March for Trump (1/6) - (1/5-1/6), 18 NAKED PROUD BOYS IN THE SHOWER AT RAM RANCH

Was this a terrorist incident?

  • Yes

    Votes: 508 24.7%
  • No

    Votes: 526 25.6%
  • There were bad people(terrorists) involved, but that shouldn't reflect on everybody else

    Votes: 254 12.4%
  • It was the state who created terror

    Votes: 767 37.3%

  • Total voters
    2,055

WhatIsThePunchline

kiwifarms.net
Okay? What you think that negates what I said about them all being little cornfed suburban fascists who don't respect anything besides their right to shit on impoverished people and especially whoever is taking their Wendy's order? That blue lives is pretend bullshit?
No no no, I get it. You don't care about their lives because they're the psychopaths.
 

Slap47

Hehe xd
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
1611645414017.png




Rip.
 

WaltherPPGAY

kiwifarms.net
Posting CP of your own children to own the libs epic style.

It seems just as likely to me that her daughter posted it herself. After all the daughter's interpretation of events is:

Kellyanne stole the photo from her daughters phone somehow and held onto it for unspecified purposes until a hacker managed get access to it and post it on Kellyanne's twitter. When the daughter found out her first instinct was to go onto tik tok and have a heartfelt discussion with her followers.

To me that the daughter used her mother's phone to post the photo for clout seems just as likely.
 

ForTheHoard

Come out and fight me like a man
True & Honest Fan
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It's entirely possible to protest without storming a federal building and physically terrifying even the conservatards who supported you yesterday and are now forever done with you. Is it fair that the media are letting antifa get away with the bullshit they do while hyperfocusing on the shit anyone right of Stalin does? Of course not. But congratulations on giving them all the rope they need.

This is, on the federal level, the shit where antifa scared the shit out of even a pussy like Ted Wheeler enough that he turned on them. Except it's the entire country.

"Optics" means how does the general populace view you. Do people view themselves as representing some greater cause that should be supported by "the people," meaning, basically, the people who actually do things? If you piss all those people off you lose.

If both sets of extremists are just people who hassle the fuck out of cops and even kill them, why do they expect any support from those authorities? Why the fuck would people who used Blue Lives Matter as a slogan fuck with cops and invade federal buildings? It makes no sense.
The argument isn't that conservatives aren't allowed to protest, just that they don't enjoy equal protections under the 1st amendment. One man's protest is another man's violent insurrection.
 

Suburban Bastard

Moderna-fied
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
Yeah, I don't see a trial happening. President Trump wouldn't be convicted, anyway. If there had been a trial and a conviction suggest there may have been all sorts of trouble. Millions believe the election was stolen. Then for the person they voted for to be prohibited from running for President again could have sent the signal the ballot box is no longer the way to affect change. Simply the worst thing that could happen to the Biden regime, who's touting "unity".

Growing number of GOP senators oppose impeachment trial​

  • FILE - In this Jan. 6, 2021, file photo violent rioters, loyal to President Donald Trump, storm the Capitol in Washington. The words of Donald Trump supporters who are accused of participating in the deadly U.S. Capitol riot may end up being used against him in his Senate impeachment trial as he faces the charge of inciting a violent insurrection. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)
  • FILE - In this Jan. 6, 2021, file photo with the White House in the background, President Donald Trump speaks at a rally in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)
  • Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., speaks during a confirmation hearing for President-elect Joe Biden’s pick for national intelligence director Avril Haines before the Senate intelligence committee on Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2021, in Washington. (Joe Raedle/Pool via AP)
  • Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., speaks during a confirmation hearing for Secretary of Defense nominee Lloyd Austin, a recently retired Army general, before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2021, in Washington. (Greg Nash/Pool via AP)
  • Vice President Mike Pence administers the oath of office to Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D, during a reenactment ceremony in the Old Senate Chamber at the Capitol in Washington, Sunday, Jan. 3, 2021. (Samuel Corum/Pool via AP)
  • Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, questions Secretary of State nominee Antony Blinken during his confirmation hearing to be Secretary of State before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2021. (Graeme Jennings/Pool via AP)
  • Vice President Mike Pence administers the oath of office to Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., as his wife Annie Coons holds a Bible, during a reenactment ceremony in the Old Senate Chamber at the Capitol in Washington, Sunday, Jan. 3, 2021. (Kevin Dietsch/Pool via AP)
  • In this image from video, Rep. Madeleine Dean, D-Pa., speaks as the House debates the objection to confirm the Electoral College vote from Pennsylvania, at the U.S. Capitol early Thursday, Jan. 7, 2021. (House Television via AP)
1 / 8

Trump Impeachment Rioters​

FILE - In this Jan. 6, 2021, file photo violent rioters, loyal to President Donald Trump, storm the Capitol in Washington. The words of Donald Trump supporters who are accused of participating in the deadly U.S. Capitol riot may end up being used against him in his Senate impeachment trial as he faces the charge of inciting a violent insurrection. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)

MARY CLARE JALONICK and LISA MASCARO
Sun, January 24, 2021, 11:58 AM


WASHINGTON (AP) — A growing number of Republican senators say they oppose holding an impeachment trial, a sign of the dimming chances that former President Donald Trump will be convicted on the charge that he incited a siege of the U.S. Capitol.

House Democrats, who will walk the impeachment charge of “incitement of insurrection” to the Senate on Monday evening, are hoping that strong Republican denunciations of Trump after the Jan. 6 riot will translate into a conviction and a separate vote to bar Trump from holding office again. But GOP passions appear to have cooled since the insurrection, and now that Trump's presidency is over, Republican senators who will serve as jurors in the trial are rallying to his legal defense, as they did during his first impeachment trial last year.

“I think the trial is stupid, I think it’s counterproductive,” said Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla.. He said that "the first chance I get to vote to end this trial, I’ll do it” because he believes it would be bad for the country and further inflame partisan divisions.

Arguments in the Senate trial will begin the week of Feb. 8. Leaders in both parties agreed to the short delay to give Trump's team and House prosecutors time to prepare and the Senate the chance to confirm some of President Joe Biden’s Cabinet nominees. Democrats say the extra days will allow for more evidence to come out about the rioting by Trump supporters who interrupted the congressional electoral count of Biden's election victory, while Republicans hope to craft a unified defense for Trump.

An early vote to dismiss the trial probably would not succeed, given that Democrats now control the Senate. Still, the Republican opposition indicates that many GOP senators would eventually vote to acquit Trump. Democrats would need the support of 17 Republicans — a high bar — to convict him.

When the House impeached Trump on Jan. 13, exactly one week after the siege, Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., said he didn’t believe the Senate had the constitutional authority to convict Trump after he had left office. On Sunday, Cotton said “the more I talk to other Republican senators, the more they’re beginning to line up” behind that argument.

“I think a lot of Americans are going to think it’s strange that the Senate is spending its time trying to convict and remove from office a man who left office a week ago,” Cotton said.

Democrats reject that argument, pointing to a 1876 impeachment of a secretary of war who had already resigned and to opinions by many legal scholars. Democrats also say that a reckoning of the first invasion of the Capitol since the War of 1812, perpetrated by rioters egged on by a president who told them to “fight like hell” against election results that were being counted at the time, is necessary so the country can move forward and ensure such a siege never happens again. (Yo, Dems. It WILL happen again. Congress has lost the trust of the people. Hurt being cucked, didn't it, bitches. - JS)

A few GOP senators have agreed with Democrats, though not close to the number that will be needed to convict Trump.
Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said he believes there is a “preponderance of opinion” that an impeachment trial is appropriate after someone leaves office.

“I believe that what is being alleged and what we saw, which is incitement to insurrection, is an impeachable offense,” Romney said. “If not, what is?”

But Romney, the lone Republican to vote to convict Trump when the Senate acquitted the then-president in last year’s trial, appears to be an outlier. (Mitt, eat shit. - JS)

Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., said he believes a trial is a “moot point” after a president's term is over, “and I think it’s one that they would have a very difficult time in trying to get done within the Senate.”

And Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, had tweeted on Saturday: “If it is a good idea to impeach and try former Presidents, what about former Democratic Presidents when Republicans get the majority in 2022? Think about it and let’s do what is best for the country.”

On Friday, GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a close Trump ally who has been helping him build a legal team, urged the Senate to reject the idea of a post-presidency trial — potentially with a vote to dismiss the charge — and suggested Republicans will scrutinize whether Trump’s words on Jan. 6 were legally “incitement.”

Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., said Democrats were sending a message that “hatred and vitriol of Donald Trump is so strong” that they will hold a trial that stops Biden's policy priorities from moving. Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., suggested Democrats are choosing “vindictiveness” over national security as the new president tries to set up his administration.
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who said last week that Trump “provoked” his supporters before the riot, has not said how he will vote or argued any legal strategies. The Kentucky senator has told his GOP colleagues that it will be a vote of conscience.

One of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s nine impeachment managers said Trump’s encouragement of his loyalists before the riot was "an extraordinarily heinous presidential crime." (Nancy Pelosi's existence is a crime against nature. - JS)

“I think you will see that we will put together a case that is so compelling because the facts and the law reveal what this president did,” said Rep. Madeleine Dean, D-Pa. "I mean, think back. It was just two-and-a-half weeks ago that the president assembled a mob on the Ellipse of the White House. He incited them with his words. And then he lit the match.”

Trump’s supporters invaded the Capitol and interrupted the electoral count as he falsely claimed there was massive fraud in the election and that it was stolen by Biden. Trump’s claims were roundly rejected in the courts, including by judges appointed by Trump, and by state election officials.

Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., said in an interview with The Associated Press on Sunday that he hopes that evolving clarity on the details of what happened Jan. 6 “will make it clearer to my colleagues and the American people that we need some accountability.”

Coons questioned how his colleagues who were in the Capitol that day could see the insurrection as anything other than a “stunning violation” of the centuries-old tradition of peaceful transfers of power.
“It is a critical moment in American history and we have to look at it and look at it hard,” Coons said.

Rubio and Romney were on “Fox News Sunday,” Cotton appeared on Fox News Channel's “Sunday Morning Futures” and Romney also was on CNN's “State of the Union,” as was Dean. Rounds was interviewed on NBC's “Meet the Press.”


Can't wait to watch fox do yet another 180 on mitch.
 

Paranoia Machine

Where am I?
kiwifarms.net
To politicize this would be a disservice to the child and would give the mother even a small bit of an out.
I know that there are amazing adoption stories out there with parents that end up loving their child more than even a biological parent would; but this makes me hate the world just a little bit more.
Its stories like this that remind me that beneath our accomplishments, creativity, complex thoughts, and nuances; we're apes. We can become so tribal and hateful as long as we can find an excuse to justify our disgusting behavior.
Congratulations, you horrible cunt of a mother, you found a way to demonize an infant that the world already dealt a shit hand to.

What a cruel world we live in.
 

RandomTwitterGuy

kiwifarms.net
We also dont pay 40%+ in taxes so we can be raped by your apparently incorruptible politicians.
I never said that, but i love times like this. When some one found something on google and did not read it first.

So this is looking into renewable energy and corruption in the time of 1990 to 2007. The study it self is from 2016. Strange how they would go with that late a set of numbers, but wait there more. This is a study about Italis corruption and problems. Not the entire Euro zone.

I mean i could get a study about Norway's renewable sector and it would be clean. It is meaningless and it is literally not a argument for or against.

Fuck man you most be strongly against guns, there are crimes being committed by people with guns. See Guns are bad. Same argument your making.


We been needing to move to Nuclear for a long ass time now, but oil barons will never let that happen.

Yeah it would be good to do in a lot of places, scares the shit out of me. How ever i can not deny the strength of it.
 

Arm Pit Cream

5%er, Jupiterian Philosopher, Anglophobe, CSIS
True & Honest Fan
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