RA: Oh, now there’s the ticket, Jenner and Lindell. She can cover his face with a pillow, for 10 minutes, maybe I’ll think of voting for her.
MT: Not sure what I think of this one.
Rachel: So, who is surprised that the Oil spokesperson said that we should, “Of course” continue to give them their welfare checks. “Pantyhose!” Down her throat?
GK: “You would have thought….” I’m damned speechless.
PP: Putz Willow, Putz willow, Putz Willow!
Beau: The man is spot on.
RA: I’m so glad I don’t have to repeat myself; Chip did it all for me.
MT: Roland Martin may be right that being unvarnished scares power but it also scares a lot of people away who basically agree with you but not with the way you put it. The same holds for all of those screaming at the top of their lungs.
C&L: Well, at least Yvette Herrell is honest about where her priorities lie.
JM: Of course, Kirschner is right to rant about extreme vetting for police officers but even that won’t be enough to stop the violence against people of colour unless there is a culture change in the way (too) many Americans think. First of all, it needs to be generally acknowledged that racism is systemic and needs to be rooted out before vetting new police officers on racism and bigotry will bring change.
PP: Hilarious. Though insight into his commercials, rallies and new TV/radio show, which I didn’t have before this, also made me question the sanity of a large group of Americans.
Beau: Policy drives accountability. Spot on when talking about individual accountability and pursuing charges against that individual. But what when the policy is wrong, e.g. allowing or even calling for racial profiling? How do you get accountability for that so the policy is changed by a general acknowledgement that it is wrong?
RA: Oh, now there’s the ticket, Jenner and Lindell. She can cover his face with a pillow, for 10 minutes, maybe I’ll think of voting for her.
MT: Not sure what I think of this one.
Rachel: So, who is surprised that the Oil spokesperson said that we should, “Of course” continue to give them their welfare checks. “Pantyhose!” Down her throat?
GK: “You would have thought….” I’m damned speechless.
PP: Putz Willow, Putz willow, Putz Willow!
Beau: The man is spot on.
RA: I’m so glad I don’t have to repeat myself; Chip did it all for me.
MT: Roland Martin may be right that being unvarnished scares power but it also scares a lot of people away who basically agree with you but not with the way you put it. The same holds for all of those screaming at the top of their lungs.
C&L: Well, at least Yvette Herrell is honest about where her priorities lie.
JM: Of course, Kirschner is right to rant about extreme vetting for police officers but even that won’t be enough to stop the violence against people of colour unless there is a culture change in the way (too) many Americans think. First of all, it needs to be generally acknowledged that racism is systemic and needs to be rooted out before vetting new police officers on racism and bigotry will bring change.
PP: Hilarious. Though insight into his commercials, rallies and new TV/radio show, which I didn’t have before this, also made me question the sanity of a large group of Americans.
Beau: Policy drives accountability. Spot on when talking about individual accountability and pursuing charges against that individual. But what when the policy is wrong, e.g. allowing or even calling for racial profiling? How do you get accountability for that so the policy is changed by a general acknowledgement that it is wrong?
Thanks, JD!
I’m afraid I’m too tired and busy to attend to videos.