Posted on 10/29/2018 10:24:41 PM PDT by ransomnote
I refuse to vote for Senator, DiFiChiSpy vs DeLeon (both scum) and a few other Dem vs Dem races.
But this I swear. I WILL VOTE FOR MY HOMBRE DEVIN NUNES!!!
Anyway. Any help will be appreciated.
Bagster
Three of us went to lunch with our Indian friend, not an Indian place, and she ordered the Beet Reuben and the rest of us were like, WHAT?!?!
“I would kick their ass, go vote, come out and kick their ass again. Maybe steal their i.d. and go vote again.
I’d let you film it, and put it on YouTube.”
Almost makes me wish I lived in CA just to have that experience. That would be more than fine!
Somebody has to find a way past this ghandi crap and start shooting some of these migrant subbies.
>>I think enrichened might be what s/he was going for.
No. I just enjoy the sound of words, whether they’re in the dictionary or not. I’ve spent massive amounts of time transcribing the entire body of poetry of Henry Livingston and Clement Moore into their phonemes - the sound of the words - and I get lost in the sound shape of words, whether they’re real or not. Mary
The plus symbol on that has the 3 parentheses on both sides, which is the chan’s signifier for the J-tribe.
That punishes people that don't want kids. Kinda goes against the whole individual liberty thing, eh?
>>If I encountered someone threatening me at the polling place I would film everything. Either they would back off or the law would be notified or both.
Or you’d lose your camera. I’d melt into a puddle. Or maybe I’d try to find some phone number of the appropriate authority to inform.
Bagster
Methinks the Mexicans are playing a bit of diplomatic theater pretending to try to stop them. However, the diplomatic fallout from killing any likely does restrain them somewhat.
I like seagulls.
They remind me of tasty waves.
#SeaChildStuckInTheDesert
Bagster
Good point.
You’re right. Super hot peppers are not designed to make a dish hot, but to add some heat without adding a lot of pepper flavor.
Special Counsel and Former FBI Director Robert Mueller Accused of Rape By Very Credible Witness
FTA:
What we know: The woman is a very credible witness. Her story are corroborated. The incident happened in 2010 in New York City. The woman is a professional.
Wow, a Yuge October surprise Boom! It appears that the President and the Q team can take the demonrats playbook and use it against them every time the demonrats try to play dirty. Q has said many times, “We have it all.” It might just be that the Creator of this world has had enough of the evil perpetrated by the demonrats and their shenanigans too.
WWG1WGA
Self set-up???
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2018/10/special-counsel-refers-scheme-targeting-mueller-to-fbi/574411/
Dude. Did you even WATCH Gandhi?
Don't you remember when the British Soldiers mowed down a mob of unarmed, passively resisting demonstrators with machine guns?
After that, the sun DID set on the British Empire, if I recall from my movie history.
Think of another plan.
Bagster
>>That punishes people that don’t want kids. Kinda goes against the whole individual liberty thing, eh?
We don’t have children, but we still have to pay for schooling the town’s children. Society bands together for its continued existence, the future of which is defined as children. People have the freedom not to bother with children in their own lives but, as members of society, they don’t have the freedom to not help society continue. MO
I love Mr Rogers bags take note women love him... Do you not like Sears either, before your time this man helped a lot of people with all kinds of problems through his TV show...Hey when you are down and out nothing better than Mr Rogers and Winnie the Pooh to give you comfort...
********Fred Rogers was the much-loved host of the public television show ‘Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood,’ which ran on PBS from 1968 to 2001.
Who Was Fred Rogers?
Born on March 20, 1928, in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, Fred Rogers was a puppeteer and ordained minister who became the host of the TV program Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood. With a degree in music composition, he wrote 200 songs for the show, including the theme, “It’s a Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood.” He was honored with numerous awards and accolades for his dedication to children via television.
Early Life
The beloved and longtime host of Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, Fred McFeely Rogers was born on March 20, 1928, in Latrobe, Pennsylvania. He was an only child until the age of 11 when his parents, James and Nancy, adopted a baby girl.
After graduating from Latrobe High School, Rogers enrolled at Dartmouth College, where he studied for a year before transferring to Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida. Rogers, who’d begun playing the piano at a young age, graduated magna cum laude in 1951 with a degree in music composition.
During his senior year of college he visited his parents and was awed by the family’s newest household addition: a television set. He could see a fantastic future for the medium and, as he’d later recall, Rogers immediately decided he wanted to be a part of it.
Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood’
Over the course of its decades-long run, Rogers’ show varied little. He approached his young audience with respect and a directness about issues children faced that were rarely touched on by other programs.
Ritual and the familiar appearance of some of TV’s most enduring charactersincluding the deliveryman Mr. McFeely, X the Owl, Queen Sara Saturday and King Fridayhelped keep the show fresh for generations of kids.
At the center of the show, of course, was Fred Rogers himself, a Protestant minister who worked as the series’ producer, host and head puppeteer. He also wrote the scripts and songs.
“The world is not always a kind place,” he said, talking about his show. “That’s something all children learn for themselves, whether we want them to or not, but it’s something they really need our help to understand.”
In the very first show that aired on PBS, Fred Rogers began the program much as he would over the next 33 years by walking through the front door of his television house and trading in his raincoat and suit jacket for a zippered sweater. The sweaters soon became as much a part of the program as the puppets. In all, Rogers had about two dozen of them, all made by his mother. In 1984, the Smithsonian Institution chose to put one of the famous sweaters on exhibit.
During its long run, Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood attracted well known guests such as Yo-Yo Ma and Wynton Marsalis and earned Rogers several awards for the program’s excellence. The honors included four daytime Emmys, a 1997 Lifetime Achievement award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and, in 2002, the Presidential Medal of Freedom. In 1999, he was inducted into the Television Hall of Fame.
Rogers’ commitment to children, however, wasn’t limited to the TV set. In 1968, he served as chairman of a White House forum on child development and the mass media, and was often consulted as an expert or witness on those issues.
“Those of us in broadcasting have a special calling to give whatever we feel is the most nourishing that we can for our audience,” Mr. Rogers said. “We are servants of those who watch and listen.”
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