Osodecentx said:
Oldbear83 said:
Canon said:
Oldbear83 said:
Osodecentx said:
Oldbear83 said:
Osodecentx said:
Oldbear83 said:
Osodecentx said:
Oldbear83 said:
Osodecentx said:
Oldbear83 said:
Osodecentx said:
Oldbear83 said:
Osodecentx said:
ATL Bear said:
Robert Wilson said:
He leaned into the shutdowns, massive handouts, and the big unemployment payments. He never was really a limited government guy - much more of a populist - and he was happy to open up the checkbook for the giveaways which were necessary to support the lockdowns. He finally realized the error of his ways, but the horse was way out of the barn by then.
If he gave a tinker's dam about the party or the country, he would've done everything in his power to help keep the Georgia senate races from going Democrat, but he was too wrapped up in his own *****
We are incredibly fortunate that Biden has done such a terrible job that he has no leverage on Manchin or Sinema (really the opposite - they can't very well follow him).
Trump took a giant dump on Georgia without any regard for consequence. His first mistake on the GA Senate race was going for Kelly Loeffler over Doug Collins. And no way David Perdue should have lost his race. Now Trump's collateral damage with Kemp could put the governor's race in play for Stacy Abrams as he and Perdue, instead of being the Senator, are tearing at each other. Shoe in Lieutenant Governor Duncan has declined to run because of the insanity from 2020, so even that's up for grabs now.
Good post
Sure, if you're into blaming Trump for other issues and problems instead of looking more carefully at causes.
I believe Trump is the cause of the things listed.
There's help available for that, you know ...
Help for what?
Delusion, paranoia, and comprehension of cause, in this case
Okay, IDS Boy
Weak riposte, son.
Fear saps strength that way.
"Holy cow, I thought you were pathetic, but now, now you're just pitiful."
Yes, random statements out of context are a common symptom of chronic TDS.
"Not really what you said. But thanks for proving you will cling to a claim long after it's rotted into greasy bits."
Also, repeating statements made by someone else in other contexts reflects poor reading comprehension and the inability to support your own side of a discussion.
Don't bother with Oso. He dances on the graves of dead people who disagreed with his stance on vaccines. He's kind of gross.
Oso's a good guy, he just cannot accept that the CDC a la Fauci has become so corrupt.
I agree on CDC.
Look, I know you can make cogent arguments; Ive seen you do it. The little quips you make to counter someone arguments aren't worthy.
Make your argument; we may disagree, but make an argument
I make arguments appropriate to the tone in the room. Take a look at responses from Sam, from quash, and their peers when I bring up the facts, and see their contempt for anyone who disagrees.
The plain fact is that I am wasting my time with some of these people, they will never stop and consider the facts, never consider that this issue is not about Trump or an election but illustrates the dismal erosion of the federal government's duty to some level of transparency.
I'm not some anti-vaccine nut, but the mandates and lockdowns and bully-gang tactics to smear anyone bringing up the value of treatments and open forum discussion of the virus' evolution are revolting.
I disagree with Canon and Amal, too, when they devolve to name-calling, but at least they tend to do so only in response to some childish tantrum from the statists.
We are learning more and more that while serious, COVID was
never the catastrophic threat the media played it out to be. It's somewhere between SARS and The Spanish Flu of 1918 in scale, but the fear-mongering is both useless and sure to provoke a savage backlash.
What happens when a genuine threat exists, but the CDC has no credibility because they went stupid over COVID?
That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier