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Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/08/2024 in Posts

  1. Liberals, "she not a real woman where is her penis?"
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  3. Some don't realize anger is an emotion. What about the threads celebrating liberal meltdowns? Logical 😀
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  5. Poor @myata. Poor poor @myata.
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  6. Because they work for the WEF divide and conquer you will own nothing and be happy agenda always conspiring against the the well being of the majority of Canadian citizens (with exception of especially liberal insiders) and so they continue to screw Canadian citizens while robbing us blind. When Justin Trudeau and his party of Liberal liars claim to believe something why would the majority of Canadian citizens even entertain the idea that they are not lying when they claim to believe the rubbish they feed everyone when they prove to lie and deceive so very often? Every time they claim to be doing something for the citizens of Canada, they simply leave out something "bad" for the citizens of Canada "for the WEF sick agenda." Why would anyone trust liars who value a climate hoax used to rob Canadians of a decent future more than they value the well being and safety of Canadian citizens? The majority of Canadians never voted for anyone to rob Canadians of a decent future and value a climate hoax more than they value the lives of the majority of Canadian citizens. To even imply that the majority of Canadian citizens ever did is an oxy m0ron. Again, of the entire Earth's surface area, not even 30 percent of the surface area is land. Humans only occupy 10 percent of that land which means that humans only occupy 3% of the entire Earth's surface area and not one person globally has ever proven with even so much as a shred of validity that 3% of the entire Earth's surface area occupied by humans raises the Earth's atmospheric temperature even so much as 0.000001 degree yet they keep lying compulsively and obsessively of a climate crisis caused by humans and use such lies to rob us blind while detouring businesses from being successful as their asinine motives drive businesses out of Canada I find quite obvious to deliberately further rob Canadians of a decent future. Let alone caused by humans, I have never even seen any proof of a climate crisis over the years but instead I saw Catherine McKenna when Minister of the Environment remove over a hundred years of Canadian climate recorded history citing it as unreliable and again I state all these years later they cited it as unreliable because it exposes that their climate crisis is a hoax used to suit their sick WEF divide and conquer with lies and deceptions agenda. Sure Trudeau's carbon tax reduces carbon emissions because it kills Canadian citizens who otherwise live a breathe Just ask the current Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault who swears up and down it works and now you know why quite factually. They value a climate hoax more than they value the lives of Canadian citizens and for this, yet another reason, have no business holding office betraying the well being and safety of Canadian citizens. The Liberal and NDP coalition have worked so hard to rob Canadians of a future how is it not the duty of Canadian citizens to make sure Canadian citizens rob Liberals and NDP of everything that they and their families have in the near future when they so very eagerly without hesitation are robbing the general population of Canadian citizens including our children of everything especially of a future for years now while distracting with their lies and deceptions fabricated as what they claim to believe? Why shouldn't Canadian citizens feel obligated to thrown them in prison while labelling them haters for speaking against Canadian citizens robbing them blind when they have so eagerly been doing such to Canadian citizens for years now?! I am against the Liberal NDP coalition and their rubbish that they push upon Canadian citizens and our families but perhaps the way to end their madness is by placing the threat that they put on the majority of Canadian citizens upon them and their families! How would they like for themselves and their families to have no future while they starve and go homeless as they are doing to us Canadian citizens and our children under many pathetic lies and deceptions they use as guises to screw us all in every way they appear to be able to think of now? It's my pleasure to give you all something to think about as I continue to stand strong for the well being and safety of the citizens of Canada as I have for 24 and ½ years now! Again, I love and care about everyone but that doesn't mean your actions do not disgust me and nor does it mean that your ignorance doesn't infuriate me and nor does it mean you shouldn't pay the price for destroying the well being, sanity and decent future of Canadian citizens like the Liberals and NDP deliberately have for years now in multiple ways as I have pointed out multiple examples time and time again for almost a decade now! This title and release was inspired by Pierre Poilievre's YouTube channel's video titled "Why would Trudeau raise tariffs on ourselves?" which Pierre Poilievre released Nov. 6th 2024. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQ_qxFj1TW4 love Primary Factual Fundamentalist World Class Activist David Jeffrey Spetch Owen Sound Ontario Canada Ps. Be good, be strong!
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  7. I wish this was actually real!
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  8. I found the winner. It's just about the perfect symbolism for the D party. ***WARNING*** DO NOT WATCH IF LAUGHING OUT LOUD WILL GET YOU IN TROUBLE AT WORK ***WARNING***
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  9. Once project 2025 kicks in, Americans will be in for a cold awakening. Women rights, gay rights, and even minority rights will be curtailed. There is a good chance Trump will come after political opponents and the media, by persecuting them. By 2028, America will look like Putin's Russia. Fascism shattered Europe a century ago — and historians hear echoes today in the U.S. None of the scholars forecast an imminent turn to autocracy in the U.S., and all were careful to say the U.S. experience today is in important ways different from devastating conditions that preceded the rise of European fascism in the 1920s and ‘30s. But in a series of interviews, experts who have studied the political and economic history of Europe traced dramatic and deeply troubling parallels between that era a century ago and this fraught American moment. As in Europe after World War I, “there’s kind of a disdain for democracy,” said John Connelly, the eminent historian of modern Europe. “There’s a willingness to think of going beyond the technicalities of a democratic system in order to solve problems. There’s a longing — there’s a respect for strong leadership that many believe is lacking in a standard liberal democracy.” The view was not unanimous. Jason Wittenberg, a political scientist who has studied European politics and dictatorships, insisted that the U.S. military and other institutions would not succumb to strongman rule. “My bottom line is that fears about Trump are not entirely unfounded, but they’re massively overblown,” Wittenberg said. “Yes, he could do damage. But in the worst-case scenario, there’s just no plausible circumstance under which an illiberal government could be implemented. There’s no way it could happen.”And yet, the cautious consensus that emerged from the interviews is that U.S. democracy is more vulnerable today than it has been since the Civil War more than 160 years ago. Several scholars believe the public’s frustration and polarization, incidents and threats of right-wing violence, and a radical new Supreme Court ruling granting presidents broad immunity from the law could precipitate a break with democracy Such conditions undercut democracy in Italy and Germany, and the scholars see some of the same troubling signals here today.Because the forces of history are so complex, “I’m wary of trying to draw exact parallels,” said AJ Solovy, a Ph.D. student whose research is focused on German fascism. “But the Third Reich and Germany in the 1930s offer important, useful paradigms through which to understand this particular moment in the U.S. Even if there is not a one-to-one match, the themes that emerge — insecurity, crisis, a sort of existential political angst — can help explain why so many people are attracted to the MAGA movement.”Put another way: It’s not enough to look at how the leaders of anti-democratic movements might be alike. Instead, it’s essential to look at the broader conditions that allowed for the rise of those movements. Condition No. 1: An era of extraordinary instability, loss and perceived humiliation Any discussion of 20th century fascism in Italy and Germany begins with World War I. The war brought a level of death and devastation that had never been seen before. New weapons technology turned portions of Europe into a killing field. Relentless shelling barrages didn’t merely maim and kill, but obliterated bodies on a mass scale.Germany lost the war, and Italy was on the winning side. But for both, the aftermath was devastating: Millions dead and wounded. The Spanish flu, and thousands more dead. Hyperinflation, unemployment, widespread hunger. Grave polarization and political instability. And then, the Great Depression. Leaders, the military and the people in both nations felt crushed and humiliated. The traditional order was dissolving, and crisis was constant. The Russian Revolution appealed to many, but also provoked widespread fear of communism. Women were gaining political emancipation. Film and radio were extending their reach. Modern art was rejecting the subjects and styles of the past. Political and culture wars raged across the landscape. In both countries, the scholars said, people suffered from a profound sense of dislocation. Lawrence Rosenthal, a scholar of Italian fascism and the founder of the UC Berkeley Center for Right-Wing Studies, described it as a violent break between past and future that affected tens of millions of people.Both Italy and Germany were deeply divided between advanced industrial areas and rural regions that seemed stuck in a feudal era that hadn’t changed in centuries, Rosenthal said. He imagined the experience of young Italian soldiers who lived through the war and the flu pandemic. “When the war is over, they go back to their villages, their hometowns, and they don’t fit anymore,” he said. “Everything has changed.”After the horrors of war, they have changed, too — they’re lost, alienated, dispossessed. What remained was their shared experience with other soldiers, “the brotherhood of the trenches,” Rosenthal said. “And this was a potential mass base for fascism.” In such tectonic shocks, the scholars see strong but uneven parallels between Europe in the 1920s and ‘30s and the U.S. today. COVID parallels the Spanish flu. The U.S. is divided between regions thriving in the information economy and chronically depressed Rust Belt and rural regions. But while the U.S. has suffered from inflation since the pandemic ended, hyperinflation in Germany was almost 1,000 times worse. And the U.S. has no recent experience comparable to World War I or the Depression. Still, questions remain: Even if Americans have not been exposed to such a shattering experience, is it possible that a series of smaller shocks could cause similar trauma? And could this trauma fuel an authoritarian political movement in the U.S.? Condition No. 2: In a time of traumatic upheaval, some people seek order at any cost Ulrike Malmendier, a behavioral economist at Berkeley’s Haas School of Business, has conducted influential research into how the Great Depression and other traumatic experiences shape people’s worldviews and decisions, even decades later. Malmendier said trauma researchers generally categorize two sorts of experience: “big-T trauma,” such as a war, extreme economic crisis, sexual assault or terrorist attack; and “small-t trauma,” such as the modest, but painful, “paper cuts” that we accumulate in daily life. Think about food insecurity in a time of inflation. “It’s not that you have no access to food and you’re starving,” she said. “But you have this insecurity that food might not be available, or you might not have enough, because prices are rising.” Changing technology, changing demographics and the shocks of economic globalization can have a similar effect. Malmendier explained: “People think, ‘Something around me isn’t quite as it used to be. My work skills might not be as valuable as they were. I’m constantly worrying, ‘What does that mean for me?’ “With technological change, or demographic change, the constant worry of how you fit into this place might be as big as if there was a war — ‘I now live in a different environment. I’m feeling displaced.’” In effect, Malmendier said, trauma rewires our brains. Even modest change can be traumatic and can trigger a primal impulse to avoid further shocks. People might imagine that things would be better if only they could return to the order of the good old days. Now consider the U.S. experience since the start of the 21st century: The 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001 were followed quickly by wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that lasted for years and ended in stalemate. The Great Recession in 2008 and 2009 wiped out savings and drove a spike in unemployment. The nation’s demographics were changing. While many celebrated the election of Barack Obama as the nation’s first Black president in 2008, and the nomination of Hillary Clinton as the first woman to win a major-party presidential nomination in 2016, many others were deeply resentful. For some, resentment extended to the legalization of same-sex marriage and the expansion of rights for transgender and nonbinary people. The era has featured almost unchecked random mass shootings and declining affiliation with traditional religion. Technological change has been rapid and disruptive; the internet, smartphones and social media have overwhelmed us with disinformation. In the aftermath, political and social polarization has steadily deepened. Chronic insecurity can be a powerful driver of anti-democratic movements, said David Clay Large, a senior fellow at the Berkeley’s Institute of European Studies.“Social change — gender, art, politics, class — leads to insecurity,” said Large. “People get used to certain norms, a certain place in the world. Then their world is turned upside down. In Europe in the ‘20s, it happened quickly. In this country, it’s been more gradual. “There is a feeling of having lost something, sometimes a mythologized or romanticized past that people claim they’re missing. You can say that’s nonsense, but they still feel it. And that’s important.”Malmendier hasn’t studied anti-democratic movements, but she sees a connection: Once this sort of trauma gets wired into the brain, people can believe it’s “very, very likely that the next traumatic event is just around the corner,” she explained. “They might make an exaggerated attempt to avoid being put in this painful situation again. “That is where you might see a link to extremism, or maybe populism.” Condition No. 3: A strongman leader appeals to the fear and rage of his public In simple terms, populism is a social movement that seeks to turn back the clock, by extreme measures, if necessary. Nationalism is a natural extension, an effort to return the nation to its imagined former greatness.Both are fueled by a widespread sense of loss and humiliation, and by grievance and resentment. There’s a sense, the scholars said, that modern ways aren’t serving the needs of the masses, and the masses need to seize power and restore order and justice.In such conditions, Connelly and others said, people can turn away from democracy — and toward an authoritarian leader. “In Italy in the early 1920s,” Connelly said, “there was a sense across the political spectrum: We need a person who can really break through these old, decrepit structures of liberal order that went back several decades to the creation of modern Italy.“Mussolini appealed to people of many backgrounds, in the center of the political spectrum, as a force of order and strength. As a former socialist, he could project concern for the broad populace.” Similar social dynamics allowed Hitler to rise to power. Both he and Mussolini emerged from the humiliation and bitterness of World War I on a promise to restore the greatness of the nation and its people.It’s an essential point: None of the Berkeley scholars put Trump in the same category as Hitler or Mussolini. But, they said, it’s difficult to ignore some similarities between them. Each of them has been described as chronically dishonest and highly manipulative. Each had a flamboyant, theatrical speaking style, and they were able to summon the admiration and provoke the fury of their fanatically loyal supporters. Both Hitler and Mussolini served time in jail, while Trump has been found liable for a range of criminal and civil offenses “I alone can fix it,” he famously said in his first campaign. Later, he proclaimed to his followers: “I am your warrior. I am your justice. And for those who have been wronged and betrayed: I am your retribution.” All three men were at times seen as messiahs. And all survived assassination attempts. Condition No. 4: The leader employs violence to impose order and obedience Fascism, said Rosenthal, historically is characterized by the use of organized militias that answer to the leader or the state, deployed to impose order and consolidate fascist power — often through violence.Mussolini sent his Blackshirts to the March on Rome in 1922 to threaten the national government, and the government capitulated. Stormtroopers attached to the Nazi Party violently harassed communists, Jews and others and were a critical force in Hitler’s rise to power. While Trump never had a MAGA militia, he has encouraged followers to assault protesters or journalists. Through his first term, he built a loose alliance with the Proud Boys, the Oath Keepers and other armed groups that embrace hard-right, often racist ideology.Trump in effect summoned them to Washington, D.C., on the eve of congressional certification of Democrat Joe Biden’s win in the November 2020 election, and then seemed to incite them just before the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Leaders and members of those militia groups have been prosecuted and imprisoned for their violent effort to prevent an orderly transfer of power. Trump has described them as political prisoners, and has said he “absolutely” would consider pardoning them if he’s re-elected. Condition No. 5: The leader identifies scapegoats and attacks them relentlessly Right-wing populism, said Connelly, “is always directed against others. What unites all of these forces is a hostility to foreigners, to people who are different, to the other. Hitler was overtly anti-Semitic, an overt racist. Mussolini was anti-Slavic because of the perception that Croatians and Slovenians had stolen Italian territory.”Hitler’s rhetoric had a sharp, sinister edge. Said Solovy: “There’s no doubt that it enabled violence and genocide.” Trump’s use of scapegoating has been a defining trait of his movement. In the initial days of his presidency, he banned people from six Muslim-majority countries from entering the U.S. His movement has featured escalating attacks on LGBTQ+ and transgender people. He has persistently insulted and condemned migrants crossing the southern border into the U.S., calling them at various times rapists, mentally ill and “vermin” who are, in his view, “poisoning the blood of our country.” Critics have noted the similarity of Trump’s dehumanizing language to Nazi smears against the Jews. Still, fierce opposition to immigration remains central to the MAGA movement, and it is a crucial focus of the controversial Project 2025 plan that is seen as a blueprint for a second Trump term. Trump’s allies have openly predicted that, if he’s reelected, the government will round up millions of legal and undocumented migrants, hold them in mass concentration camps, and then deport them. Attorney Mike Davis, a former Supreme Court clerk whose name has been floated as a possible U.S. attorney general under Trump, recently described these goals in chilling detail: “We’re gonna deport a lot of people, 10 million people and growing — anchor babies, their parents, their grandparents. We’re gonna put kids in cages. It’s going to be glorious.” Condition No. 6: Democratic institutions remove limits on the leader’s authority There is a final parallel — and for some of the scholars, one of jarring importance. Early in the leadership of both Mussolini and Hitler, lawmaking bodies gave them enormous authority to suspend rights and processes in place under Italian and German democracy. The U.S. Supreme Court, just two months ago, issued a controversial landmark ruling that seems to give presidents broad immunity from prosecution if they break laws in the course of their duties. How does that decision compare to the rulings in Europe during the rise of fascism?“This is probably the most controversial thing I can say,” Rosenthal replied, “but I believe that there is a parallel between the German Enabling Act in 1933 and the Supreme Court decision on immunity.” The U.S. court ruled that “the president essentially enjoys impunity,” Connelly added. “They’re withdrawing themselves from the process, when they’re supposed to be a check on the process. Similarly, institutional checks on abuse of power failed in Germany.” The U.S. has its own unique strains of illiberalism For Large and Wittenberg, the idea that conditions in the U.S. match those in post-WWI Italy and Germany goes only so far. For both, the parallels diverge in important ways.Even before the U.S. formed in the late 1700s, Large said, an anti-democratic impulse was evident. That was most acute in matters of race and ethnicity: slavery and the Civil War, genocide against Indigenous people; Supreme Court rulings that justified segregation Jim Crow laws and lynchings. Wave after wave of immigrants arrived in the U.S. to a fiercely hostile reception. In Europe a century ago, there was no force comparable to the hard-right evangelical Christians who form a core of the MAGA movement. Nor did Europe allow almost unchecked private possession of guns. Today in the U.S., thousands — perhaps millions — in the MAGA ranks own weapons of war. Many of them consider guns a right ordained by God. Those currents in American culture today resist any control on guns, despite epidemic mass shootings. MAGA forces seek to ban the teaching of the nation’s racial history in schools, and they justify sweeping campaigns to control women’s reproductive rights and to strip basic rights from LGBTQ+ Americans.I don’t think we have to say, ‘Oh God, we’re in trouble in this country because we’re going to go fascist like the Europeans,’” Large said. “I say we’re in trouble because we’re going to go fascist like the Americans.” election campaign, U.S. Senate candidate Blake Masters of Arizona embodied a modern political archetype: A white man with deep grievances and a belief in racist conspiracy theories — and weapons as a thinly veiled threat against the prevailing political order. Wittenberg, the political scientist, acknowledges such worries. But in his view, there is no practical way that Trump or any other president could impose an authoritarian government. The country is too big, he said. Our institutions are too dispersed, too entrenched. The military would never go along. A greater concern, for Wittenberg, is that by exaggerating the risk of an authoritarian takeover, we’ll miss the slow erosion of democratic institutions and processes driven by both Republicans and Democrats — the greater use of executive orders by presidents, for example, or simply our uncompromising resistance to outcomes in which our opponents win.Suppose Trump is reelected, he mused, and suppose his administration weakens or abolishes the Environmental Protection Agency. “So we’ll have dirtier air,” he said. Some voters will be furious, “but there’s nothing essential to democracy about having clean air. The Constitution explicitly states that powers not mentioned in that document are thrown back to the states. So arguably, it’s more democratic.”Congress can block the effort or impeach the president, or voters can challenge the decision in court. It’s messy, Wittenberg said, but that’s the nature of our system. “Democracy doesn’t always give you good outcomes,” he said. “You know, democracy produces people like Trump. And if you think that people like Trump should not be allowed to run for president, or support efforts to invalidate his candidacy, then you have a problem with democracy.” The guardrails of democracy may not be as strong as we think With Kamala Harris surging in the polls and the Trump campaign struggling to gain traction, there’s a temptation to believe that the risk of a democratic crack-up might soon be erased. But several scholars cautioned against that view. The anti-democratic dynamics that shape our era will not go away with one election, they say. And so the future seems to turn on a central question: Is Wittenberg right, that what happened in Germany and Italy can’t happen here? Or could a majority of Americans turn against democracy, as Italians and Germans did a century ago?Both Rosenthal and Large agree that the nation’s long tradition of democracy and its deeply embedded institutions are far stronger than those in Italy and Germany. “That’s true, and that can help,” Large said. “But I don’t think the guardrails are as strong as a lot of people think.” Compared to Germany and Italy, “the mountain to climb in America is much steeper for illiberal movements,” Rosenthal added. “I agree with that 100%. But there is a cliché which says that when these things go, they go quickly. I would add that as an addendum.” Which leaves Americans and the rest of the world to closely watch the guardrails leading up to Nov. 5, and in the weeks after. The future is uncertain — and that, too, is how democracy works.“In the next several months, there are going to be surprises,” Rosenthal said. “That’s the only thing we can be certain of.”
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  10. Likely better than your boyfriend with the fake vagina...
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  11. I just finished watching Nimona on Netflix. It's an animated feature that I at first thought would just merely be pretty funny. By the end of it, I found it to be a profound look at how we treat things that are different from what we're used to, and how trying to eradicate differences tends to just lead to more problems. Here's a film review on it that I think is quite good: https://mashable.com/article/nimona-review Quoting a bit from it: ** Remarkable resurrection aside, Nimona is an extraordinary film in its own right. It catapults us into an eye-popping futuristic medieval world, where shapeshifter Nimona (voiced by Chloë Grace Moretz) will wreak havoc — and win your heart in the process. Along with its unique animation and rollicking action sequences, Nimona digs into themes of individuality, identity, and acceptance that aim to speak directly and warmly to the queer community. At a time when LGBTQ rights and spaces continue to come under attack from bigoted legislation, Nimona cements itself not just as a great fantasy film, but as an important one as well. ** One thing I'd like to add, I don't think the lessons in this film stop at LGBTQ issues, but with ways of resolving things in general- one is dialogue, the other with violence and how violence tends to frequently escalate into more violence.
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  12. In fact she has already been president. It was during a medical procedure on Biden
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  13. Let Israel finish the job in Gaza. And deport all these hoodlums back to the Middle East. Canada should NOT admit any Palestinians here.
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  14. Split personality cannot go on forever. The choice was between leaving the past behind, abandoning it consciously and by choice; or embracing it. That choice is made now. Precedents and new normals set and created. Anyone can be the present. Cults can run governments. We cannot argue the reality, what's done is done no unsaying it, zero chance of walking back. But sure, it's a new reality here, before us. No denying, ignoring or refusing to admit it. The reality always catches up. Bring it on.
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  15. Multiculturalism. Mass immigration from regions that hate the West. It is so disgusting to see headlines like this.
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  16. They're wallowing in self pity. @myata is sinking fast. The poor...person had hope but...that hope has been dashed. And worse...Trump got a clear majority vote. Oh the horror! @myata...try to not fall completely into dispare. You too @Michael Hardner. Think of it this way... We all just a couple years ago, emerged from a global pandemic...apparently...and the global economy took it in the teeth. It was BAD! But we came out and one of the results...whether intentional or not...was 1 US surrender and 2 shiny new wars. THIS...boys...is the IDEAL time to turn American business and resources loose! At least until America can fully recover, and maybe even reduce some o' that insane debt. Get well soon...
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  17. You know I have to apologize now as I reread the history. Hitler's invasion of Austria was clearly used as the blueprint for Putin's annexation of Crimea and the subsequent war. History repeats itself and we're failing to learn its lessons. Doesn't look encouraging. The Anschluss
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  18. This is not even remotely true. The Austrian leader (under pressure from Nazis in Austria and Germany), proposed a referendum to keep Austria independent of Germany. In response, Germany invaded, and annexed Austria. Austria never voted to join Germany. Austria was conquered by Germany. After Austria was absorbed into the Third Reich, all attempts at democratic votes were meaningless, since 99% would go along with Hitler, as the penalty for voting against would be a one-way ticket to a concentration camp. Without the Germans annexing Austria, historians estimate roughly 70% of the Austria population would ahve rejected the Anschluss.
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  19. But that wasn't the problem...in their mind. In their mind, they didn't scream loud enough.
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  20. The US will now be run again by a Putin informant traitor who attempted to defraud the American voters and has been criminally charged for it (cases pending). We live in perilous times where politicians care more about power than their own country.
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  21. They should blame the policies. The economy, immigration and state of democracy were top of mind with voters. Maybe they shouldn't threaten to raise taxes, give amnesty to illegals and try to jail their opponents. Liberal behavior is 100% why they lost.
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  22. As if your reputations counted in it. The electorate will give Trump about 2 years to have Made America Great Again or go back to thinking about flipping the White House again. What happened to the 1st major objective Trump promised, the biggest deportation program in America's history? How much of this promise do people think or even better predict Trump will have delivered on during the 1st 18 - 24 months of his term? What if it's next to nothing?
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  23. Until you learn to say what you mean you can never choose what you like.
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  24. Yes hopefully that includes sending the Ayatollahs to hell where they should be. Here's how tired I am, for some reason my brain processed that as you saying "hopefully that includes sending the the ayatollahs to Ukraine where they should be" I was like what the hell does he want the ayatollahs in Ukraine for??
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  25. Looks like the incoming Trump team isn't gonna f around with this nonsense any longer
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  26. The hope he'll keep his promises certainly shines through. I'm reminded of the enthusiasm usually on display for populist phrases like "we're going to crack down and get tough on" fill-in-blank-here. I guess the most obvious clue of what's ahead should be apparent in how quickly Trump releases the Democrats Jan 6 hostages. Notwithstanding how forgiving Trump's supporters are it's also clear they're very impatient. If he fu cks the dog on this it'll plant the first seeds of doubt that will bloom into a field of weeds in no time at all. It'll be the same when Poilievre is elected - the high often ridiculous expectations of so many conservative voters will leave them little room or time in which to manoeuvre.
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  27. Nobody is forcing you to read this thread. Go away if you cannot handle it.
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  28. Exactly You can't have a unified nation with completely disjointed information sources.
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  29. As much as I like the sentiment, I don't see the left wanting to reconcile or move forward any time soon. They are still talking about targeting Donnie in New York and the media talking heads are still blaming everything on what's between your legs and your skin color. So unless you give them exactly what they want, unlimited power, they will continue to march on toward the revolution. A sizeable chunk of Democrats aren't rational. It'll take awhile to dismantle what they've tried to put together through regulatory boards, judicial nominees, education institutions, etc
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  30. Putin has done far more to increase NATO defence spending than anything Trump has done.
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  31. I hope not. I'd be more than content to let the hair sniffer go out as the leader. America could use a break.
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  32. Mr. or Mrs. High. Whichever the case may or may not be... 1. The OP by @Political Smash doen not mention Alex Jones. You have tried to derail the thread with his invocation. 2. The OP is about the climate laws and regulations imposed by the Canadian Liberals. So let's try real hard to stay on topic...Mkaaayyy? Further to that, I ask you again..."prove we have a climate crisis"? You can't. Nobody can. And that...young Padewan...is the problem. In REALITY...not a single peer reviewed scientific document will proclaim a "climate crisis". Why? It's simply not a crisis. It's a "potential" issue and perhaps...and that's a very big "perhaps"...even a crisis. But TODAY it's noted that the average global temperature has risen over the last century...that would be 4 generations...or more...at about .2 degrees PER DECADE. That...my disingenuous young Padewan...a crisis does not make.! The "green" movement is nothing more than just another scare tactic to keep mindless slumps in a constant state of panic, in order to make them willing dupes. Frankly, Pixie-Dust and his whole Gawd-forsaken cabinet should be jailed for the undue suffering they've imposed on Canadians... WITH A BLATANT LIE! Now...young Padewan...the question remains... Prove there's a climate crisis.
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  33. More Hitler talk again, Myata? What is it with democrats and their fascination with Nazi Germany? Could it be because you both share a love for socialism, slavery and death?
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  34. well according to the dems he ACTUALLY SAID he'd see blood in the streets!!! He ACTUALLY SAID he was going to be a dictator and destroy the constitution and there would be no more elections. He ACTUALLY SAID he would use the military to arrest judges and journalists. He ACTUALLY SAID he would ban puppies, kill kittens and cancel christmas!! (ok i made that one up but it sounds like something they'd say he said ) Very little of what the left things he actually said was things he actually said.
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  35. That's an interesting question. If I had to guess, I would say no, Biden will not step down. He is probably still bitter that Obama and Pelosi forced him out for the likes of Kamala Harris.
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  36. I would have voted for trump just to see this video
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  37. Now that Trump is in power, Ukraine is screwed unless the rest of NATO ups its game. Netanyahu will also be given a free reign. Arab Americans who voted for Trump because they were unhappy with Biden just shot themselves in the foot.
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  38. A shame we didn't go to the same school. Trash who were so insecure they bullied other people were so fun to bully back. Things got real peaceful after they realized they couldn't get away with that shit in public. Sounds like nobody was around to school your fool ass so you turned out as pathetic as you have.
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  39. Well I'm not. I have things yet unaccomplished. I'm not done till I say I'm done.
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