I say YES. YOU say NO....Numero Tre! Enjoy!
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Enjoying the memes! Been busy getting ready for hip replacement tomorrow. My orthopedic doctor had a cancellation, so I’ve been scrambling getting testing done and trying to get ready. Will be lurking and enjoying the posts for the next several days while I recover. Peace and good health.
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I didn't know that big foot knew how to use a laptop!
Good luck with your surgery. Al least you've had less time to fret about it! Sending positive thoughts your way!
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Good luck, cardplayer! That will be a good surgery to have behind you & will definitely will improve your quality of life (like the ability to quickly flee the scene if you accidently wander into a Trump rally!).
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As I look back at the entire tapestry of my life, I can see from the perspective of the present moment that every aspect of my life was necessary and perfect. Each step eventually led to a higher place, even though these steps often felt like obstacles or painful experiences.
Wayne Dyer -
Gone most of the day so need to catch up with the news of the day. They did find the NYC subway shooter so I'm glad of that. I'm so tired of all the shootings/killings that take place. I hope Pres. Biden can get some cooperation, but the lawlessness has gone on so long now. It does sound though like the NRA is having a difficult time holding on. I hope that is true.
Will miss you cardplayer. Good luck with your surjury. -
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Neither genius, fame, nor love shows the greatness of the soul. Only kindness can do that.
Jean Baptiste Henri Lacordaire -
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Some things of interest -- Greg Abbott is caving on his border inspections. It would sooo disrupt supply lines and he was deluged with tons of pressure and had to walk it back. Great !!! Couldn't happen to a more idiotic Reps. Also, Mark Miller will go before the 1/6 committee today. The high profile names -- like Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner and the WH. lawyers ( Cipolone and his legal aide ) is that they were there and witnessed instances of possible criminal activities, but didn't participate. They can, if so desired and seems it is, relate things they saw and heard, and keep themselves below the radar for any possible charges. Liz Cheney has indicated that so far these individuals have given the committee useful information -- so as long as they are clear of most issues, there will be if nothing else great confirmation of what is already known.
I've thought all along that most of the bombshell material ( things that aren't leaked as such ) will go heavy on lots of confirmation of details of what was done. Amusing that the Loon ( rather out of the blue ) came out with a statement to the effect that he TOLD the WH lawyers they were free to talk to the 1/6 committee. I, as well as Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O'Donnell can see what that is about. The Loon's way to looking as though he is in charge of these people and is still pulling the strings. Total turn around which makes it all the more transparent. The Loon has had his people working double over-time to try and prevent any information from getting out. Perhaps he has had to finally acknowledge after losing all of these particular battles that he has to come up with something else. Also, for others, they know privileged information or communications are not going to cut it. Well past that now.
Lastly, it now sounds like late May or early June is when the televised hearings will begin. I'll be somewhat glued to them I do believe and I hope many others will be as well. I imagine there are a lot of Reps. that don't know the REAL truth either and maybe are on a fence we don't see. They, like us, may be just waiting to see how all of the last yr. of the Loon's time in the WH really did play out. If the confirmation is strong enough -- it may make a real difference in how Reps. votes are cast later on in the yr. Naturally I hope most are so demoralized they don't even bother voting, but surprises have happened so I'll likely never hold my breath.
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You can say that over and over.
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It’s been a long day and I’m in pain, but wanted to let you know that iam enjoying the memes and posts. Has to share this though. Hip is all done. Yippee!!
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So Hunter Biden is all those jamoke's are ever going to have. And of course, they think nothing of trying to smear someone through their children, though Hunter has been an adult for some time. When they started after H. Biden, the WH was full of the Loon's wayward of-spring who were grifting right along with the head grifter.
Some may wonder so here it is:
Dec 9, 2021 — Jamoke, meaning "a stupid or inconsequential fellow," is used mainly in informal speech or slang and only rarely appears in print.
Love your meme too cardplayer and wishing you fast healing with your hip. Glad it is done and sending all kinds of well wishes.
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Glad you are on the recovery road, card!
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I think they have been doing a lot of this lately and I'm all for anything that puts bullseyes on Reps. backs.
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April 14, 2022
Apr 15
Today's stories illuminate the increasingly dangerous international struggle between democracy and authoritarianism.
On the world stage, that struggle is most visible these days in the invasion of democratic Ukraine by the authoritarian president of Russia, Vladimir Putin. Putin apparently believed his invasion would be a cakewalk, but we are now in day 51 of Putin's brutal attack, and while Ukraine is badly battered, it is holding strong.
Yesterday, Ukrainian Neptune missiles sank Russia's flagship cruiser Moskva in the Black Sea. The humiliation of losing a flagship to Ukraine prompted Russian state propaganda first to claim that the ship sank from an accident and then to insist that their real enemy in the war was the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), an organization Russian leaders consider significant enough to struggle with, unlike "weak" Ukraine.
A study out today from political scientists Ryan Grauer and Dominic Tierney reveals why democracies have an advantage over authoritarians in war. The sharing of power across officials in the legislature, judiciary, and executive branches means there is more open debate, reducing the chance of unpopular wars and, by extension, bad decisions. Observers of Russia, for example, blame the loss of the Moskva, as well as the miscalculation of Ukraine's ability to fight, on a refusal to take accounts of Ukraine's abilities seriously.
Grauer and Tierney also note that the ability of people in a democracy to protest means leaders cannot fight unpopular wars and stay in power, and that democratic countries do not tend to go to war with other democracies. Grauer and Tierney argue that the need to gain public support for wars makes it hard for democratic leaders to fight other democracies toward which their people might have good feelings, or that can put up strong resistance.
That speaks to the ability of democracies to work together, and Grauer and Tierney's study helps to explain why Russia's war of choice against a democratic neighbor has strengthened the alliances of those countries committed to national self-determination. Finland and Sweden, which have not previously expressed an interest in joining NATO, are now so seriously considering it that today a Russian spokesperson warned that if they did so, Russia would move nuclear weapons closer to Europe. Finnish former prime minister Alexander Stubb said his country was already "well prepared" for any Russian actions.
Yesterday, in a speech at the Atlantic Council, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen noted the multilateral cooperation that has enabled countries across the world to isolate Russia economically. Countries have joined together, she said, not to advance any one country's foreign policy objectives, but "in support of our principles—our opposition to aggression, to widespread violence against civilians, and in alignment with our commitment to a rules-based global order that protects peace and prosperity."
"Going forward," the treasury secretary said, "it will be increasingly difficult to separate economic issues from broader considerations of national interest, including national security." She warned China that it runs the risk of being shut out of this system if it refuses to stand against Russia's invasion.
Yellen promised that countries would work together to address the food shortages the war would bring to developing nations, and called for allied nations to expand their economic alliances for the twenty-first century.
She called for limiting supply chains to "countries we know we can count on" and for developing trade and data exchanges with those same countries in such a way as to protect American workers. She called for building on last year's global minimum tax deal to enable governments to tax corporations without encouraging them to move to cheaper countries, for more financial flexibility to combat financial crises, and for more investment in the developing world. She urged a global transition to cleaner energy and the strengthening of our global health systems to combat future pandemics.
"Some may say that now is not the right time to think big," Yellen said, but she noted that Treasury officials began crafting proposals for a new postwar international financial structure in 1941, even before the U.S. entered World War II. In 1944, with the war still raging, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt said: "It is fitting that even while the war for liberation is at its peak, [we] should gather to take counsel with one another respecting the shape of the future which we are to win." Just like then, Yellen said, "we ought not wait for a new normal. We should begin to shape a better future today."
Democracies are at risk from authoritarianism today in large part because centralizing power in a few wealthy people permits those people to continue to pocket disproportionate shares of the national wealth.
A study released yesterday by ProPublica of leaked tax documents from the Internal Revenue Service revealed how our current laws permit the very wealthy to sidestep taxes and amass greater and greater wealth. According to Forbes, the wealth of the richest 25 Americans rose more than $400 billion from 2014 to 2018, giving them a combined wealth of $1.1 trillion. It would take the wealth of 14.3 million ordinary American wage earners to get to that number. During those years, those 25 richest Americans paid $13.6 billion in taxes, a true tax rate of 3.4%.
Those with virtually unlimited money can buy the tools to spread propaganda in favor of their position. That concern is behind the fight over "free speech" that right-wing leaders have launched against social media platforms that have excluded their lies and calls for violence.
It is also behind the outcry today over the proposal of billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk, allegedly the richest man in the world, to buy Twitter for a cash offer of $43 billion in a hostile takeover of the popular platform. (According to ProPublica, Musk paid no income tax in 2018.) Musk says he wants to own the platform himself to make it more "broadly inclusive," because he believes that inclusion is "extremely important to the future of civilization…. I don't care about the economics at all."
Musk's call for "free speech" is perceived to be a sign that he would reopen the platform to former president Donald Trump and others currently banned from it because of their lies about the January 6 insurrection. Right-wing politicians lauded the potential purchase, while journalists, who use the platform intensively to keep track of breaking stories, mulled whether they could stay if it becomes a haven for the right wing.
That right wing appears to be dominating the United States these days as the Republican Party has traded power for defense of democracy. Yesterday, CNN reported that a new book about the last days of the Trump presidency says that then–Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) indulged Trump's attempt to overturn the election in order to get Trump's help in the Georgia runoff election for the Senate so that the Republicans could stay in power there.
The Big Lie that Trump had really won the election has now become a litmus test for party members, as he is tightening his grip on the Republican Party. Today, in a clear indication that party leaders intend to hold the door open for a 2024 presidential run for Trump or someone like him, the Republican National Committee voted unanimously to withdraw from debates sponsored by the nonpartisan, nonprofit Commission on Presidential Debates. Trump repeatedly insisted the 2020 presidential debates, even the one hosted by Fox News Channel journalist Chris Wallace, were biased against him.
Trump hates debates not least because his knowledge of political topics is weak; in an interview on Fox News Channel personality Sean Hannity's show last night, Trump appeared not to understand the difference between NATO—a defensive alliance of 30 member states including the Baltic states and the U.S.—and the European Union, a political and economic union of 27 member states primarily located in Europe. In a discussion about NATO, he claimed to have asked then-German chancellor Angela Merkel: "How many Chevrolets are you selling this month in Munich or Berlin?"
He added: "she looked at me and [said,] 'Well, probably none.'"
In the same interview, Trump refused to condemn Putin and appeared to blame NATO for the invasion.
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Some people confuse acceptance with apathy, but there's all the difference in the world. Apathy fails to distinguish what can and cannot be helped; acceptance makes the distinction. Apathy paralyzes the will-to-action; acceptance frees it by relieving it of impossible burdens. -Arthur Gordon
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It is time for deciding something about term limits. A bit difficult since some people can maintain their mental faculties with little issue. Others and I know Diane Feinstein is one of them, reach a time when it is time to go to the sidelines and let younger people take the reins. Grassley, I think, might have been ready, but I do think fellow Reps. talked him out of it, trying to keep those with heavy support for the Loon on board. Not only is Grassley out of it often but why should someone stay in the House or Senate until they drop over.
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Popping in to mention my 30 year old niece is running in the Boston this coming Monday, April 18th! It’s been a goal of hers for years—she ran cross-country track in high school and has been a runner ever since. My sister and her husband will be traveling to Boston with her. Her starting time is 10:30 am.
Boston Marathon trivia:
It is the oldest annual marathon in the world, begun in 1897.
To register for the Boston Marathon, you have to run a certified marathon in a certain time limit determined by your gender and age. For men between 18 and 34, the necessary qualifying time historically is 3 hours flat, and for women, it's 3:30.
The marathon is typically run on Patriots Day, which is the third Monday in April. The COVID-19 pandemic led to the cancellation of the 2020 race and pushed the 2021 marathon back to October. Monday marks the first time the event will be run in April since 2019.
Approximately 500,000 spectators line the marathon's 26.2 mile course each year --that's 80 percent of Boston's total population!
The unicorn is the Boston Athletic Association mascot and is on the marathon medal.
Every year, 30,000 runners participate in the Boston Marathon.
A Boston Red Sox baseball game is always played on Marathon Monday!
Spencer, a local therapy dog, has gone viral for making an appearance at the race clutching a "Boston Strong" flag cheering runners on.
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Love the trivia for the B. Marathon. Also nice to see Spencer and that the Boston colors are yellow and blue which are Ukraine's as well. I hope that is a good sign of a great restart to the Marathon taking place as 'usual'. Golden Retrievers are fantastic dogs. I had a Golden yrs. ago. They are fantastic work dogs that love what they do and many are highly, highly trainable. My dog Regie was one of those. I got him right after my stroke and could not really keep up with him -- but in training class he responded beautifully even with MY time lag on commands and pressures on the lead.
Trainer finally talked me into having Reggie go with someone who could really use his over abundant talents. I cried for three weeks straight and then let him go to New York where he found drugs at the airport, found bodies of missing people and when he wasn't doing that -- because Goldens are so gentle and happy, he went to nursing homes to visit with the residents there. Always on the go. I still miss him though he is deceased after all this time but I did find joy in knowing he was not miserable from too sedate a life which is definitely what he would have had with me.
Good Luck to your niece, Divine. I'm glad she is getting to do this. -
Most of the news is rehashed from previous week, although finally it is confirmed that Ukraine missiles ( at least two ) did hit the Russian flagship and ultimately caused it to sink to the bottom of the sea. A great humiliation to Putin and a story was ready about munitions on the ship itself accidently exploding.
More on Mark Meadows and Mike Lee and emails back and forth clearly showing plans to subvert the election so as to give it to the Loon. I think this is noticed a lot more perhaps ( not that it would have really escaped ) because Mark Meadows had a change of heart about cooperation. Likely he was helped into that decision. There again Ruth -- the tangled web when you choose to lie, omit facts or just completely change your former stance.
Lies are not good things and changes in mid-stream can obviously be damning. I think it is also possible, that at the beginning of 1/6, it may have been thought that they would not be able to do the great job they seem to be doing, in amassing what sounds like highly credible info, with all sorts of corroborating information. Here's hoping that we do not have to wait too much longer to start hearing the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth of 1/6.
I think it is amazing all the shenanigans undertaken to try and keep as much of these things under wrap as possible. Maybe more has come out just in having made those on the committee even more determined to find the needed answers.
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Good luck to your niece, Divine!
Love the dog stories. DH & I, who always have had cats before, have somehow found ourselves with an 85 pound puppy (long story) who will either keep us young or do us in.....the jury is still out!
The list of people whom I hope will rot in a literal hell just keeps getting longer & longer!
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Thanks, Jackie & Ruth!
One more fact about the Boston Marathon: all qualifiers must show proof of Covid 19 vaccination!
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