hamilton No humongous titties. No squirting pussy. Popeye no go! |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jan 22 03:08PM -0600 Master Bruce wrote: >> When Camel Toe has the power is when we really need to worry... what >> an ugli POS. > After Trump, everybody looks good. Popeye don't like her because she ain't a real mexican, and she has never been a star at the donkey shows in Tijuana. |
| Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 23 08:20AM +1100 On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 14:41:57 -0500, Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com> wrote: >Biden wishes he was Trump... Biden is a nothing. Biden is a brain >dead POS. Biden has been a do nothing ass kisser for 50 years... same >as yoose. Yes 50 years of racism and oppression of minorities in politics from Mr Bidden. He is a disgusting creepy man. |
| Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 23 08:23AM +1100 On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 14:46:53 -0500, David Crossley >> as yoose. >Biden is a puppet,and things will only be worse once he gives up >the ghost and Cameltoe takes his place. Biden has always been a puppet, loyal only to his powerful corporate masters. We now have a President and Vice President with a history of oppressing minorities and the poor. Big Tech may try to erase that history but they cannot hide it entirely or people who have memories |
| Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 23 08:36AM +1100 On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 15:01:17 -0500, Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com> wrote: >>the ghost and Cameltoe takes his place. >When Camel Toe has the power is when we really need to worry... what >an ugli POS. KAMALA HARRIS HAS BEEN TOUGH ON BLACK PEOPLE, NOT CRIME A couple months ago, I was chillin' at my potna house watching football. During a commercial break, we started talking about Kamala Harris — and my potna's older cousin shouted, "Kamala Harris! She been lockin' niggas up at Renee (referring to the Oakland courthouse) since way back in the day and was doin' it with a smile on her face." He wasn't wrong. Kamala Harris has spent her career as the district attorney of Alameda County, San Francisco, and as the Attorney General aka The Top Cop of California. As someone from the Bay Area and living in Oakland, I am constantly reminded of her history of locking up Black people in the Bay Area. Her track record consists of terrorizing Black communities through the prison industrial complex and she has consistently shown herself to be an enemy to the masses of Black people. While I admit the symbol of having a Black woman as president sounds nice, it doesn't exclude Kamala from being critiqued. I operate under the political belief that there are no good presidents. Presidents are just figureheads for the white supremacist settler colonial state. I aim to have a principled critique of her record that advances Black political thought, yet Twitter has been full of misogynist critiques of Kamala. It is important we critique her while avoiding misogynoir, as there is no place for misogynoir in the Black liberation movement. Whether it was declining to advocate for legalization of marijuana in California, in which Black people are arrested at the highest rate. Or her failure to support body cameras for the police while simultaneously opposing legislation that would require her office to independently investigate police shootings. Kamala is not for the people. She even defended the 3 strikes law, in which Black people are incarcerated at a rate 12 times higher than whites. Kamala Harris has demonstrated through her actions that she does not value Black lives, but rather supports our death via the carceral state. Kamala's support of the death penalty, which is a modern day form of lynching that has executed hundreds of innocent people, and also disproportionately affects Black people proves that she doesn't value Black lives. Kamala even advocated that an innocent Black man named Kevin Cooper, who was a death row inmate and had a trial that was rooted in overt racism and corruption, be executed. She advocated for this even though Kevin had DNA evidence that proved his innocence yet Kamala Harris opposed it until the New York Times exposed the case. Furthermore, America has no moral ability to be able to decide who lives and who dies. The death penalty is fundamentally racist, yet Kamala supports it — furthering her record as a tough on crime politician. Not only has she failed to support policies that might improve the lives of Black people, she has defended the need for prison slavery. What's dangerous about Kamala is that she weaponizes "civil rights" language however her actions prove otherwise. For instance, she said "the idea that we incarcerate people to have indentured servitude is one of the worst possible perceptions…I feel very strongly about that. It evokes images of chain gangs." Despite making the connection between prison labor and chain gangs —she "pushed back against a federal order to expand an early parole program, arguing that it would deplete their stock of prison labor, especially inmates who fight wildfires". These inmates make a dollar an hour, which is a form of slavery. Kamala is not only a super cop, but an adamant defender of the institution of policing that is rooted in slave patrols. Kamala Harris evokes the language of being a civil rights leader for Black people. In her video announcement for president, she weaponized words like "truth, justice, and equality" and her campaign slogan is "for the people". This is propaganda, and this campaign strategy isn't something new, rather it follows what I refer to as the Obama Plan. The Obama Plan is a campaign strategy that will center a civil rights type narrative such as "hope" and will also use all the elements of Blackness we like in order to get a Black person elected. This campaign uses the popular aesthetics of Blackness despite the actions of Harris being fundamentally anti-Black. Kamala used this plan by announcing her run for presidency on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a day that celebrates the radical legacy of a Black man who stood for the liberation of Black lives with both an anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist politic. Kamala Harris announcing her run for presidency on MLK Day is disrespectful to King's legacy and is a spit in the face to the Black radical tradition. Her announcing on MLK day is propaganda. It's meant to fool Black people that she's actually for us, despite her actions terrorizing the Black community through her role as a prosecutor. It shows us how Black liberals will weaponize the aesthetics of a freedom fighter in order to strengthen the united states colonial empire. It is important that we understand that the "criminal justice system" is built upon the legacy of chattel slavery, and that it's primary role is to lock up Black, Brown, and poor people to maintain a workforce (re: slaves) that supplies America an endless amount of free labor. This being said, Kamala has been the slave auctioneer and sending Black people to prison in order to maintain this endless supply of free labor. Yet some claim that she was a "progressive prosecutor". How can there be a progressive prosecutor if the foundation of the criminal justice system is rooted in slavery and the genocide of the indigenous? If she truly was a "progressive prosecutor or a good prosecutor," she would make sure that prosecutors do not exist. There were no good slave owners, or slave auctioneers, just as there are no good prosecutors. Kamala Harris is what the Black radical tradition calls a neo-colonialist. Neo-colonialism is the integration of a colonized person into the colonized system in order to enact the policies of the colonizer. That being said, Kamala is a Black face doing the job of a white supremacist system. Neo-colonialism is white supremacist colonial propaganda, and it is meant to fool the masses of oppressed people that becoming the oppressor leads to freedom. Don't be fooled by symbolism. As Obama's presidency showed us, symbolism does not mean progress for the masses of Black people. It is clear that Kamala Harris is not for the people. She is for the American empire. Don't let her identity as a Black woman, or her identity as an AKA, or her status as an alumna from Howard University fool you into thinking she is actually for us: Kamala don't give a fuck about you niggas. https://afropunk.com/2019/01/kamala-harris-has-been-tough-on-black-people-not-crime/ |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jan 22 02:21PM -0600 David Crossley wrote: > -- > Regards > David Crossley Maybe so, but it hardened him: He was soon able to fuck his own aunt at age 12, an admirable feat. Then later, he became a decorated naval hero during the cuban missile crisis. Kennedy probably pinned lots of medals on him, in lavish white house ceremonies. |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jan 22 02:25PM -0600 dsi1 wrote: >> wherever needed depending on what I am doing. >> Carol > That's a problem with living on a tiny island. When we got our big, beautiful, Samsung refrigerator, I was dismayed to find that the dishwasher door hit the refrigerator. When we rebuilt the kitchen, I extended the kitchen cabinets out 6 inches or so. I should have extended it out around 18 to 24 inches and made it more open. That's the breaks. Next time. On da rock, couldn't yoose just set yoose refrigerator outside, on a small concrete pad, then run an extension cord? |
| Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 23 08:15AM +1100 On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 14:25:19 -0600, Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com> wrote: >> That's a problem with living on a tiny island. When we got our big, beautiful, Samsung refrigerator, I was dismayed to find that the dishwasher door hit the refrigerator. When we rebuilt the kitchen, I extended the kitchen cabinets out 6 inches or so. I should have extended it out around 18 to 24 inches and made it more open. That's the breaks. Next time. >On da rock, couldn't yoose just set yoose refrigerator outside, on >a small concrete pad, then run an extension cord? An Awkward Kiss Changed How I Saw Joe Biden In 2014, I was the 35-year-old Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor in Nevada. The landscape wasn't looking good for my party that year. There were no high-profile national races to help boost turnout, and after the top candidate bowed out of the governor's race, "None of the Above" ended up winning the Democratic primary. So when my campaign heard from Vice-President Joe Biden's office that he was looking to help me and other Democrats in the state, I was grateful and flattered. His team offered to bring him to a campaign rally in an effort to help boost voter turnout. We set the date for November 1, just three days before election day. In a state as large but sparsely populated as Nevada, it takes nonstop travel to connect with all its residents. You're lucky to get properly fed, much less look properly coiffed as female candidates are often required to do. I was exhausted and short on time, so decided to not to wash my hair the morning of the rally. I sprayed some dry shampoo in my hair, raced off to the Reno airport, and flew back to Las Vegas. The event proceeded as most political events do: coordinated chaos with random problems that no one can predict. I found Eva Longoria, co-founder of the Latino Victory Project, roaming the parking lot trying to figure out how to get inside the union hall. My staff was running around town trying to purchase ferns because according to Biden's team, no other vegetation was acceptable for the stage. I found my way to the holding room for the speakers, where everyone was chatting, taking photos, and getting ready to speak to the hundreds of voters in the audience. Just before the speeches, we were ushered to the side of the stage where we were lined up by order of introduction. As I was taking deep breaths and preparing myself to make my case to the crowd, I felt two hands on my shoulders. I froze. "Why is the vice-president of the United States touching me?" I felt him get closer to me from behind. He leaned further in and inhaled my hair. I was mortified. I thought to myself, "I didn't wash my hair today and the vice-president of the United States is smelling it. And also, what in the actual fuck? Why is the vice-president of the United States smelling my hair?" He proceeded to plant a big slow kiss on the back of my head. My brain couldn't process what was happening. I was embarrassed. I was shocked. I was confused. There is a Spanish saying, "tragame tierra," it means, "earth, swallow me whole." I couldn't move and I couldn't say anything. I wanted nothing more than to get Biden away from me. My name was called and I was never happier to get on stage in front of an audience. By then, as a young Latina in politics, I had gotten used to feeling like an outsider in rooms dominated by white men. But I had never experienced anything so blatantly inappropriate and unnerving before. Biden was the second-most powerful man in the country and, arguably, one of the most powerful men in the world. He was there to promote me as the right person for the lieutenant governor job. Instead, he made me feel uneasy, gross, and confused. The vice-president of the United States of America had just touched me in an intimate way reserved for close friends, family, or romantic partners — and I felt powerless to do anything about it. Our strange interaction happened during a pivotal moment in my political career. I'd spent months raising money, talking to voters, and securing endorsements. Biden came to Nevada to speak to my leadership and my potential to be second-in-command — an important role he knew firsthand. But he stopped treating me like a peer the moment he touched me. Even if his behavior wasn't violent or sexual, it was demeaning and disrespectful. I wasn't attending the rally as his mentee or even his friend; I was there as the most qualified person for the job. Imagine you're at work and a male colleague who you have no personal relationship with approaches you from behind, smells your hair, and kisses you on the head. Now imagine it's the CEO of the company. If Biden and I worked together in a traditional office, I would have complained to the HR department, but on the campaign trail, there's no clear path for what to do when a powerful man crosses the line. In politics, you shrug it off, smile for the cameras, and get back to the task of trying to win your race. After the event, I told a few of my staff what happened. We all talked about the inexplicable weirdness of what he did, but I didn't plan on telling anyone else. I didn't have the language or the outlet to talk about what happened. Who do you tell? What do you say? Is it enough of a transgression if a man touches and kisses you without consent, but doesn't rise to the level of what most people consider sexual assault? I did what most women do, and moved on with my life and my work. Time passed and pictures started to surface of Vice-President Biden getting uncomfortably close with women and young girls. Biden nuzzling the neck of the Defense secretary's wife; Biden kissing a senator's wife on the lips; Biden whispering in women's ears; Biden snuggling female constituents. I saw obvious discomfort in the women's faces, and Biden, I'm sure, never thought twice about how it made them feel. I knew I couldn't say anything publicly about what those pictures surfaced for me; my anger and my resentment grew. Had I never seen those pictures, I may have been able to give Biden the benefit of the doubt. Had there not been multiple articles written over the years about the exact same thing — calling his creepy behavior an "open secret" — perhaps it would feel less offensive. And yet despite the steady stream of pictures and the occasional article, Biden retained his title of America's Favorite Uncle. On occasion that title was downgraded to America's Creepy Uncle but that in and of itself implied a certain level of acceptance. After all, how many families just tolerate or keep their young children away from the creepy uncle without ever acknowledging that there should be zero tolerance for a man who persistently invades others' personal space and makes people feel uneasy and gross? In this case, it shows a lack of empathy for the women and young girls whose space he is invading, and ignores the power imbalance that exists between Biden and the women he chooses to get cozy with. For years I feared my experience would be dismissed. Biden will be Biden. Boys will be boys. I worried about the doubts, the threats, the insults, and the minimization. "It's not that big of a deal. He touched her, so what?" The immediate passing of judgement and the questioning of motives. "Why now? Why so long after? She just wants attention." Or: "It's politically motivated." I would be lying if I said I didn't carefully consider all of this before deciding to speak. But hearing Biden's potential candidacy for president discussed without much talk about his troubling past as it relates to women became too much to keep bottled up any longer. When I spoke to a male friend who is also a political operative in Biden's orbit — the first man who had heard the story outside of my staff and close friends years ago — he did what no one else had and made me question myself and wonder if I was doing the right thing. He reminded me that Biden has significant resources and argued points that made me question my memory, even though I've replayed that scene in my mind a thousand times. He reminded me that my credibility would be attacked and that I should be prepared for the type of "back and forth" that could occur. (When reached by New York Magazine, a representative for Vice-President Joe Biden declined to comment.) I'm not suggesting that Biden broke any laws, but the transgressions that society deems minor (or doesn't even see as transgressions) often feel considerable to the person on the receiving end. That imbalance of power and attention is the whole point — and the whole problem. Stay in touch. |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jan 23 08:11AM +1100 Many very embarrassing moments Joe Biden and his regime. The media is also having a very hard time hiding their hypocrisy under Joe and it has only been a few days into his rule! #Biden #BidenGaffes #JoeBiden https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2pg9VUZ92tQ John Kuthe... |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jan 22 01:57PM -0600 Master Bruce wrote: >> here. His sole reason for being here is to snipe at everyone else. > Not everyone and not all the time. I don't even snipe at Dave Smith > all the time and that's saying something. That's a goddamn LIE master. You snipe dave with almost every post he makes. |
| You received this digest because you're subscribed to updates for this group. You can change your settings on the group membership page. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it send an email to rec.food.cooking+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com. |
No comments:
Post a Comment