2024
Re: 2024
If Trump wins, we can only hope that this is how it works out.Seacoaster(1) wrote: ↑Sat Nov 02, 2024 7:38 am This is a sentence in the Wall Street Journal editorial page endorsement of the Moron:
“Mr Trump was too undisciplined, and his attention span too short, to stay on message much less stage a coup.”
Stirring stuff.
It does take a lot of work, planning and discipline to be Putin, Xi or Hitler. And a main takeaway from the Mueller report was that Trump's core crew was too incompetent to collude.
Of course if Trump is just screwing around and watching TV like he did during Term 1, I do worry about what Steven Miller and Kash Patel will be up to. Especially since there won't be folks like Mattis, Kelly, Esper, Milley around.
And recall that the Trump lawyers like Sessions, Barr, Cippilone etc. (who in no way are RINO squishes) constantly told Trump no (and got fired for doing so). Heaven help us from whoever (whatever) will be WH counsel and US AG in Term 2.
Boycott stupid. Country over party.
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Re: 2024
Where is George Soros??!!
https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/ ... rcna178254
A South African buying an American election. Hysterical. I hope TRUMP wins and turns this country inside out.
https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/ ... rcna178254
A South African buying an American election. Hysterical. I hope TRUMP wins and turns this country inside out.
“I wish you would!”
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Re: 2024
Just saw a freak at the gas station with a MAGA hat on. Anti-social and completely out of place. Take America Back.
“I wish you would!”
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Re: 2024
And the Moron's putative choice for our public health czar is....
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/02/us/p ... water.html
"Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said Saturday that among the first acts of a second Trump administration would be to “advise all U.S. water systems to remove fluoride from public water,” a stunning potential reversal of what is widely considered one of the most important public health interventions of the past century.
The statement, posted on social media, is among the more concrete pledges made by Mr. Kennedy — a former independent presidential candidate who is now backing Mr. Trump — in his capacity as a top adviser on Mr. Trump’s transition team. It also raises the specter of an all-out assault on public-health expertise should Mr. Trump win next week’s election, a prospect that has already caused significant alarm among experts across the medical and environmental fields.
As president, Mr. Trump would not have the power to order states and municipalities to remove fluoride from their water supplies; fluoridation is a matter of local control.
But a presidential pronouncement would inject the White House into a debate that stretches back to the 1950s, when conspiracy theories swirled around fluoridation, with critics claiming it was a Communist plot to poison Americans’ brains — a view that was memorably parodied in Stanley Kubrick’s film “Dr. Strangelove.”
More recently, however, there has been scientific debate around the practice, with some studies suggesting that excess exposure to fluoride — at levels twice the amount recommended by the Environmental Protection Agency — could harm infants’ developing brains. But scientists, including those at the federal government’s National Toxicology Program, say more research is needed to understand whether lower exposure to fluoride has an effect.
The process of adding small amounts fluoride to drinking water, or fluoridation, began about 80 years ago to prevent tooth decay. That effort, public health officials say, has been extraordinarily successful. A majority of Americans today live in water systems that are fluoridated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which lists fluoridation as one of the 10 great public health achievements of the 20th century.
The American Dental Association has said that studies show that water fluoridation reduces dental decay by at least 25 percent in children and adults. “Seventy years of research, thousands of studies and the experience of more than 210 million Americans tell us that water fluoridation is effective in preventing cavities and is safe for children and adults,” the association states on its website.
Karoline Leavitt, the Trump campaign’s national press secretary, said in a statement Saturday: “While President Trump has received a variety of policy ideas, he is focused on Tuesday’s election.”
Mr. Trump has repeatedly said in recent public appearances that he would let Mr. Kennedy “go wild” on issues of health and the environment. Earlier this week, Mr. Kennedy told supporters that Mr. Trump had promised him “control” of the nation’s public health agencies, a claim the Trump campaign said was premature.
Mr. Kennedy, a prominent skeptic of vaccines who has railed against public health measures and the impact of chemicals on the environment, considers the C.D.C. and medical associations like the A.D.A. to be corrupt. He has pledged to “clean up” the nation’s public health infrastructure, if empowered by Mr. Trump.
In his statement on social media, Mr. Kennedy said Mr. Trump would advise all U.S. water systems on Jan. 20 — inauguration day — to remove fluoride.
In September, opponents of fluoridation won a major legal victory when a federal judge in California ordered the E.P.A. to strengthen its regulations for fluoridated water. The judge cited the toxicology program’s study.
In a recent interview, Stuart Cooper, the head of the Fluoride Action Network, the advocacy group behind the case, said that while his organization had “some overlap” with Mr. Kennedy’s agenda, it preferred to remain nonpartisan. He steered the conversation away from politics. “We’re already winning with the science,” Mr. Cooper said.
In the wake of the court ruling, he said, scores of communities have put a pause on water fluoridation.
Such moves are troubling to dental experts, said Dr. Jayanth Kumar, the former state dental director in California. He said there were limits to the toxicology program’s analysis. “In my view, the benefits of water fluoridation are settled,” Dr. Kumar said.
Mr. Kennedy has been speaking around the country as part of a “Make America Healthy Again” tour aligned with Mr. Trump's campaign. But he has also used social media to give hints of his priorities, should he be granted power over the nation’s health services.
In a post earlier on Saturday, Mr. Kennedy responded to a post about the ingredients in a plant-based formula brand, saying: “This regime of child abuse is about to end.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/02/us/p ... water.html
"Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said Saturday that among the first acts of a second Trump administration would be to “advise all U.S. water systems to remove fluoride from public water,” a stunning potential reversal of what is widely considered one of the most important public health interventions of the past century.
The statement, posted on social media, is among the more concrete pledges made by Mr. Kennedy — a former independent presidential candidate who is now backing Mr. Trump — in his capacity as a top adviser on Mr. Trump’s transition team. It also raises the specter of an all-out assault on public-health expertise should Mr. Trump win next week’s election, a prospect that has already caused significant alarm among experts across the medical and environmental fields.
As president, Mr. Trump would not have the power to order states and municipalities to remove fluoride from their water supplies; fluoridation is a matter of local control.
But a presidential pronouncement would inject the White House into a debate that stretches back to the 1950s, when conspiracy theories swirled around fluoridation, with critics claiming it was a Communist plot to poison Americans’ brains — a view that was memorably parodied in Stanley Kubrick’s film “Dr. Strangelove.”
More recently, however, there has been scientific debate around the practice, with some studies suggesting that excess exposure to fluoride — at levels twice the amount recommended by the Environmental Protection Agency — could harm infants’ developing brains. But scientists, including those at the federal government’s National Toxicology Program, say more research is needed to understand whether lower exposure to fluoride has an effect.
The process of adding small amounts fluoride to drinking water, or fluoridation, began about 80 years ago to prevent tooth decay. That effort, public health officials say, has been extraordinarily successful. A majority of Americans today live in water systems that are fluoridated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which lists fluoridation as one of the 10 great public health achievements of the 20th century.
The American Dental Association has said that studies show that water fluoridation reduces dental decay by at least 25 percent in children and adults. “Seventy years of research, thousands of studies and the experience of more than 210 million Americans tell us that water fluoridation is effective in preventing cavities and is safe for children and adults,” the association states on its website.
Karoline Leavitt, the Trump campaign’s national press secretary, said in a statement Saturday: “While President Trump has received a variety of policy ideas, he is focused on Tuesday’s election.”
Mr. Trump has repeatedly said in recent public appearances that he would let Mr. Kennedy “go wild” on issues of health and the environment. Earlier this week, Mr. Kennedy told supporters that Mr. Trump had promised him “control” of the nation’s public health agencies, a claim the Trump campaign said was premature.
Mr. Kennedy, a prominent skeptic of vaccines who has railed against public health measures and the impact of chemicals on the environment, considers the C.D.C. and medical associations like the A.D.A. to be corrupt. He has pledged to “clean up” the nation’s public health infrastructure, if empowered by Mr. Trump.
In his statement on social media, Mr. Kennedy said Mr. Trump would advise all U.S. water systems on Jan. 20 — inauguration day — to remove fluoride.
In September, opponents of fluoridation won a major legal victory when a federal judge in California ordered the E.P.A. to strengthen its regulations for fluoridated water. The judge cited the toxicology program’s study.
In a recent interview, Stuart Cooper, the head of the Fluoride Action Network, the advocacy group behind the case, said that while his organization had “some overlap” with Mr. Kennedy’s agenda, it preferred to remain nonpartisan. He steered the conversation away from politics. “We’re already winning with the science,” Mr. Cooper said.
In the wake of the court ruling, he said, scores of communities have put a pause on water fluoridation.
Such moves are troubling to dental experts, said Dr. Jayanth Kumar, the former state dental director in California. He said there were limits to the toxicology program’s analysis. “In my view, the benefits of water fluoridation are settled,” Dr. Kumar said.
Mr. Kennedy has been speaking around the country as part of a “Make America Healthy Again” tour aligned with Mr. Trump's campaign. But he has also used social media to give hints of his priorities, should he be granted power over the nation’s health services.
In a post earlier on Saturday, Mr. Kennedy responded to a post about the ingredients in a plant-based formula brand, saying: “This regime of child abuse is about to end.”
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Re: 2024
The science isn’t settled!Seacoaster(1) wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 6:15 am And the Moron's putative choice for our public health czar is....
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/02/us/p ... water.html
"Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said Saturday that among the first acts of a second Trump administration would be to “advise all U.S. water systems to remove fluoride from public water,” a stunning potential reversal of what is widely considered one of the most important public health interventions of the past century.
The statement, posted on social media, is among the more concrete pledges made by Mr. Kennedy — a former independent presidential candidate who is now backing Mr. Trump — in his capacity as a top adviser on Mr. Trump’s transition team. It also raises the specter of an all-out assault on public-health expertise should Mr. Trump win next week’s election, a prospect that has already caused significant alarm among experts across the medical and environmental fields.
As president, Mr. Trump would not have the power to order states and municipalities to remove fluoride from their water supplies; fluoridation is a matter of local control.
But a presidential pronouncement would inject the White House into a debate that stretches back to the 1950s, when conspiracy theories swirled around fluoridation, with critics claiming it was a Communist plot to poison Americans’ brains — a view that was memorably parodied in Stanley Kubrick’s film “Dr. Strangelove.”
More recently, however, there has been scientific debate around the practice, with some studies suggesting that excess exposure to fluoride — at levels twice the amount recommended by the Environmental Protection Agency — could harm infants’ developing brains. But scientists, including those at the federal government’s National Toxicology Program, say more research is needed to understand whether lower exposure to fluoride has an effect.
The process of adding small amounts fluoride to drinking water, or fluoridation, began about 80 years ago to prevent tooth decay. That effort, public health officials say, has been extraordinarily successful. A majority of Americans today live in water systems that are fluoridated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which lists fluoridation as one of the 10 great public health achievements of the 20th century.
The American Dental Association has said that studies show that water fluoridation reduces dental decay by at least 25 percent in children and adults. “Seventy years of research, thousands of studies and the experience of more than 210 million Americans tell us that water fluoridation is effective in preventing cavities and is safe for children and adults,” the association states on its website.
Karoline Leavitt, the Trump campaign’s national press secretary, said in a statement Saturday: “While President Trump has received a variety of policy ideas, he is focused on Tuesday’s election.”
Mr. Trump has repeatedly said in recent public appearances that he would let Mr. Kennedy “go wild” on issues of health and the environment. Earlier this week, Mr. Kennedy told supporters that Mr. Trump had promised him “control” of the nation’s public health agencies, a claim the Trump campaign said was premature.
Mr. Kennedy, a prominent skeptic of vaccines who has railed against public health measures and the impact of chemicals on the environment, considers the C.D.C. and medical associations like the A.D.A. to be corrupt. He has pledged to “clean up” the nation’s public health infrastructure, if empowered by Mr. Trump.
In his statement on social media, Mr. Kennedy said Mr. Trump would advise all U.S. water systems on Jan. 20 — inauguration day — to remove fluoride.
In September, opponents of fluoridation won a major legal victory when a federal judge in California ordered the E.P.A. to strengthen its regulations for fluoridated water. The judge cited the toxicology program’s study.
In a recent interview, Stuart Cooper, the head of the Fluoride Action Network, the advocacy group behind the case, said that while his organization had “some overlap” with Mr. Kennedy’s agenda, it preferred to remain nonpartisan. He steered the conversation away from politics. “We’re already winning with the science,” Mr. Cooper said.
In the wake of the court ruling, he said, scores of communities have put a pause on water fluoridation.
Such moves are troubling to dental experts, said Dr. Jayanth Kumar, the former state dental director in California. He said there were limits to the toxicology program’s analysis. “In my view, the benefits of water fluoridation are settled,” Dr. Kumar said.
Mr. Kennedy has been speaking around the country as part of a “Make America Healthy Again” tour aligned with Mr. Trump's campaign. But he has also used social media to give hints of his priorities, should he be granted power over the nation’s health services.
In a post earlier on Saturday, Mr. Kennedy responded to a post about the ingredients in a plant-based formula brand, saying: “This regime of child abuse is about to end.”
“I wish you would!”
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Re: 2024
Open Sphincter, YA, C&S, Tech, Kram, Petey, Lager and people like them agree:
https://www.threads.net/@kamalahq/post/ ... o53SpTCRtw
https://www.threads.net/@kamalahq/post/ ... o53SpTCRtw
“I wish you would!”
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Re: 2024
This thread needs to call a waaambulance.
- cradleandshoot
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- NattyBohChamps04
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Re: 2024
The party that "hates" pedophiles is always so silent about Epstein and Trump's looong friendship and all the allegations against Trump over the years.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 8:00 am https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-j ... st-1978434
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Re: 2024
But Bill and Hillary….NattyBohChamps04 wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 12:33 pmThe party that "hates" pedophiles is always so silent about Epstein and Trump's looong friendship and all the allegations against Trump over the years.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 8:00 am https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-j ... st-1978434
“I wish you would!”
Re: 2024
Nope. The game of trolling goes away in a few months, fellas.
Then Trump shows up, and starts F'ing the working class, while the rest of us on the Forum laugh and laugh and laugh.
Pete doesn't give a fig about anything Trump does. Trump is a cash register for Petey.....that's it. Nothing more.
And TrumpNation is back for their 12th year of asking to be fleeced...in exchange for allll the pointless shiny objects you two are bragging about....
Life is WAY too short to keep caring about the working class. They're on their own as far as I'm concerned.
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Re: 2024
The transgenders, illegal aliens and wokeness will all be gone soon!a fan wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 4:50 pmNope. The game of trolling goes away in a few months, fellas.
Then Trump shows up, and starts F'ing the working class, while the rest of us on the Forum laugh and laugh and laugh.
Pete doesn't give a fig about anything Trump does. Trump is a cash register for Petey.....that's it. Nothing more.
And TrumpNation is back for their 12th year of asking to be fleeced...in exchange for allll the pointless shiny objects you two are bragging about....
Life is WAY too short to keep caring about the working class. They're on their own as far as I'm concerned.
“I wish you would!”
Re: 2024
I distinctly remember one poster telling us he was voting for Trump the first time around because he was "tired of PC culture".Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 4:58 pmThe transgenders, illegal aliens and wokeness will all be gone soon!a fan wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 4:50 pmNope. The game of trolling goes away in a few months, fellas.
Then Trump shows up, and starts F'ing the working class, while the rest of us on the Forum laugh and laugh and laugh.
Pete doesn't give a fig about anything Trump does. Trump is a cash register for Petey.....that's it. Nothing more.
And TrumpNation is back for their 12th year of asking to be fleeced...in exchange for allll the pointless shiny objects you two are bragging about....
Life is WAY too short to keep caring about the working class. They're on their own as far as I'm concerned.
These are full grown adults writing these things, and telling a room full of people that this is how they think the Executive Branch works.
Re: 2024
If Trump can get done what he or hid close associates claim he will do millions will lose health insurance, medicare, full SS benefits, public education, trump nation is the biggest user of all of these. The look on their faces should be priceless. The country could plunge into depression. The best high net worth investment firms are not expecting much change regardless who winsa fan wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 5:00 pmI distinctly remember one poster telling us he was voting for Trump the first time around because he was "tired of PC culture".Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 4:58 pmThe transgenders, illegal aliens and wokeness will all be gone soon!a fan wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 4:50 pmNope. The game of trolling goes away in a few months, fellas.
Then Trump shows up, and starts F'ing the working class, while the rest of us on the Forum laugh and laugh and laugh.
Pete doesn't give a fig about anything Trump does. Trump is a cash register for Petey.....that's it. Nothing more.
And TrumpNation is back for their 12th year of asking to be fleeced...in exchange for allll the pointless shiny objects you two are bragging about....
Life is WAY too short to keep caring about the working class. They're on their own as far as I'm concerned.
These are full grown adults writing these things, and telling a room full of people that this is how they think the Executive Branch works.
In theory stock prices are based on future earnings if deep cuts are made future earnings and stock prices will go diwn.
I just heard a Trump ad talking how we are “one nation and one people”. Who is pretending to be Trump. The person also tslked about all races, creeds and the like bcs one prople
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Re: 2024
Open Sphincter, YA, C&S, Tech, Kram, Petey, Lager and people like them won’t readily critique Trump…. Jeffrey Epstein has more character…..let that settle in….
“I wish you would!”