i hope they still offer the tactical kilt. I am thinking Drew McIntyre would look great in one.Waiting for the 5.11 marketing campaign, "When 10 molotov cocktails aren't enough, wear 5.11 cargo pants."
i hope they still offer the tactical kilt. I am thinking Drew McIntyre would look great in one.Waiting for the 5.11 marketing campaign, "When 10 molotov cocktails aren't enough, wear 5.11 cargo pants."
So... a 7 foot non-scalable fence around the Capitol?
1. Yeah, let's have our "leaders" cut themselves even further off from us great unwashed.
2. I thought fences didn't work?
They'll be building a wall next.
Fences or walls?So... a 7 foot non-scalable fence around the Capitol?
1. Yeah, let's have our "leaders" cut themselves even further off from us great unwashed.
2. I thought fences didn't work?
Awkward.
The public not liking the dems much more gave the Republicans a great opportunity to gain overall popularity. Now they’re damaged goods. The “patriots” really screwed the pooch on this one.NPR's ME had a pretty good interview of Jonah Goldberg this morning about this.
Ignore what you might think about NPR and listen.
How Does The GOP Move Forward After Capitol Breach, Trump Presidency?
A key point: The GOP party is f***ed right now, but the public doesn't like the Dems much more.
Pretty confident in your telepathic abilities?
Indeed, it's going to be a hard row to hoe.The public not liking the dems much more gave the Republicans a great opportunity to gain overall popularity. Now they’re damaged goods. The “patriots” really screwed the pooch on this one.
WowweeThird thread I've posted this on. Might get in trouble but please watch this
Charlie Ward & Simon Parkes What Happened on 6 January, What Happens Next, Trump Prevails - Robert David Steele
WATCH NOWrobertdavidsteele.com
The 'public' was does that mean? This will have no effect, democrats are still going to support democrats and Republicans support Republicans, nothing got screwed. It's not like this is going to cause a Republican to turn democrat, or we'd have seen democrats move over after the year long nonsense from BLM and Antifa. It gave the democrats and the media more to exploit but that's nothing new.The public not liking the dems much more gave the Republicans a great opportunity to gain overall popularity. Now they’re damaged goods. The “patriots” really screwed the pooch on this one.
Along with Sen Hawley, it's time for Ted Cruz to go. They tied their ships to Trump and now they can sink with him.Indeed, it's going to be a hard row to hoe.
Throwing Josh Hawley under the bus would be a good start for the GOP.
Here's a screenshot of that video, to save others from wasting their time watching it:Third thread I've posted this on. Might get in trouble but please watch this
Charlie Ward & Simon Parkes What Happened on 6 January, What Happens Next, Trump Prevails - Robert David Steele
WATCH NOWrobertdavidsteele.com
Why do we want Ted Cruz gone?Along with Sen Hawley, it's time for Ted Cruz to go. They tied their ships to Trump and now they can sink with him.
Why do we want Ted Cruz gone?
Pretty confident in your telepathic abilities?
And this is why Dems nearly always win these fights. They close ranks and double down, even when they're wrong. Republicans are always afraid of what might happen or how their actions might be perceived even when they're right, and hurriedly look for sacrificial lambs in a futile attempt to placate the crowd satisfied with nothing less than their absolute destruction. I'm not sure when they will learn this lesson. At least Trump tried to show them.Indeed, it's going to be a hard row to hoe.
Throwing Josh Hawley under the bus would be a good start for the GOP.
I voted for Ted Cruz in the 2016 primaries, so I wasn't saying this lightly. I feel that Ted Cruz tried to have his cake and eat it too. I think he went along with Trump's call to oppose the election certification just as an effort to appease Trump's supporters, when he knew that it was 'never going to be the solution for election integrity and wasn't constitutional' (paraphrasing Dan Crenshaw).Why do we want Ted Cruz gone?
Cruz was on my short list in the 2016 cycle, but I can't imagine supporting him ever again. McConnell and others had a utilitarian approach, which I can understand.I voted for Ted Cruz in the 2016 primaries, so I wasn't saying this lightly. I feel that Ted Cruz tried to have his cake and eat it too. I think he went along with Trump's call to oppose the election certification just as an effort to appease Trump's supporters, when he knew that it was 'never going to be the solution for election integrity and wasn't constitutional' (paraphrasing Dan Crenshaw).
And this is why Dems nearly always win these fights. They close ranks and double down, even when they're wrong. Republicans are always afraid of what might happen or how their actions might be perceived even when they're right, and hurriedly look for sacrificial lambs in a futile attempt to placate the crowd satisfied with nothing less than their absolute destruction. I'm not sure when they will learn this lesson. At least Trump tried to show them.
That raises the question of Trump's ascendancy, though."Always win these fights" in what sense?
I think their insistence on always doubling down--their inability to police their own party--is one of the great advantages that the Republican party has. Republicans do police their own party, and I think that is part of why the Republicans control almost 60% of the state legislatures in our country.
I don't think that abandoning integrity becomes a good idea just because the dems have done it...