"Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.” -- George Orwell, _1984_

Joined February 2014
2,522 Photos and videos
Other than the inadvertently repeated "group" (didn't doublecheck vouce-text as always required, sorry), there is of course nothing wrong or even difficult with the English here. Just an example of the now-insanely-obsessed @Martina Navratilova's sad cowardice.
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As all these people do, of course she avoided a simple answer to the question and slapped the block on. You either agree with them or they want you out of the room. They talk only to themselves.
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In case you needed your daily dose of the stereotypical vulgar moron who has his little hyperreactive profane fit and then blocks you, here's a particularly hilarious example from @jeff36779606.
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Golf needs exactly zero of this kind of person.
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25 Nov 2025
Replying to @Weinsteinlaw
No it isn't. Both sides of the aisle have gone totally ridiculous for a couple of decades now in labeling anybody who served in the military a "hero." My dad and his brothers who served during and after WWII, and my older cousin who was shot in Vietnam but survived, ....
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25 Nov 2025
... would've laughed their faces off at this nonsense. It was always well known that they were all different types in the military. But that's not the point here anyway. The point is that military service and being an astronaut don't exempt you from criticism. Period.
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stephenf retweeted
Comparing Republicans to Nazis has long been a national pastime of the Democratic Party. During the 1964 Barry Goldwater/Lyndon Johnson presidential race, Republican presidential candidate Goldwater accepted an invitation to visit an American military installation located in Bavaria, Germany. On “CBS Evening News,” hosted by Walter Cronkite, correspondent Daniel Schorr said: “It is now clear that Sen. Goldwater’s interview with ‘Der Spiegel,’ with its hard line appealing to right-wing elements in Germany, was only the start of a move to link up with his opposite numbers in Germany.” The reaction shot — when the cameras returned to Cronkite —showed the “most trusted man in America” gravely shaking his head. When Goldwater accepted the Republican nomination, Democratic California Gov. Pat Brown (future Governor Jerry Brown’s father) said, “The stench of fascism is in the air.” About Ronald Reagan, Steven F. Hayward, author of “The Age Of Reagan” wrote: “Liberals hated Reagan in the 1980s. Pure and simple. They used language that would make the most fervid anti-Obama rhetoric of the Tea Party seem like, well, a tea party. Democratic Rep. William Clay of Missouri charged that Reagan was ‘trying to replace the Bill of Rights with fascist precepts lifted verbatim from Mein Kampf.’” After Republicans took control of the House in the mid-’90s, Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., compared the newly conservative-controlled House to “the Duma and the Reichstag,” referring to the legislature set up by Czar Nicholas II of Russia and the parliament of the German Weimar Republic that brought Hitler to power. About President George W. Bush, billionaire Democratic contributor George Soros said, “(He displays the) supremacist ideology of Nazi Germany,” and that his administration used rhetoric that echoes his childhood in occupied Hungary. “When I hear Bush say, ‘You’re either with us or against us,’” Soros said, “it reminds me of the Germans.” He also said: “The (George W.) Bush administration and the Nazi and communist regimes all engaged in the politics of fear. ... Indeed, the Bush administration has been able to improve on the techniques used by the Nazi and communist propaganda machines.” Former Vice President Al Gore said: “(President George W. Bush’s) executive branch has made it a practice to try and control and intimidate news organizations, from PBS to CBS to Newsweek. ... And every day, they unleash squadrons of digital brown shirts to harass and hector any journalist who is critical of the President.” The late actor/singer and activist Harry Belafonte, who marched with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., called Bush a racist. When asked whether the number and prominence of blacks in the Bush administration perhaps suggested a lack of racism, Belafonte said, “Hitler had a lot of Jews high up in the hierarchy of the Third Reich.” NAACP Chairman Julian Bond played the Nazi card several times. Speaking at historically black Fayetteville State University in North Carolina in 2006, Bond said, “The Republican Party would have the American flag and the swastika flying side by side. Then Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn., now Minnesota Attorney General, compared then-President George W. Bush and 9/11 to Adolf Hitler and the destruction of the Reichstag, the German parliament building: “9/11 is the juggernaut in American history and it allows ... it’s almost like, you know, the Reichstag fire,” Ellison said. “After the Reichstag was burned, they blamed the Communists for it, and it put the leader of that country (Hitler) in a position where he could basically have authority to do whatever he wanted.” If not the Nazi card, it’s the race card or the sexist card or the homophobic card. When virtually everyone is a “fascist” or a “Nazi” those words become meaningless. #TrumpDerangementSyndrome
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6 Mar 2025
... a dorm security boss, you'd think it'd be a really short leap to just emailing all profs too. Also it reminded me of this question I never could figure out about a different email: Why would you print a "love you more, stud" email that you yourself wrote, if in fact ...
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6 Mar 2025
... she did print that one (which is still not clear to me)? Why do people print emails at all? Not a rhetorical question. Also also in the UMPD records, are you guys aware of how different the "all she said was 'my sister, my sister'" story (from Mayotte) is there?
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6 Mar 2025
Here's one reason she _didn't_: To pay a fine so she could get her license reinstated. You could pay over the phone with a card. (I checked.) You could drive to Concord and back in half a day. No need to make it a days-long expensive thing. So there's just ...
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6 Mar 2025
... no way that could've been at _most_ a thing she was planning to do up there in addition to whatever the main purpose was. And there wouldn't have been any point in being around Haverhill or on the western side of the state for that specific task.
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6 Mar 2025
... sheriff's office, PD, women's shelter, etc., in a four-state area, if you thought the search should be that wide? And flooding the media -- every radio station, every TV station? I get the idea of hanging posters. Fine. But I'm looking at this "hey, let's go ...
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6 Mar 2025
... way far out," coupled with the fact that you have such an effort to be sure everybody knows somebody was with bf at all times. Just odd.
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4 Mar 2025
... the cell tower when it senses a phone in its area. What happened here with the "Londonderry ping" was that somebody attempted to call her number, apparently a little after 5 p.m., from that area. So it's not even a cell-tower ping. Or that's how techies ...
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4 Mar 2025
... have explained it to me. It was an unanswered call to her number. You probably also know that area has a regional airport (Manchester-Boston). If you're wondering whether flights came into Manchester-Boston that originated in Oklahoma City and DFW, the answer is yes.
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4 Mar 2025
... could verify that at least the phone was not in the area until Wednesday, which is a very common thing to do for multiple reasons. And a couple of other reasons here and there too. All the involvement from mom, and her insistence that the relationship was just terrific ...
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4 Mar 2025
... at a time when Maura was seeing HB. Just so, so much. And that's where the statistics go, too. That's kind of where I start from.
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3 May 2024
Replying to @JediBearBob
Poetic, but inapplicable here. If I overestimated you by thinking you'd know who this governor and leading contender for a VP pick was, okay. So then we go to which party is automatically the party of all possible evil. Is she a Republican? Yes? ...
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3 May 2024
I'm betting that's all you need to know. Everything else will be read in that light. Am I wrong? If I go read down your feed, am I going to see all or nearly all positives for anything anti-Republican, and all or nearly all negatives for Republican positions and people?
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