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To: ChicagoConservative27
WHERE WAS THE "LEGAL PROCESS" IN LITIGATING THE STOLEN 2020 ELECTION?

THERE WASN'T ONE!!!

Dear FReepers, please do not use the term "Democrats" anymore.. THEY ARE COMMUNISTS WHO NEED TO BE CALLED WHAT THEY ARE! Let's call them what they are!!!

33 posted on 08/15/2023 9:22:02 AM PDT by CivilWarBrewing (Get off my back for my usage of CAPS, especially you snowflake males! MAN UP!)
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To: CivilWarBrewing

Agreed. They should be referred to as commiecrats since that is what they are.


56 posted on 08/15/2023 9:36:28 AM PDT by 43north (America doesn't need an election. We need an exorcism.)
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To: CivilWarBrewing

“From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs”

“Jeder nach seinen Fähigkeiten, jedem nach seinen Bedürfnissen.”

Marx would not suffer government-paid couch potatoes.


68 posted on 08/15/2023 9:44:23 AM PDT by Brian Griffin (Article II, Section 2: "The President...may require the opinion, in writing,...upon any subject...")
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To: CivilWarBrewing

WIKI

End Poverty in California (EPIC) was a political campaign started in 1934 by socialist writer Upton Sinclair (best known as author of The Jungle). The movement formed the basis for Sinclair’s campaign for Governor of California in 1934. The plan called for a massive public works program, sweeping tax reform, and guaranteed pensions. It gained major popular support, with thousands joining End Poverty Leagues across the state. EPIC never came to fruition due to Sinclair’s defeat in the 1934 election, but is seen as an influence on New Deal programs enacted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Sinclair laid out his vision for EPIC in his 1933 book I, Governor of California, and How I ended Poverty: A True Story of the Future. Specifically, the plan called for state seizure of idle factories and farm land where the owner had failed to pay property taxes. The government would then hire the unemployed to work on the farms and at the factories. The farms would then operate as self-sufficient, worker-run co-ops. EPIC also called for the implementation of California’s first state income tax. The tax was to be progressive, with the wealthiest being taxed at 30%. The plan would also have increased inheritance taxes and instituted a 4% tax on stock transfers. EPIC also included government-provided pensions for the old, disabled, and widowed. To implement EPIC, Sinclair called for the creation of three new government agencies: the California Authority for Land (CAL), the California Authority for Production (CAP), and the California Authority for Money (CAM). CAL was to implement the plan for seizure and cultivation of unused farm lands. CAP was to do the same for idle factories. CAM meanwhile was to be used to finance CAL and CAP by issuing scrip to workers and issues bonds for the purchase of lands, factories, and machinery.

The heads of Hollywood’s major movie studios strongly opposed EPIC, largely due to Sinclair’s proposal to hand over idle movie studio lots to unemployed film workers to make movies of their own. The studio heads reacted by threatening to move film operations to Florida and deducting money from employee paychecks to finance the campaign of Sinclair’s Republican opponent for governor, Frank Merriam.

without the backing of Roosevelt, Sinclair fell behind Merriam in the polls. On November 6, 1934, Merriam defeated Sinclair with 1,138,629 (48.9%) to Sinclair’s 879,537 (37.8%). Even in defeat, Sinclair received twice as many votes as any previous Democratic candidate for governor. In addition, two dozen candidates running on the EPIC platform were elected to the state legislature, including Culbert Olson, who became Governor four years later.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End_Poverty_in_California


76 posted on 08/15/2023 9:50:15 AM PDT by Brian Griffin (Article II, Section 2: "The President...may require the opinion, in writing,...upon any subject...")
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