gemini104104
Verified User
So, what does this supposed to mean? Obviously repukes and their un-American media sources of the gutter are waging war on America and anything else of a civilized nature on Earth and that includes their tRump stacked in seditious judges too. Yet, this is not the first time Democracy has come under attack among the enemy from within in particular and like before in U.S. history, this threat can be crushed again. These internal and enemy combatant swine of so-called human beings are incapable of supporting or co-existing in a civilized society. Actually, instead of having a free pass to mock America to the point of demonstrating a direct challenge against the USofA, both Tucker the worthless POS and the other worthless POS tRump, in particular, should be on a rail of real Justice being served on their seditious and anti-American hides:
n "Sea of Tranquility," Emily St. John Mandel's new novel, the United States no longer exists. In its place is a collection of recognizable but independent nations – the Atlantic Republic, United Carolina, the Republic of Texas, the city/state of Los Angeles.
Somehow, the ties that bind the land of the free from sea to shining sea have been severed and unknown forces have balkanized America's remnants. (Like Mandel's best-known novels, "Station Eleven" and "The Glass Hotel," the themes of "Tranquility" center on how humans cope with catastrophe and loss, and not on the mechanics of disaster.)
Implausible? Today, perhaps. But not so much if we plot America's current trajectory 200 years into the future, when a portion of Mandel's story is set."
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opin...sedgntp&cvid=024c2b916a2d4b8f92269657b74357ec
n "Sea of Tranquility," Emily St. John Mandel's new novel, the United States no longer exists. In its place is a collection of recognizable but independent nations – the Atlantic Republic, United Carolina, the Republic of Texas, the city/state of Los Angeles.
Somehow, the ties that bind the land of the free from sea to shining sea have been severed and unknown forces have balkanized America's remnants. (Like Mandel's best-known novels, "Station Eleven" and "The Glass Hotel," the themes of "Tranquility" center on how humans cope with catastrophe and loss, and not on the mechanics of disaster.)
Implausible? Today, perhaps. But not so much if we plot America's current trajectory 200 years into the future, when a portion of Mandel's story is set."
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opin...sedgntp&cvid=024c2b916a2d4b8f92269657b74357ec
Last edited: