Timeline of National Guard Deployment to Capitol By Robert Farley Posted on January 13, 2021 | Updated on May 24, 2021 Timeline of National Guard Deployment to Capitol - FactCheck.org
I was surprised they actually keep statistics like that but according to an article published in The Journal of General Internal Medicine covering a period between 2014 and 2019 they found opioid related deaths equal among red states and blue states The stats below are official government figures and completely unrelated to the article: West Virginia: 41.5 per 100,000 people - Red State New Hampshire: 34.3 per 100,000 people - Blue sometimes Red Kentucky: 29.9 per 100,000 people Red State Ohio: 29.9 per 100,000 people - Red State Rhode Island: 28.2 per 100,000 people - Blue State Pennsylvania: 26.3 per 100,000 people - Blue State Massachusetts: 25.7 per 100,000 people - Blue State New Mexico: 25.3 per 100,000 people - Blue State Utah: 23.4 per 100,000 people - Red State Tennessee: 22.2 per 100,000 people - Red State
Susan Collins is known for her portrayal of her (supposed) mental anguish while trying to decide whether or not to support another one of Trump's proposals. In the end, she would support Trump. Susan Collins Sad That Joe Manchin Has Replaced Her as Most Annoying Senator The Borowitz Report June 9, 2021 Susan Collins Sad That Joe Manchin Has Replaced Her as Most Annoying Senator
Oh yeah. Last Summer I took the four counties that I would normally do business in or ride bike in and turn those numbers into percentages. The two counties with big urban areas, Grand Forks and Fargo were like .75ish. the rural counties went much higher in one was right under 3%. And I sat there and looked at it and you could just see it the redder the county the higher the percentage. What makes that worse is that these are very sparsely populated counties so you actually have to get in the pickup drive somewhere to breathe on somebody.
Supreme Court Watergate-era rulings against Nixon may end Trump's executive privilege claims - CNNPolitics excerpt: "Nixon lost in 1977 by a 7-2 vote. A threshold question for the justices in that case of Nixon v. Administrator of General Services was whether Nixon, as a former president, could assert executive privilege -- a right intended to ensure a president confidentiality in his dealings with advisers and usually given significant protection. In an earlier case, the 1974 United States v. Nixon, the court had said the privilege is not absolute, as it required Nixon to turn over Watergate tapes for a criminal investigation. (Nixon resigned soon after that decision.) "
Nixon claimed that 18 minutes of the tapes were "accidentally erased". We can expect something similar from Trump.
Nothing is gone for good anymore. Oh, and Donnie's Epstein videos will eventually come out, too. I'm surprised Putin hadn't slipped with the peepee video, too.
McEnany is another wax-figure automaton from Fox with prerecorded messages. She was known for spouting off a long line of rehearsed statements in response to questions she anticipated from reporters at presidential press gatherings. The content was usually a list of whataboutisms. At the end, she would cowardly run off the stage. Kayleigh McEnany From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Kayleigh McEnany - Wikipedia excerpt: "2020 presidential election and aftermath While ballots were still being counted on election day, McEnany made an early false declaration of victory for Trump.[53] After Joe Biden won the election and President Donald Trump refused to concede, McEnany spread false claims of fraud in the 2020 election.[54][55] On November 20, 2020, McEnany falsely claimed Trump was not given an "orderly transition of power".[56][57] Previously in 2016, within two days of Trump's victory, his opponent Hillary Clinton conceded to Trump, while then-President Obama had recognized Trump as president-elect and hosted Trump at the White House. Trump himself thanked Obama and his wife "for their gracious aid throughout this transition". Trump fired the leader of his transition team (Chris Christie), threw out months of transition planning, and rejected help from the Obama administration.[58] McEnany's comment was stated while Trump himself was refusing to recognize his opponent Joe Biden's victory as legitimate; Trump was also actively delaying the start of a transfer of power to president-elect Biden for two weeks.[59] Following the 2021 storming of the United States Capitol, Randall Lane, writing for Forbes, warned corporations against hiring McEnany or other people "who lied for Trump", stating that "Forbes will assume that everything your company or firm talks about is a lie. We're going to scrutinize, double-check, investigate with the same skepticism we'd approach a Trump tweet. Want to ensure the world's biggest business media brand approaches you as a potential funnel of disinformation? Then hire away."[60]"
The grand finale of McEnany's cowardly exits occurred on January 7, 2021, the day after Trump's insurrection at the Capitol. Kayleigh McEnany slammed for her 'cowardly exit' from the White House Alex Henderson, AlterNet January 20, 2021 Kayleigh McEnany slammed for her 'cowardly exit' from the White House excerpt: "When Donald Trump's presidency officially ended on Inauguration Day, one of the people who left with him was former White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany. Washington Post media critic Erik Wemple, in an Inauguration Day column, looks back on McEnany's final weeks in Trump's administration, calling her departure a "cowardly exit." Wemple notes that the last time McEnany "appeared before the assembled press in the White House Briefing Room was on Jan. 7, the day after a violent mob stormed the U.S. Capitol Building." "Speaking for the 'entire White House,' she plowed through a prepared statement deploring the actions of the rioters," Wemple recalls. "Then she closed her briefing book and bolted. In all, it took one minute and 50 seconds." Wemple continues, "Even though the briefing was sparsely attended on account of coronavirus restrictions, the correspondents let out a roar as McEnany left the room. All of them had a question for her, and they yelled those questions at the same time. No answers came back." The Post media critic goes on to say that Jan. 7 was a rare example of McEnany not being able to rationalize Trump's actions in some way."
Holy smokes … I sure could go for a mean tweet, stocked grocery store shelves, and $1.47/gal gasoline right now.
McEnany will always have a high profile job....entertainment for the mental limited masses, like Carson. She should be nominated for an academy award with being able to act like that, say that shit and keep a straight face. She did seem to have a nice ass, which, I'm sure was what Donnie wanted.
it's one thing to suspect they killed Herman Cain it's another thing hearing it from the horses Ivermectin filled mouth We killed Herman Cain': Trump staffers say they blame themselves for Cain's COVID-19 death after he attended Tulsa rally When news hit that former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain died of COVID-19 a month after he attended then-President Donald Trump's rally in Tulsa last summer, many of the president's campaign staffers blamed themselves for his death, according to a new book. We killed Herman Cain," one senior Trump staffer reportedly told ABC News reporter Will Steakin, who also attended the Tulsa event on June 20, 2020. That's according to an excerpt of ABC News' chief Washington correspondent Jonathan Karl's forthcoming book, "Betrayal: The Final Act of the Trump Show," published in Vanity Fair on Thursday. The book is slated to come out on November 16. The Trump campaign flew in Cain, a prominent Republican who co-chaired the coalition Black Voices for Trump, to attend the Tulsa rally last year, according to the book. He, along with many other attendees, were photographed at the indoor event without masks.