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How sad is this??...these clowns need to prove that they are still drinking the Trump Kool-Aid to run?!?!....wtf...the Republican party is a complete joke....🤡

Michigan GOP candidates for governor pledge loyalty to Trump in primary debate

 
 
Henry J. Gomez
Wed, July 6, 2022 at 10:45 PM
 
 

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — The four leading contenders in Michigan's GOP primary for governor professed loyalty to former President Donald Trump at a debate Wednesday night while promoting debunked conspiracy theories that the 2020 election was stolen from him.

"President Trump is still my president," chiropractor Garrett Soldano responded when candidates were asked if they supported Trump even after recent congressional hearings revealed more about his actions before the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Image: Tudor Dixon. (Michael Buck / WOOD TV8)
 
Image: Tudor Dixon. (Michael Buck / WOOD TV8)

Commentator Tudor Dixon described how she amplified Trump’s accomplishments through conservative media.

"We have this focus on all the negative and we have this focus on Jan. 6, where there were peaceful protesters and then some who disrupted the process," she said in remarks about the deadly riot at the Capitol.

Businessman Kevin Rinke fondly recalled Trump’s social media habits. "I would take mean tweets today for a safer America," he said.

And Ryan Kelley — a real estate broker who was at the Capitol on Jan. 6 and has surged to the top of polls since his arrest last month on misdemeanor charges related to the riot — drew a dubious parallel between Trump’s defeat and the cost of gas.

Image: Ryan Kelley (Michael Buck / WOOD TV8)
 
Image: Ryan Kelley (Michael Buck / WOOD TV8)

"Jan. 6, 2021, back when gas was under $2 a gallon," Kelley said, leaning into a tidbit that fact-checkers have found was false. "Those were good times."

Kelley has said he didn't enter the Capitol on Jan. 6 and was exercising his First Amendment rights.

The debate, one of several ahead of the Aug. 2 primary, was televised live across the state — a prime opportunity for the candidates to sell themselves to GOP voters who will nominate a challenger to face Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in what’s expected to be a competitive election this fall.

Trump, who has not endorsed a candidate in the race, has prioritized backing candidates who are willing to embrace or indulge his 2020 election lies.

Video: The threat to abortion access in purple states

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Kelley’s arrest — he has yet to enter a plea — and a separate scandal involving allegedly fraudulent petition circulators have rocked the race, making it one of the messiest Republican primaries in the country this election cycle. Two top-tier candidates, including former Detroit police chief James Craig, were disqualified from the ballot after failing to submit enough valid signatures.

Craig has since launched a write-in campaign for the GOP nomination but was not included in Wednesday's debate. Nor was Ralph Rebandt, a pastor from the Detroit suburbs who failed to meet the polling threshold.

Michigan, which provided President Joe Biden with a narrow victory over Trump in 2020, has been a popular target of election-deniers and conspiracy theorists. None of the four candidates on stage Wednesday rejected the false claims that Trump would have been re-elected if not for widespread voter fraud.

Image: Garrett Soldano (Michael Buck / WOOD TV8)
 
Image: Garrett Soldano (Michael Buck / WOOD TV8)

Kelley and Soldano said explicitly that they believed the election was stolen from Trump but offered no evidence, citing instead material presented in "2,000 Mules," a discredited documentary by right-wing commentator Dinesh D’Souza. Dixon and Rinke were more passive, rehashing claims that fraud and other misbehavior affected results.

Although the candidates largely agree on Trump, there were arguments over the course of the 90-minute debate about tax policy and which candidates have been most consistent over the course of the race.

Kelley and Soldano, who gained a following with the activist base after protesting Whitmer’s Covid policies in 2020, both attacked Dixon as a tool of the GOP establishment. Dixon has been endorsed by Michigan’s influential DeVos family, whose name is plastered on the building where the debate was held, and 20 state legislators. She also was the only candidate Trump singled out by name earlier this year at a rally in Michigan.

"I think as Michiganders we’re sick and tired of the career politicians and the establishment having control over all of us," Soldano said at Grand State Valley University’s downtown campus.

After the debate, Dixon said the attacks suggested her rivals are worried about her candidacy.

"I think it should tell the people of Michigan that they are struggling to connect,” she told reporters. "And so when we have that question about how would you work with people across the aisle, people really need to think: If you can’t work with people in your own party, can you reach across the aisle?"

Lavora Barnes, the Michigan Democratic chair, remarked on the "nasty infighting" in a statement after the debate.

Image: Kevin Rinke (Michael Buck / WOOD TV8)
 
Image: Kevin Rinke (Michael Buck / WOOD TV8)

"Rinke, Kelley, Dixon and Soldano laid out a dark vision for Michigan’s future, where anti-democracy conspiracy theories and dangerous abortion bans take priority, while progress on strengthening infrastructure is reversed, law enforcement funding is slashed, and public schools are dismantled," Barnes said. "Instead of this backwards focused division, Michiganders deserve a leader who will continue to deliver on the fundamentals that improve people’s lives."

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How f*in crazy is this guy??...😪

Trump Now Claims He Won Wisconsin Since State Court Has Restricted Ballot Drop Boxes

Mary Papenfuss
Fri, July 8, 2022 at 8:39 PM
 
 

Former President Donald Trump is now desperately attempting to snatch Wisconsin from the jaws of his defeat by suddenly claiming he won the state in the 2020 presidential election.

He didn’t.

His reasoning? Since the Wisconsin state Supreme Court issued a ruling Friday sharply curtailing the number of drop boxes for absentee ballots, that must mean all the votes in those boxes in November 2020 were somehow fake — and apparently were all marked for victor Joe Biden.

“This means I won the very closely contested (not actually) Wisconsin Presidential race because they used these corrupt and scandal-ridden Scam Boxes,” he falsely insisted in a post Friday on Truth Social.

(Photo: Screen Shot/Truth Social/Donald Trump)
 
(Photo: Screen Shot/Truth Social/Donald Trump)

(Photo: Screen Shot/Truth Social/Donald Trump)

There is no evidence that the vote in Wisconsin, or anywhere else in the nation, was fraudulent. Dozens of court cases and several recounts state by state verified Biden’s victory.

Members of Trump’s own Department of Justice found no evidence of fraud after extensive investigations. Trump’s handpicked attorney general, William Barr, called the election fraud claims “bullshit.”

“These allegations were simply not true,” Richard Donoghue, the acting deputy attorney general at the time, told Trump, he testified last month before the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection. He added that Trump eventually said: “Just say the election was corrupt and leave the rest to me and the Republican congressmen.”

Trump and Republicans have claimed that drop boxes facilitated cheating but have offered no evidence.

The conservative-controlled Wisconsin court ruled that under current law, absentee ballot drop boxes may only be placed in election offices and that no one other than the voter can return a ballot in person. “Ballot drop boxes appear nowhere in the detailed statutory system for absentee voting,” Justice Rebecca Bradley wrote.

There’s no move in Wisconsin to switch Biden’s victory to Trump.

Critics say the GOP goal is to significantly decrease the number of votes, which is generally considered beneficial to Republicans. One way to do that it to make voting as inconvenient as possible.

Trump said on Fox News in 2020 that “you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again” if “voting levels” rose. (Research has shown, however, that mail-in ballots don’t appear to give either party a distinct advantage.)

Trump continues to push for single-day, in-person voting in elections — prohibiting convenient mail-in ballots and early voting that 69% of American voters used in 2020. (Trump votes by mail.) That would be challenging especially for the disabled and the elderly, as well as for those working long hours or two jobs or juggling child care.

“Ultimately, we want same-day voting — one day — and only paper ballots,” Trump said to cheers at a rally in Nashville last month.

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Jan. 6 panel: Ex-White House lawyer spoke of 'Trump’s supreme dereliction of duty'

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Alex Wong
 
Dennis Romero and Julia Jester
Sun, July 10, 2022 at 1:37 AM
 
 

The House Jan. 6 committee Saturday issued a statement describing the input of an ex-White House lawyer as "reinforcing" alleged misconduct by former President Donald Trump.

The idea that the former Trump White House counsel Pat Cipollone might have confirmed others witnesses' damning accounts in his much-anticipated private interview Friday was initially tempered by the possibility that he may have invoked executive privilege, a legal concept intended to allow presidents to speak freely with legal advisers.

Responding to multiple reports that Cipollone had invoked that privilege during his daylong testimony under subpoena, a committee spokesman suggested a different storyline.

"In our interview with Mr. Cipollone, the Committee received critical testimony on nearly every major topic in its investigation, reinforcing key points regarding Donald Trump’s misconduct and providing highly relevant new information that will play a central role in its upcoming hearings," the statement from House Select Committee spokesman Tim Mulvey read.

 

It continued: "This includes information demonstrating Donald Trump’s supreme dereliction of duty."

Trump and his representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment late Saturday.

Mulvey did not confirm or deny the reports on privilege, but said Cipollone was never guided by the panel to avoid potentially privileged information.

In fact, the statement suggests that in Cipollone, the committee got another voice to back up some of the vivid testimony of Cassidy Hutchinson, assistant to former Trump Chief of Staff Mark Meadows.

She testified that on Jan. 6, 2021, Trump was filled with rage and ordered his Secret Service detail to take him to the Capitol so he could join supporters who would eventually enter the complex and attack police while trying to reach lawmakers and Vice President Mike Pence, all participating in certifying Trump's loss.

She said Secret Service agents in a presidential SUV with Trump refused to take him, and the president lunged for the steering wheel from behind the front seats and then tried to grab the throat of one agent, claims Trump has denied.

She also testified that Trump showed no sympathy for Pence as the rioters were getting potentially life-threateningly close to the vice president and Trump allegedly had the time and the power to call them off. The former president has denied this as well.

On Saturday Mulvey said in the committee's statement that Cipollone "corroborated key elements of Cassidy Hutchinson's testimony."

The Jan. 6 committee will resume with fact finding during a hearing Tuesday.

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New Hearing To Expose Trump Meet With 'Team Crazy' Triggering Jan. 6 Riot: Jamie Raskin

Mary Papenfuss
Sun, July 10, 2022 at 9:44 PM
 
 

The upcoming televised hearing Tuesday by the Jan. 6 panel will explosively expose Donald Trump’s White House meeting in 2020 with “Team Crazy” that began to set in motion the violence of last year’s insurrection, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) said Sunday on CBS News’ “Face the Nation.”

Raskin called Trump’s Oval Office huddle on Dec. 18, 2020, with his former attorney Rudy Giuliani, wild conspiracy theorist lawyer Sidney Powell, and extremist retired Army Gen. Michael Flynn the “craziest meeting” of his entire presidency.

The trio and other outside lawyers — derided as “Team Crazy” in and around the White House, said Raskin — urged several new courses of action, including the “seizure of voting machines around the country,” he explained.

The following night Trump sent out a tweet calling for Americans to flood the Capitol to protest the election he lost. “Be there. Will be wild,” he promised.

Raskin, a member of the Jan. 6 panel who will be a lead questioner on Tuesday, said it was Trump who picked Jan. 6 last year as the showdown date. “Donald Trump was, of course, the central figure who set everything into motion,” he added.

The “explosive effects” of that tweet resulted in the “mobilization of an armed, violent mob” that was part of Trump’s bid to “overthrow” the election, Raskin told news host Robert Costa.

It was the “first time in American history when a president of the United States called a protest against his own government, in fact, to try to stop the counting of Electoral College votes in an election he had lost,” Raskin summed up.

It’s “absolutely unprecedented ... nothing like that had ever happened before,” he said. “It makes the Watergate break-in look like the work of Cub Scouts,” he added.

Raskin called Trump’s actions the “greatest political offense against the union by a president of the United States in our history. Nothing comes close to it,” he noted.

He indicated to Costa that there would not be an eyewitness account from inside the meeting. But he suggested that White House staff and lawyers had revealed details of wild plans that Trump and his fringe team aimed to implement.

At that time, White House officials were trying to convince Trump to accept his defeat, explaining that investigations revealed no substance to claims of election fraud. Trump, in response, turned to the most extreme plans of action, said Raskin.

It appeared that a lengthy deposition Friday by Trump’s former White House counsel Pat Cipollone would play a key role in what’s presented Tuesday.

“We’re going to get to use a lot of Mr. Cipollone’s testimony to corroborate other things we’ve learned along the way,” Raskin explained Sunday. “He was the White House counsel at the time. He was aware of every major move ... that Donald Trump was making to try to overthrow the 2020 election and essentially seize the presidency.”

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1 hour ago, Warrior said:

You can’t blame BDP, he’s been spoon feed this propaganda for over 6 years.

 

 

LOL..and you've been fed lies for 4 years...over 30,000 in fact by a professional Bullshit artist...who is still telling the BIG lie to this day...do you think Trump won the election and it was stolen from him champ?....🙄

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4 minutes ago, zulu1128 said:

Imagine spending your golden years sitting at a computer 24/7 frantically searching articles about Drumpf to rage at, and then breathlessly running to post them on a HSFB forum. lol.

golden years??.....LOL..nice try Dave...not there yet...."frantically searching"....LOL....no...not necessary these days...the guy you "don't support" is in the headlines everyday....with more to come....wake-up Dave,,,turn off Fox news and get your head out of the sand...🤡

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Looks like you'll need to make new plans for Friday Dave....

Trump rally in North Carolina canceled as former president summoned to court

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Chris Seward/AP
 
Danielle Battaglia
Mon, July 11, 2022 at 3:31 PM
 
 

Former President Donald Trump and a host of Republican personalities have canceled their scheduled appearances Friday in Greensboro.

News of the cancellation comes as Axios reports Trump, his son, Donald Trump Jr., and his daughter, Ivanka Trump, have been scheduled to testify under oath Friday in an investigation into Trump’s finances.

The American Freedom Tour had announced in May appearances in Greensboro by Trump, Trump Jr., television news personality Kimberly Guilfoyle, former New York state judge Jeanine Pirro, Pinal County (Arizona) Sheriff Mark Lamb and political commentator Dinesh D’Souza.

The American Freedom Tour did not publicize that the event would no longer take place Friday, but quietly removed it from its website. Tickets for the event initially sold for $9 to $3,955.

 

The News & Observer requested further information and received a generic response.

“We are very sorry that due to unforeseen circumstances we are rescheduling the American Freedom Tour stop in Greensboro, NC,” an emailed reply stated. “Your ticket may be used at any American Freedom Tour event in America.”

The only event currently scheduled on the organization’s website is on Aug. 20 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

The email added that phone calls would be placed to those registered to attend the Greensboro event to provide more detailed information and answer further questions. A second email would go out once the event is rescheduled, the message said.

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Sen. Lindsey Graham ordered to testify in front of special grand jury in Trump election probe

633b08e664d2a0097864ec6f3cee7e1d
 
WSBTV.com News Staff
Mon, July 11, 2022 at 2:49 PM
 
 

A Fulton County judge has ordered U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham to testify in front of a special grand jury looking into possible election tampering by former President Donald Trump in the November 2020 election.

Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney ruled Monday that Graham will be required to testify on Aug. 2 after Graham said he would fight a subpoena to testify, citing executive privilege.

Graham is being asked to testify, in part because of two phone calls he made in November 2020 to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. In those calls, Graham asked Raffensperger to reexamine “certain absentee ballots cast in Georgia to explore the possibility of a more favorable outcome for former President Donald Trump.”

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Donald Trump Attempted To Contact January 6th Committee Witness Last Week; Phone Call Reported To Justice Department; Liz Cheney Says At Hearing: “We Will Take Any Effort To Influence Witness Testimony Very Seriously”

 
 
Ted Johnson
Tue, July 12, 2022 at 4:08 PM
 
 
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UPDATE: Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) said that former President Donald Trump tried to reach out to a January 6th Committee witness, who has not yet been heard from at the hearings, and that the incident has been reported to the Justice Department.

“We will take any effort to influence witness testimony very seriously,” Cheney said toward the end of Tuesday’s hearing. 

 

Cheney said that the witness “declined to answer” Trump’s call, but instead referred the matter to their attorney, who then contacted the committee.

“This committee has supplied that information to the Department of Justice,” Cheney said.

She said that Trump made the call after the last committee hearing, in which Cassidy Hutchinson, a former aide to chief of staff Mark Meadows, testified.

PREVIOUSLY: The January 6th Committee once again delivered a riveting and disturbing narrative of the lead up to January 6th and the aftermath, in a nearly three-hour hearing that included vivid testimony about Donald Trump’s culpability for instigating the siege on the Capitol.

The hearing’s two witnesses, Jason Van Tatenhove, former spokesman for OathKeepers, and Steven Ayers, who plead guilty to entering the Capitol on January 6th, bolstered the committee’s effort to show the links between Trump’s election rhetoric and how it mobilized extremist groups and faithful supporters to action.

Ayers told the committee that, had Trump called off his supporters from the Capitol earlier in the afternoon, “we wouldn’t be in as bad of a situation.” Instead, Trump waited until 4 PM, after the Capitol had been sacked, to call the crowd to disperse.

He also said that he had not planned to go to the Capitol that day and instead just attend Trump’s speech at the Ellipse. But he went when Trump, in his speech, called on his supporters to march there. Trump said that he would be there with them, but he did not go.

“I think everybody thought he would be coming down,” Ayers said.

Their testimony was just one of a number of revelations from the hearing.

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Jan. 6 committee obtains draft of tweet indicating Trump planned to tell followers to march to Capitol

Dylan Stableford
Dylan Stableford
·Senior Writer
Tue, July 12, 2022 at 4:09 PM
 
 

The House select committee on Tuesday revealed that it had obtained the draft of an undated tweet suggesting that then-President Donald Trump was planning to explicitly direct his followers to march to the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, even before he urged them to do so during his speech at the rally that preceded the attack.

"I will be making a Big Speech at 10AM on January 6th at the Ellipse," reads the draft shown at the hearing. "Please arrive early, massive crowds expected. March to the Capitol after. Stop the Steal!!"

Rep. Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla., said the committee had obtained the draft tweet from the National Archives. It was marked with a stamp indicating that Trump had seen the draft.

The draft of the tweet obtained by the Jan. 6 committee is marked Draft Tweet and is stamped: President Has Seen.
 
The draft of a tweet obtained by the Jan. 6 committee shown during Tuesday's hearing. (Yahoo News via House TV)

“Although this tweet was never sent, rally organizers were discussing and preparing for the march to the Capitol in the days leading up to Jan. 6,” Murphy said.

The committee obtained a text message dated Jan. 4, 2021, from Kylie Kremer, one of the Jan. 6 rally organizers, to one of Trump's confidants, Mike Lindell, the founder of MyPillow. In it, Kremer informed Lindell that Trump “is going to just call for it ‘unexpectedly.’”

“The end of the message indicates that the president’s plan to have his followers march to the Capitol was not being broadly discussed,” Murphy said.

In a similar text dated Jan. 5, 2021, from Ali Alexander, a far-right activist, to a journalist, which was obtained by the committee, Alexander said that “Trump is supposed to order us to capitol at the end of his speech but we will see.”

At the rally at the Ellipse on Jan. 6, 2021, Trump indeed urged his supporters to march to the Capitol as Congress was convening to certify Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election.

“We fight like hell. And if you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore,” Trump said. “So we're going to, we're going to walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I love Pennsylvania Avenue. And we're going to the Capitol.”

Then-President Donald Trump, looking grim and wearing black leather gloves, raises one hand in a fist as he arrives to speak at the rally.
 
Then-President Donald Trump at a rally in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021. (Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo, File)

“This was not a spontaneous call to action,” Murphy said, “but rather was a deliberate strategy decided upon, in advance, by the president.”

Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., the panel’s vice chair, opened Tuesday’s hearing by saying it was "nonsense" that Trump was “incapable of telling right from wrong” while he was perpetuating falsehoods about the election.

“President Trump is a 76-year-old man,” Cheney said in her opening remarks. “He is not an impressionable child. Just like everyone else in our country, he is responsible for his own actions and his own choices.”

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12 hours ago, DBP66 said:

Jan. 6 committee obtains draft of tweet indicating Trump planned to tell followers to march to Capitol

Dylan Stableford
Dylan Stableford
·Senior Writer
Tue, July 12, 2022 at 4:09 PM
 
 

The House select committee on Tuesday revealed that it had obtained the draft of an undated tweet suggesting that then-President Donald Trump was planning to explicitly direct his followers to march to the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, even before he urged them to do so during his speech at the rally that preceded the attack.

"I will be making a Big Speech at 10AM on January 6th at the Ellipse," reads the draft shown at the hearing. "Please arrive early, massive crowds expected. March to the Capitol after. Stop the Steal!!"

Rep. Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla., said the committee had obtained the draft tweet from the National Archives. It was marked with a stamp indicating that Trump had seen the draft.

The draft of the tweet obtained by the Jan. 6 committee is marked Draft Tweet and is stamped: President Has Seen.
 
The draft of a tweet obtained by the Jan. 6 committee shown during Tuesday's hearing. (Yahoo News via House TV)

“Although this tweet was never sent, rally organizers were discussing and preparing for the march to the Capitol in the days leading up to Jan. 6,” Murphy said.

The committee obtained a text message dated Jan. 4, 2021, from Kylie Kremer, one of the Jan. 6 rally organizers, to one of Trump's confidants, Mike Lindell, the founder of MyPillow. In it, Kremer informed Lindell that Trump “is going to just call for it ‘unexpectedly.’”

“The end of the message indicates that the president’s plan to have his followers march to the Capitol was not being broadly discussed,” Murphy said.

In a similar text dated Jan. 5, 2021, from Ali Alexander, a far-right activist, to a journalist, which was obtained by the committee, Alexander said that “Trump is supposed to order us to capitol at the end of his speech but we will see.”

At the rally at the Ellipse on Jan. 6, 2021, Trump indeed urged his supporters to march to the Capitol as Congress was convening to certify Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election.

“We fight like hell. And if you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore,” Trump said. “So we're going to, we're going to walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I love Pennsylvania Avenue. And we're going to the Capitol.”

Then-President Donald Trump, looking grim and wearing black leather gloves, raises one hand in a fist as he arrives to speak at the rally.
 

Then-President Donald Trump at a rally in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021. (Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo, File)

“This was not a spontaneous call to action,” Murphy said, “but rather was a deliberate strategy decided upon, in advance, by the president.”

Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., the panel’s vice chair, opened Tuesday’s hearing by saying it was "nonsense" that Trump was “incapable of telling right from wrong” while he was perpetuating falsehoods about the election.

“President Trump is a 76-year-old man,” Cheney said in her opening remarks. “He is not an impressionable child. Just like everyone else in our country, he is responsible for his own actions and his own choices.”

 

Hahaha....this is your best work! we are down to a "draft of tweet"...lol not even a real tweet but a draft. Well done and please keep this hard hitting news coming.

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6 minutes ago, Warrior said:

 

Hahaha....this is your best work! we are down to a "draft of tweet"...lol not even a real tweet but a draft. Well done and please keep this hard hitting news coming.

and it still shows INTENT Sherlock Holmes...."draft" or not.....so we know he planned the attack on the Capital champ....😪

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