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Thread: Even if dirty Moore is guilty they will still vote for him??

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    Aww look, little people talk.

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    Quote Originally Posted by crowonapost View Post
    Well that only works if you need a whore in the first place. Some do, thank you for sharing.
    whores are usually abused as children to get them in that situation


    why blame the victim

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    Quote Originally Posted by Corazón View Post
    Has nobody ever heard of Dorothy Parker ffs? I took the liberty of changing the original quotation.

    "You can lead a horticulture but you can't make her think"



    Sent from my Lenovo K8 Note using Tapatalk
    Sorry still stuck on 'Handy quotes'.
    "If you ever catch on fire, try to avoid seeing yourself in the mirror, because I bet that's what REALLY throws you into a panic."

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    Quote Originally Posted by evince View Post
    whores are usually abused as children to get them in that situation


    why blame the victim
    Also porn stars. Yes, we know the obvious. What you seem to fail at grasping is I am responding to the content of a poster, speaking at their level, not trying to educate the world from a place of vanity, like say, yourself.

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    Quote Originally Posted by crowonapost View Post
    Aww look, little people talk.
    Ok, have fun with your new playmate! You remind me of the scorpion in the story of the scorpion and the frog.



    Sent from my Lenovo K8 Note using Tapatalk

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    Quote Originally Posted by crowonapost View Post
    Also porn stars. Yes, we know the obvious. What you seem to fail at grasping is I am responding to the content of a poster, speaking at their level, not trying to educate the world from a place of vanity, like say, yourself.
    vanity?



    hahahahahahahahahahahahaha


    not having compassion for people forced in to the sex trade is not how you best evil


    there are many many other things to call these zip lock bags filled with weasel jizz and rat bile

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    Quote Originally Posted by christiefan915 View Post
    Just have to bring in lefties.
    absolutely. all of you partisan idiots deserve to be criticized.
    A sad commentary on we, as a people, and our viewpoint of our freedom can be summed up like this. We have liberals and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans, yet those very people look at Constitutionalists as radical and extreme.................so those liberals and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans must believe that the constitution is radical and extreme.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Stretch View Post
    Not the ONLY reason...if it was then she would have gone to the cops, not the press.
    She, the 14 year old abuse victim was sought out, she told her story to reporters, she did not come forward on her own.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Stretch View Post
    I intentionally left out "episodes" of learning to get over it while I was 16 and 17. I stood my ground and then moved on from unwanted advances. I can't even imagine coming forward 48 years later to avenge any mistreatment.
    "The moving finger writes and having writ moves on." Omar Khayyam
    Well, good for you, not all girls are as strong as yourself.
    Was your abuser an assistant DA in a small town?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Stretch View Post
    Should have been a police investigation if she really wanted some kind of justice all this time later, not a WaPo investigation.
    My friend was raped, the police did nothing, this is why women don’t go to the police.

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    Quote Originally Posted by evince View Post
    vanity?



    hahahahahahahahahahahahaha


    not having compassion for people forced in to the sex trade is not how you best evil


    there are many many other things to call these zip lock bags filled with weasel jizz and rat bile
    Again, no shit. How self important of you to make sure I know all about your thoughts on sex trafficking and the plight of women, as if I am not familiar with it. Yes that is vanity. And you go there.
    Don't you feel self self important now? Changing the subject, making it about you, it's so about you now. You feel special?

    hahahahaha

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    Quote Originally Posted by evince View Post
    its seems you are saying you were abused


    If that is true I am very sorry someone USED you in such an evil way.

    its seems to have hardened your heart to the pain of others.


    I was not abused in that way but my father was messed up in the head when he got drunk.


    Ive told the stories here before

    things like grabbing his hand before he hit my older brother.

    Or protecting my mother from him by interceding

    or being knocked to the ground after being knocked against a wall.


    I am kinda different than most humans


    for some reason when someone tries to intimidate me all fear drains from my body and I get pissed and stand my ground


    I was fucking born that way


    I jumped off the ground and stood right to his face and gave him a look that said


    YOU ARE GOING TO HAVE TO HURT ME TO STOP ME


    as he didnt want to go to prison for hurting his 15 year old daughter he backed down.



    I never USED that experience to say ALL WOMEN HAVE TO BE LIKE ME OR FUCK THEM


    I had sisters

    their personalities varied


    they were not all like me


    some froze

    some ran


    some cried in a heap.


    I was six out of eight so I was not there to protect all my siblings



    I did refuse to stand by and watch him be a dick while drunk though.


    If I was there


    he had to back down


    because I made him do so


    you would have let him hurt everyone


    how does that make you a good person?


    I protect others


    not all are strong as me


    hell my 4 brothers were not as strong as me


    you seem to have learned from you situation to allow others to be hurt but to protect your self.



    think of what that says about you
    I am sorry and I’m sorry if Stretch was abused, no one should ever have to go through this.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Althea View Post
    Can you think of a better time? Until now, he was just a twice unseated Judge, who refused to abide by the law with respect to the cases before him.

    Now he's going to wield much more power.
    You think one vote in the senate is more powerful than a judge? Hardly dumbass

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    Quote Originally Posted by TTQ64 View Post
    Sorry I don't click on links.








    U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison has been poring over election turnout data around the country to find a solution to a maddening problem for Democrats.
    Potentially bedrock Democratic voters in the inner cities sit out off-year, midterm elections in massive numbers. Despite strong turnout when President Obama was on the ballot, Democrats nationally have lost 910 state legislative seats since 2008 and occupy the governor’s mansions in only 18 states.
    Ellison is launching a new voter effort that Democrats around the country have high hopes will lead to more victories in nonpresidential elections, particularly in races where they have lost by razor-thin margins. Even nudging up voter turnout a few percentage points could have massive implications for legislative and statewide races. As a fifth-term Minneapolis Democrat who routinely wins his elections by more than 65 percent, Ellison is increasingly convinced that the future of Democratic victories is hiding in apartment buildings and low-income urban areas across the country.
    “Where are they going to come from? Trust me, there’s 3 percent in every congressional district in the United States,” Ellison said. “If we had a good turnout strategy across the country, you could really turn things around.”
    To do this, Ellison has workers fanning out to apartment buildings and low-income communities to reach potential constituencies in more personal ways. His idea is that through more one-on-one contact, Democrats can drive more people to the polls and cement lifetime allegiances to the party.
    Enter Artiste Mayfield — a part-time employee at an Amazon warehouse and a college student who grew up in north Minneapolis. With streaked red and pink hair and glasses at the end of her nose, she doesn’t look like your typical hardened political operative. Last year, she knocked on more than 200 doors in the neighborhood. This was different from conventional political door-knocking, however. In this case, she knew many of the people behind the doors.




    Mayfield also was part of a “SWAT” team — composed of blacks, Spanish speakers and Oromo speakers — who descended on apartment buildings and knocked on doors together. The idea was that no matter who was behind the door, there would be someone on the team whom he or she could relate to.
    Earlier this month, Mayfield knocked on another 66 doors. Many times, those responding were friends, acquaintances or people she knew from the community — the kind of people Ellison hopes are more receptive to a conversation.
    “Most people say, ‘I don’t vote,’ and then you begin to tell them why it’s important to vote,” Mayfield said.
    Her message is simple: “Do they know about Social Security, about food stamps, about all the things [some politicians] want to take away?” Mayfield asked. “Their eyes be like, ‘For real?’ ”
    Ellison is doing this without the enormous investment of television ads. He also pushed to get the polls open on Sundays and launched a “souls to the polls” effort to bus people to polling places after church. In 2014, some 450 voters showed up in Minneapolis on the two Sundays ahead of the election and another 124 voted on Sunday in Ramsey County.
    National model
    Ellison can point to his own Fifth District in Minneapolis and parts of adjacent suburbs as proof that the system works. His was the only one in the state where turnout numbers grew significantly between 2010 and 2014 — both off-year, midterm elections. More than 13,000 additional voters in the district showed up in 2014 than in 2010 — by far the biggest spike seen across the state.
    The results in Minnesota are gaining the attention of campaign managers nationally heading into 2016.
    Maryland’s Eighth Congressional District is more suburban and more affluent than Minneapolis. It stretches north of the nation’s capital into the well-heeled suburbs of Montgomery County and north into some of the state’s more rural stretches. It is also a reliably Democratic stronghold: There are seven Democrats running for Congress in an open seat next year.
    One of those hopefuls, state Sen. Jamie Raskin, hopes to adopt Ellison’s get-out-the-vote program.
    “It’s an interesting case study in this approach,” said Raskin’s campaign manager, Marshall Cohen. “You have Maryland, a safe blue state in the Senate and presidential races, but just last year elected a Republican governor with record low turnout. I think at the top of people’s minds is that every vote matters and getting more people to participate will be a better outcome for the state of Maryland.”
    Andrew Virden managed the apartment program for Ellison in 2012 and took it statewide in 2014. The crew knocked on doors in about 275 apartment buildings out of about 500 in Minneapolis. Virden said that compared with TV ads, an in-person visit is much more effective in getting people off the couch.
    “By the time it’s October of an election year, every other commercial is a political ad, and that’s the time to go get a sandwich or a glass of lemonade or a cup of coffee,” he said. “You’re not actually paying attention, and if you’re not paying attention, the money is wasted. But you’re not wasting money if it’s a person standing at the front door having a conversation.”


    U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison has been poring over election turnout data around the country to find a solution to a maddening problem for Democrats.
    Potentially bedrock Democratic voters in the inner cities sit out off-year, midterm elections in massive numbers. Despite strong turnout when President Obama was on the ballot, Democrats nationally have lost 910 state legislative seats since 2008 and occupy the governor’s mansions in only 18 states.
    Ellison is launching a new voter effort that Democrats around the country have high hopes will lead to more victories in nonpresidential elections, particularly in races where they have lost by razor-thin margins. Even nudging up voter turnout a few percentage points could have massive implications for legislative and statewide races. As a fifth-term Minneapolis Democrat who routinely wins his elections by more than 65 percent, Ellison is increasingly convinced that the future of Democratic victories is hiding in apartment buildings and low-income urban areas across the country.
    “Where are they going to come from? Trust me, there’s 3 percent in every congressional district in the United States,” Ellison said. “If we had a good turnout strategy across the country, you could really turn things around.”
    To do this, Ellison has workers fanning out to apartment buildings and low-income communities to reach potential constituencies in more personal ways. His idea is that through more one-on-one contact, Democrats can drive more people to the polls and cement lifetime allegiances to the party.
    Enter Artiste Mayfield — a part-time employee at an Amazon warehouse and a college student who grew up in north Minneapolis. With streaked red and pink hair and glasses at the end of her nose, she doesn’t look like your typical hardened political operative. Last year, she knocked on more than 200 doors in the neighborhood. This was different from conventional political door-knocking, however. In this case, she knew many of the people behind the doors.





    Mayfield also was part of a “SWAT” team — composed of blacks, Spanish speakers and Oromo speakers — who descended on apartment buildings and knocked on doors together. The idea was that no matter who was behind the door, there would be someone on the team whom he or she could relate to.
    Earlier this month, Mayfield knocked on another 66 doors. Many times, those responding were friends, acquaintances or people she knew from the community — the kind of people Ellison hopes are more receptive to a conversation.
    “Most people say, ‘I don’t vote,’ and then you begin to tell them why it’s important to vote,” Mayfield said.
    Her message is simple: “Do they know about Social Security, about food stamps, about all the things [some politicians] want to take away?” Mayfield asked. “Their eyes be like, ‘For real?’ ”
    Ellison is doing this without the enormous investment of television ads. He also pushed to get the polls open on Sundays and launched a “souls to the polls” effort to bus people to polling places after church. In 2014, some 450 voters showed up in Minneapolis on the two Sundays ahead of the election and another 124 voted on Sunday in Ramsey County.
    National model
    Ellison can point to his own Fifth District in Minneapolis and parts of adjacent suburbs as proof that the system works. His was the only one in the state where turnout numbers grew significantly between 2010 and 2014 — both off-year, midterm elections. More than 13,000 additional voters in the district showed up in 2014 than in 2010 — by far the biggest spike seen across the state.
    The results in Minnesota are gaining the attention of campaign managers nationally heading into 2016.
    Maryland’s Eighth Congressional District is more suburban and more affluent than Minneapolis. It stretches north of the nation’s capital into the well-heeled suburbs of Montgomery County and north into some of the state’s more rural stretches. It is also a reliably Democratic stronghold: There are seven Democrats running for Congress in an open seat next year.
    One of those hopefuls, state Sen. Jamie Raskin, hopes to adopt Ellison’s get-out-the-vote program.
    “It’s an interesting case study in this approach,” said Raskin’s campaign manager, Marshall Cohen. “You have Maryland, a safe blue state in the Senate and presidential races, but just last year elected a Republican governor with record low turnout. I think at the top of people’s minds is that every vote matters and getting more people to participate will be a better outcome for the state of Maryland.”
    Andrew Virden managed the apartment program for Ellison in 2012 and took it statewide in 2014. The crew knocked on doors in about 275 apartment buildings out of about 500 in Minneapolis. Virden said that compared with TV ads, an in-person visit is much more effective in getting people off the couch.
    “By the time it’s October of an election year, every other commercial is a political ad, and that’s the time to go get a sandwich or a glass of lemonade or a cup of coffee,” he said. “You’re not actually paying attention, and if you’re not paying attention, the money is wasted. But you’re not wasting money if it’s a person standing at the front door having a conversation.”

    Once in a while you get shown the light, in the strangest of places if you look at it right.

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