…that don’t bode well for her presidency.
She has also never served, but she’s not unique in that regard for recent presidents.
…that don’t bode well for her presidency.
She has also never served, but she’s not unique in that regard for recent presidents.
“…is starting to make me think that Trump won in 2020.”
Medicine is much less scientific than they would have you believe.
I can believe that there are upset workers, but it seems like shoddy journalism to just find one to speak for them.
This is a thing of beauty. And the background art is nice and subtle. pic.twitter.com/Uo0ORLT4T8
— Julie Frost–That Werewolf Writer🐺🦉 (@JulieCFrost) August 24, 2024
[Afternoon update]
Three former Democrats who had enough. pic.twitter.com/S3ISZqeKhU
— Western Lensman (@WesternLensman) August 24, 2024
I agree that the most significant aspect of this is that there have still been no nukes. I wonder if Putin is concerned that either they’re no longer functional, or that he can’t trust his underlings to use them.
On the third anniversary of the greatest foreign-policy debacle in decades, Cdr Salamander is still righteously angry.
Can be found here.
It’s pretty long. How long did it take him to deliver it?
They lack a sense of irony:
The acrid scent of panic might have been expected among the limp-wristed, totalitarian faithful. And, in fact, beneath the amusing cologne of anti-Trump bluster, the panic was indeed discernible.
But there was also that trademark smooth-as-a-suppository (as Saul Bellow put it) suaveness, exemplified, for instance, by former Obama strategist David Axelrod.
“Robert F. Kennedy Sr.,” Axelrod posted shortly after the deed was done, “would have been appalled to see his son cut a deal to drop out for [t]he race and endorse Trump.”
Imagine: someone agrees to drop out of a race at the last minute and support a rival candidate! As the commentator Ned Ryan put it in response to Axelrod’s snippy post: “You suddenly seem offended by someone cutting a deal to drop out of the race and endorse someone else.”