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3) If only five show up, the media will lie that it was "thousand". If necessary, the media will pull their cameras in so that the five people look like they are packed in the middle of thousands.
How is it that I've been on this planet for 40+ years, spending half that working in the city every day (and living in shithole areas for plenty of years as well), and the only time I ever saw a gun being used in anger was when some guy in the lane next to me brought his Sig Mosquito out for the first time?
The RBF contingent is going to be very upset though....
-Mike
How is it that I've been on this planet for 40+ years, spending half that working in the city every day (and living in shithole areas for plenty of years as well), and the only time I ever saw a gun being used in anger was when some guy in the lane next to me brought his Sig Mosquito out for the first time?
I agree.That'd make a great poster to carry
Mashpee selectman Andrew Gottlieb is planning to bus kids in for it.
It is a go in Washington D.C. ...
Oooo that's the AT&T girl from the commercial
Sorry, I gave at the office...Lol. They're going to use kids for everything...
"Knock, knock, knock"
"Yes?"
"Girl Scout Troop 34, we're here to confiscate your firearms..."
That may or may not be Milana Vayntrub. Ok, it’s Milana Vayntrub.
I have 3 family member going to this thing. I told them for every dumbass rally you attend I buy another gun.
In 5-10 years we'll be seeing the powers that be orchestrating young people to march and demanding tighter speech restrictions based on the damage that white privilege, racism, and inequality has caused.
Good points, I suspect they'll engineer it though to have next generation Tide podders actually asking the government to remove the 1st Amendment. Safe to say in the near future forums like this will be labeled as hate forums, or terrorist forums, or whatever label works in their justification for shutting down anything they dont like.Um they are already doing that with 'cultural appropriation', "'hate' speech isn't free speech", 'trigger warnings', and 'privilege'. Where the 'deciders' in power censor dissident thought.
They want everyone disarmed and so mentally imprisoned by jargon and peer pressure that resistance to the Agenda is impossible. Orwell would have a field day writing about 21st Century totalitarianism.
It is a go in Washington D.C. ...
March for Our Lives receives permits for DC gun control rally
And Maryland the Liberal pride of the mid-Atlantic will be shipping some of it fine citizens there, how much you want to bet the crime rate in Baltimore drops for a day while they are gone...
The RBF contingent is going to be very upset though....
-Mike
Over the last three decades U.S. parents have committed filicide — the killing of one’s child — about 500 times every year. The horrifying instances are often poorly understood, but a recent study provides the first comprehensive statistical overview of the tragic phenomenon. The authors also suggest underlying hypotheses of motives with the hope of spurring research on filicide prevention.
I'm personally afflicted by RFB.
Never a day that get's asked if I'm "alright" at least once.
“The Lottery” is a classic short story written by Shirley Jackson in 1948. It’s the tale of a rural, farming community in America of about three hundred residents. The town seems normal by all accounts as it prepares for a traditional, harvest-time event known as The Lottery.
Then in the 1990s, something started to change dramatically in how her students responded to the sobering tale. Rather than being horrified by it, some claimed they were bored by it, while others thought the ending was “neat.”
When Ms. Haugaard pressed them for more of their thoughts, she was appalled to discover that not one student in the class was willing to say the practice of human sacrifice was morally wrong! She describes one interaction with a student, whom she calls Beth:
“‘Are you asking me if I believe in human sacrifice?’ Beth responded thoughtfully, as though seriously considering all aspects of the question. ‘Well, yes,’ I managed to say. ‘Do you think that the author approved or disapproved of this ritual?’
“I was stunned: This was the [young] woman who wrote so passionately of saving the whales, of concern for the rain forests, of her rescue and tender care of a stray dog. ‘I really don’t know,’ said Beth; ‘If it was a religion of long standing, [who are we to judge]?’”
“For a moment, I couldn’t even respond,” reports Ms. Haugaard. “This woman actually couldn’t seem to bring herself to say plainly that she was against human sacrifice. My classes of a few years before would have burst into nervous giggles at the suggestion. This class was calmly considering it.”
At one point, a student explained she had been taught not to judge, and if this practice worked for them, who was she to argue differently.
Appalled by the student’s moral indifference, Ms. Haugaard concludes, “Today, for the first time in my thirty years of teaching, I looked my students in the eye and not one of them in my class could tell me that this society, this cultural behavior was a bad thing.”
Hey, Dat Voman tried to warn us - what? - sixty years ago? Nutty tho she was, with her diet pill addiction and all.How amorality thrives on college campuses
The schools and media are churning out generations of immoral monsters in the mold of the New Soviet Man. This isn't going to lead anywhere good.