Then why demand answers to your 'questions' if you've got it all figured out already?Ahh yes, I heard about that:
But it's not like I'm going to read all this stuff to figure it out myself.
Then why demand answers to your 'questions' if you've got it all figured out already?Ahh yes, I heard about that:
But it's not like I'm going to read all this stuff to figure it out myself.
Read Silvanus's post 1 page back...Ahh yes, I heard about that:
But it's not like I'm going to read all this stuff to figure it out myself.
Trump campaign abandons part of legal challenge to Pennsylvania election results
Allegation that 682,479 mail-in and absentee ballots were illegally processed without its representatives watching has been droppedwww.theguardian.com
Trump has officially dropped the allegation that PA mail-in ballots were counted without poll-watchers present. The only claim remaining of the PA lawsuit is that blue counties were allowed to "cure" in advance and red counties weren't.
There's so much to unpack from this passage, from (what remains of) Trump's lawsuit.
Firstly, if "following the law" results in "disenfranchising many", then you've got a fucking problem.
Secondly, there's nothing in PA law that excludes a notice-and-cure process. Its perfectly legal to begin with.
You were the one who asked me what the complaint was. I told you. Then you said they retracted it. Then I posted that.Then why demand answers to your 'questions' if you've got it all figured out already?
Taking you seriously is the mistake that keeps on giving in these threads.I'll just wait for Gethsemani or someone else to come back and answer my questions, as you're obviously not taking this seriously.
That wouldn't tell you anyway (yet); that's the suit as it stood before this particular amendment.But it's not like I'm going to read all this stuff to figure it out myself.
I meant specifically this: "Read the redlined version of the Republican amended complaint here."That wouldn't tell you anyway (yet); that's the suit as it stood before this particular amendment.
Ah yeah, I had another look. You're right, I'd missed the amended one there as well.I meant specifically this: "Read the redlined version of the Republican amended complaint here."
I saw some tweets that had screenshots of things that were redlined, but I don't speak legalese enough to know if the complaint was removed entirely, reworded somewhere else, or if it was considered redundant.Ah yeah, I had another look. You're right, I'd missed the amended one there as well.
Reading through it now.
I've edited my post with a summary. In short, I can see why Trump said he hadn't "dropped" it, because it's still present in there as background. But he's not pursuing it, drops the request for the Court to rule on it, and is no longer seeking the disqualification of those ballots.I saw some tweets that had screenshots of things that were redlined, but I don't speak legalese enough to know if the complaint was removed entirely, reworded somewhere else, or if it was considered redundant.
a) You totally missed the point I was making, which was that "small government conservatism" is about a small federal government, not so much about states/counties/localities. I understand small federal governments are a century old Republican desire, but that has no bearing on states giving their citizens IDs.No, it entirely is. Laissez-faire capitalism has been in practice in the United States since the early 19th Century, and the government spending, government programs, and infrastructural works usually cited as counter-examples to this throughout the 19th and early 20th Centuries fall consistently into at least one of two groups: development for business and the wealthy, and protection of business and the wealthy. Not even Reaganomics was new under the sun during the dubious leadership of its nomenclature; it was the predominant economic theory of the Gilded Age, except then it was known as "horse and sparrow theory" which was a practical statement the poor can eat shit.
One needn't look further than the presidencies of Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover -- not to mention the outcome of their disastrous administrations, the Great Depression -- as proof positive for this. Fun side activity, compare the relationship of the Panic of 1893 to the Great Depression, and the relationship of the S&L Crisis to the Great Recession, and take a little gander for yourself as to exactly whose economic policies and which responses (or more appropriately, lack thereof) precipitated all four.
(Hint, it's because the same group of assholes bought the same group of idiots into elected office, who push the same dogshit economic policies on behalf of their paymasters, that caused the same wildly unstable boom-bust cycle for which the country's poor were made to pay the price.)
No, I got it, you're just completely wrong. Corporatism is not "small government", it's the exact opposite of "small government".a) You totally missed the point I was making, which was that "small government conservatism" is about a small federal government...
What, you're now going to say strict adherence to the gold and silver standard, while deregulating Wall Street and the banks, and allowing the outbound flow of capitol via high-risk loans to Weimar Germany creating a fatal liquidity trap, weren't major contributors to the Great Depression? Or are you just going to derp off with a bunch of decades-long debunked Glenn Beck bullshit about the Fed?b) The Great Depression was not a result of their policies.
That was certainly some words put one after another. You might want to think about putting the bottle down for the night though...Woodrow Wilson wanted America to be Europe and that’s what killed America.
Woodrow. Wilson. Un-American.
WOODROW WILSON! ************ JUST HATED THE MYTH OF AMERICA! Y’KNOW WHAT THEY SAY ABOUT THAT WOODROW WILSON GUY!
I haven’t had a drink in three months but reading your godawful posts has made me reconsider.That was certainly some words put one after another. You might want to think about putting the bottle down for the night though...
If true... what should be his punishment?Georgia’s top elections official said on Monday that Sen. Lindsey Graham implicitly proposed he toss out legally mailed ballots in his state, as Republicans seek ways to sway election results in the state in President Donald Trump’s favor.
Speaking with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Monday evening, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said the South Carolina Republican asked whether he could check signatures on mail-in ballots during Georgia’s recount and use a high frequency of mismatches to justify throwing away mail-in ballots in certain counties. Raffensperger said he took Graham’s comments as “an implication of look hard and see how many ballots you could throw out.”
Graham denied pressuring Raffensperger to throw away legal ballots, telling POLITICO that he had simply had a “very pleasant” conversation about the state’s signature verification process.
The Washington Post first reported their conversation, which reportedly took place on Friday — the same day a Georgia lawyer sympathetic to Trump filed a lawsuit to prevent the state from certifying the election until all signatures could be verified. When presented with Graham’s denial on CNN, Raffensperger pointed out that the lawsuit sought to use a tactic similar to the one Graham proposed to stop the inclusion of absentee ballots in the state.
There is a joke the Republican Party is the party of projection. Considering the controversy that happened in 2018 I wouldn't be surprised if this was true.Allegations:
Georgia elections official says Lindsey Graham looked for way to exclude some legal ballots
Republicans are trying to shift the state’s recount toward President Donald Trump, but the South Carolina senator denied he pressured Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.www.politico.com
If true... what should be his punishment?
Having to post a picture of his bare ass online so the entire internet can see if the "ladybug" allegations are true. We all lose a little, but Graham potentially loses a whole lot, and I'd be willing to forsake a piece of my soul and sanity to gaze upon his ass pic to see if he's a rent boy connoisseur.If true... what should be his punishment?
Well its voter fraud, throwing away legal ballots. So Lindsey Graham should face 2 years and a $500 fine for every single vote he wanted thrown out.If true... what should be his punishment?
Can't help but laugh, comparing that to your profile picture. Lindsey Graham getting out of prison just in time for the Horus Heresy would indeed be fitting punishment....a minimum of 28,310 years in jail and $7 million in fines.