Yea.. I'd rather it wasn't there but I'm not driving.. ..
Similar to styling I suppose.. . a matter of personal preference..
Anyhoo.. Interesting that Reality is still insisting that the secession petitions are supported by the State Governments that the residents who started and signed the ...
ohh.. wait a sec.. something just occurred to me..
Yep.. I found the same names/dates/locations on different secession petitions .. seems you don't have to verify residency or identity..
LOL... These "secession petitions" are the equivalent of the "Global Warming Petition Project".. No verification required there either..
I signed that one a few years ago as a Phrenologist and they never asked for my credentials..
Correction to the Romney volunteer manual:
Page 3, paragraph 2: Should say "You can volunteer to drive likely Republican voters who haven't yet voted over to the polls" instead of "You can volunteer to drive over likely Republican voters who haven't voted."
neoplacebo wrote:The "newsworthiness" of this pseudo secession movement is right up there with a story I read this morning about a woman in Arizona who ran over her husband with her car because he didn't vote for Romney. I expect all states and all wives to jump onto this phenomena at any minute.
Too bad Big Ugly voted. I'm sure O Really would have defended her pro bono.
neoplacebo wrote:The "newsworthiness" of this pseudo secession movement is right up there with a story I read this morning about a woman in Arizona who ran over her husband with her car because he didn't vote for Romney. I expect all states and all wives to jump onto this phenomena at any minute.
Too bad Big Ugly voted. I'm sure O Really would have defended her pro bono.
I don't do criminal stuff, but if I did I'd be more likely to defend one who ran over her husband FOR voting Republican.
I don't see what the problem is. If all these petition-signers no longer want to be part of the US, why don't they just move to Alabama or Mississippi?
Yea.. I'd rather it wasn't there but I'm not driving.. ..
Similar to styling I suppose.. . a matter of personal preference..
Anyhoo.. Interesting that Reality is still insisting that the secession petitions are supported by the State Governments that the residents who started and signed the ...
ohh.. wait a sec.. something just occurred to me..
Yep.. I found the same names/dates/locations on different secession petitions .. seems you don't have to verify residency or identity..
LOL... These "secession petitions" are the equivalent of the "Global Warming Petition Project".. No verification required there either..
I signed that one a few years ago as a Phrenologist and they never asked for my credentials..
Interesting.....I think if someone asked me for my phrenologist credentials, I'd just whack him over the head with a metal rod and commence reading his bumps for him, which might go something like "I see pain in your immediate future, but it will not last long." And then "I also see indications that in the future you will not be so quick to question things you have little comprehension of." That'll be 75 bucks.
This comes at a time when Puerto Rico has voted in favor of statehood. If they coordinate with SC, America won't have to issue tens of millions of new flags with a revised star count.
rstrong wrote:This comes at a time when Puerto Rico has voted in favor of statehood. If they coordinate with SC, America won't have to issue tens of millions of new flags with a revised star count.
great idea and a real money saver too. doesn't sc suck up over a buck and a half for every tax dollar they contribute
as for the flag, the 29 star 1847 flag is pretty cool and we need to be sure that all of them have a home to destroy
Trump: “We had the safest border in the history of our country - or at least recorded history. I guess maybe a thousand years ago it was even better.”
mama wrote:There must be some place that they could all move to isn't there? Let's get a petition up to deport them to their own country somewhere. hehehe
mama wrote:There must be some place that they could all move to isn't there? Let's get a petition up to deport them to their own country somewhere. hehehe
I'd like to suggest Somalia.
They've got a "limited government." prayer in schools, no legal abortion, women as chattel, open season on gays, lots of guns, low tax rates, hardly any regulation...everything Republicans ever wished for.
neoplacebo wrote:The "newsworthiness" of this pseudo secession movement is right u there with a story I read this morning about a woman in Arizona who ran over her husband with her car because he didn't vote for Romney. I expect all states and all wives to jump onto this phenomena at any minute.
I notice I am now an ensign, which, as far as I know, I was not earlier today. This puzzles me, as one of the reasons I didn't stay in the navy is that they refused to make me an Admiral (I wanted to bypass Ensign, Lieutenant junior grade, Lieutentant, Lieutenant Commander, Commander, and Captain). I am figuring this nom de guerre is awarded based on number of forum posts, and if so, my chances on making Admiral don't look too good....
I just noticed that I too am now an ensign. I dont know how or what I did to get demoted, but
A. I have never been in the Navy. My dad was in the Navy, but I was an Army guy.
B. I was a lieutenant colonel (also known as a telephone colonel)
mama wrote:There must be some place that they could all move to isn't there? Let's get a petition up to deport them to their own country somewhere. hehehe
Or one like this...
A small federal government with limited power and meager influence over the private lives of its citizens; extremely weak trade unions routinely sabotaged by the federal government (i.e., a “pro-business environment”); negligible income tax; few immigrants, legal or otherwise; a dominant Christian population, accounting for some 70 percent of the people; no mandatory health insurance or concept of universal health care; a strong social taboo surrounding homosexuality and a constitution that already states, “All individuals have the right to marry a person of their choice of the opposite sex”; and a gun culture so ubiquitous that you can find automatic weaponry displayed openly on the streets of its capital city and in many households.
rstrong wrote:This comes at a time when Puerto Rico has voted in favor of statehood. If they coordinate with SC, America won't have to issue tens of millions of new flags with a revised star count.
great idea and a real money saver too. doesn't sc suck up over a buck and a half for every tax dollar they contribute
as for the flag, the 29 star 1847 flag is pretty cool and we need to be sure that all of them have a home to destroy
With talk of Puerto Rico becoming the 51st state, I think America's new goal should be 53 states. A prime number.