Well Il be jiggered he is a heterosexual I had no idea
The finger! hahahahah.
Is that a Gorbachev bobble head?
Ping.
I can hear it now.
Eat your plastic fruit, kids in China have to go without.
More phony baloney from the Obama Regime. You see what THEY want you to see.
They missed some more cloned book sets (in row two from the bottom).
Where did that family poster pop up?
Looks like a little bust of Gorbachev on the bottom right.
F’n Commie.
Check this out!
carney is a useless puppet...... how much obama vomit can he eat before he, like the pilsbury dough boy, quits. he has no integrity or morals or character... i dont want to know anything about him or his family. he is a non-person... obama automaton.
Looks like the “free” breakfast at a Holiday Inn Express.
Well, they had to photoshop out all the Dummy series books “Presidency for Dummies”, etc.
Just goes to show how incredibly full of BS this administration is.
Dr Ray Stantz: Symmetrical book stacking. Just like the Philadelphia mass turbulence of 1947.
Dr. Peter Venkman: You’re right, no human being would stack books like this.
(Ghostbusters)
Moochelle would frown upon all those calories on the counter.
I shudder to think what arrogant, self-righteous little turds his poor kids are going to become...
This President and administration have raised lying to such an art that they literally don’t know how to tell the truth.
The pinky is damned funny.
That's 100% right.
"Soviet posters first appeared during the Proletarian Revolution in Russia - they delivered Communist Party's slogans to the masses and called on workers and peasants to fight for freedom and justice.
Most of us are familiar with Dmitry Moor's famous poster "Have You Enlisted In the Army?" The image of a Red Army soldier with plumes of black smoke rising from the factory smokestacks in the background, bluntly questioning the Russian worker about his contribution to the defense of the October Revolution, became the iconic piece of Soviet propaganda. Posters took on a very important role during the October Revolution and subsequent Civil War. Very few newspapers were published in those days and often a poster replaced the tabloid. Poster art was widely accessible to the masses, the images it depicted were easily understood by everyone, and a short and energetic accompanying slogan stuck in the viewers mind, as a constant call for action. In time of Civil War, propaganda posters were sent to the front lines in the same capacity as bullets and artillery shells. They were posted on walls, in cities which were under assault by the White Guard armies and foreign interventionists. The bottom of the vivid, bright-colored poster usually contained a warning: "Anyone who tears down or covers up this poster is committing a counter-revolutionary act". The poster was a powerful weapon, and just like any weapon, it had to be guarded with utmost care. "