https://www.washingtonblade.com/2023/04/12/trumps-mar-a-lago-speech-confirms-he-is-a-very-sick-man/
"I think a lot of us have seen, with Sen. Tuberville, how ignorant he is," Ret. Marine Corps. Col. Amy McGrath explained. "The fact that he has really no idea about national security policy, how the laws are enacted with regards to our military, that's not surprising to a lot of us. I think the bigger issue here, Nicolle, is not Sen. Tuberville's ignorance, it's the fact that the rest of the Senate Republican caucus, the members of the so-called party of national security, have not stood up to him. He basically has had little pushback."
Trump has taken pains to hide medical record, equating sickness with weakness.
On FaceBorg SC Said: This really got my attention,
so I wanted to share it with anyone interested in history.
One of my friends told me about a powerful lesson in their class recently. They're learning about the Salem Witch Trials, and their teacher told them they were going to play a game.
The teens dove into grilling each other. One fairly large group formed, but most of the students broke into small, exclusive groups, turning away anyone they thought gave off even a hint of guilt.
"Okay," the teacher said. "You've got your groups. Time to find out which ones fail. All witches, please raise your hands."
No one raised a hand.
The kids were confused and told the teacher he'd messed up the game. "Did I? Was anyone in Salem an actual witch? Or did everyone just believe what they'd been told?"
And that is how you teach kids how easy it is to divide a community.
Keep being welcoming, beautiful people. Shunning, scapegoating and dividing destroys far more than they protect.
And - We when we remain united despite ALL those who might divide us, we become the most powerful creators on the planet.
Fall in love with some activity, and do it! Nobody ever figures out what life is all about, and it doesn't matter. Explore the world. Nearly everything is really interesting if you go into it deeply enough. Work as hard and as much as you want to on the things you like to do the best. Don't think about what you want to be, but what you want to do. Keep up some kind of a minimum with other things so that society doesn't stop you from doing anything at all. ~Richard Feynman
Maga I think you may be correct that the system is rigged. However it's not rigged in the way you think it is. Republicans want the rule of law apply to everyone but themselves. When it is applied to them that's when the rigging of the system occurs. They want the trial either move to federal court or change of venue to a district that has 90% support for the Trader in Chief djt. In effect gerrymandering the jury, like they did in the Old South asking a jury of KKK members to convict a KKK member smh. You cheat yourself, you cheat the American people, you cheat the Constitution and you cheat the rule of law, And you wonder why you cannot get ahead well it's because you're too busy being a beta Male cuck. If and when we should lose our democracy in lieu of fascism you will be solely to blame.
WINCHESTER MYSTERY HOUSE. San Jose.
By the turn of the century, Sarah Winchester had her house: an oddly laid out mansion, with seven stories, 161 rooms, 47 fireplaces, 10,000 panes of glass, two basements, three elevators, and a mysterious fun-house-like interior.
Gold and silver chandeliers hung from the ceilings above hand-inlaid parquet flooring. Dozens of artful stained-glass windows dotted the walls. One window, in particular, was intended to create a prismatic rainbow effect on the floor when light flowed through it – of course, the window ended up on an interior wall, and thus the effect was never achieved.
Unfortunately, in 1906, an earthquake struck San Jose, and the Winchester Mystery House sustained a hefty amount of damage. Thanks to the floating foundation (a foundation that equals the weight of the surrounding soil) the entire house was saved from collapse. The top three floors were ultimately removed, leaving the house with only four stories, as seen today.
Throughout the years-long construction of the Winchester Mystery House, Sarah Winchester would never confirm that she was building a haunted house. However, stories and rumors swirled throughout San Jose.
After she died in 1922, the businessman John Brown rented the house, christened it a tourist attraction, and later purchased it outright. It has been a beloved piece of quirky, creepy Americana since it opened.
There’s an undercurrent of something undefinable. “You don’t feel alone in the house.” “But it’s friendly, at least, “Yeah, I’ve never been terrified.”