Wake Up, America! Wake Up! PLEASE!!

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trump's private attorney....just like trump can not face the facts....surprised trump hasn't made a move to do away with the FBI and inspector generals office...only way he can prevent the facts from coming out.....showing he WAS involved with Russia....3 different agencies have shown trump was involved.....but he is still trying to stop the public from finding out the facts

Barr inspector general Russia probe, Barr rejects key finding


Attorney General William Barr is rejecting a key finding in the Justice Department inspector general’s report on the Russia probe, The Washington Post reported Monday.

People familiar with the matter told The Post that Barr said he does not agree with the report’s finding that the FBI had enough intelligence to initiate an investigation into the Trump campaign in July 2016.

The long-awaited report from Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz is expected to be made public in a week. But a draft is being discussed behind the scenes, and the attorney general reportedly is not persuaded that the FBI investigation was justified.

The draft report is now being finalized and shown to the witnesses and offices investigated by Horowitz.
People familiar with the matter told the newspaper that Barr believes information from other agencies such as the CIA could change Horowitz’s finding that the investigation was warranted.

The Post noted it was unclear how Barr will voice his disagreement with the report’s finding. The department typically includes a formal letter response in inspector general reports, but Barr could also speak out publicly.

Trump has said the inspector general report would prove that intelligence officers under former President Obama were “spying” on his campaign and abusing their power to prevent him from being president.

Democrats have criticized Barr for what they see as him operating as the president’s personal attorney. Barr could not order Horowitz to alter his report because the inspector general operates independently from the department.

The Hill reached out to the Justice Department and FBI for comment. Both declined to comment to the Post.

Horowitz reportedly criticizes some FBI employees and surveillance tactics in his report but does not agree with the president’s depiction of the investigation as a witch hunt.

The Justice Department is running its own criminal investigation, led by U.S. Attorney John Durham, into the FBI probe. Barr has been involved in that investigation by traveling to other countries and asking for assistance.




Trump’s Russia Cover-Up By the Numbers – 272 contacts with ...
trumps-russia-cover-up-by-the-numbers-70...
Apr 30, 2019 · Update: June 22, 2018. In total, we have learned of 80 contacts between Trump’s team and Russia linked operatives, including at least 23 meetings. And we know that at least 24 high-ranking campaign officials and Trump advisors were aware of contacts with Russia-linked operatives during the campaign and transition.

Trump campaign’s Russia ties: Who’s involved - Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/national/trump-russia
Here’s what we learned about Team Trump’s ties to Russian interests ... coordination between Russia and the Trump campaign, according to people familiar ... on Russian ties to the Trump ...


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We will take America without firing a shot

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2017/1/18/1621912/...
Jan 18, 2017 · I’m old enough to remember Nikita Khrushchev’s fiery diatribes, most notably the oration wherein he predicted that “ We will take America without firing a shot... we will bury you!” With the...
 
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Judiciary Committee holds first impeachment hearing — live updates

Latest updates on the impeachment inquiry

  • The House Judiciary Committee will hold its first hearing of the impeachment inquiry beginning at 10 a.m., featuring testimony from four constitutional law experts.
  • On Tuesday, the House Intelligence Committee voted to adopt a 300-page report by Democrats on President Trump's actions toward Ukraine, accusing him of abusing his office and endangering national security.
  • The 13-9 vote fell along party lines.


 
Interesting...and very truthful.....we are a house divided with no answer in sight


The Weaponization of Impeachment
America’s political leaders like to talk a big game about proper constitutional conduct and high-minded principles, but the history of impeachment reveals that partisanship is a more powerful motivator.

The impeachment investigation of President Donald Trump is now moving to the House Judiciary Committee. Soon, if the House votes to impeach Trump, the ball will be in the Senate’s court, where a conviction seems unlikely. America should thus consider Judiciary Committee Chair Jerrold Nadler’s warning about going forward: Impeachment, he’s on record as saying, requires “a broad consensus of the American public, a broad agreement of almost everybody, that this fellow has got to go because he’s a clear and present danger to our liberty and to our Constitution.” The problem is that a broad consensus is nowhere to be found; on the issue of impeaching Trump, the American public is split roughly down the middle.

A bigger problem for Nadler, though, is that he said this in 1998, when he was denouncing the Republicans’ impeachment of President Bill Clinton. Today, when it comes to Trump, he sings a different tune. “Impeachment is imperative,” Nadler declared in an interview less than two months ago, “not because he’s going to be removed from office—the Senate won’t do that—but because we have to vindicate the Constitution.”

In reversing his position, Nadler has plenty of company on both sides of the aisle. Reversals like this aren’t surprising, of course, and they’re not new in American history. But politicians from both parties are using impeachment as a political weapon more often today than ever before, and as Democrats and Republicans change places with each other in the White House, members of Congress likewise change their spots regarding impeachment. In the Constitution’s first century and a half, one presidential impeachment took place, with occasional talk, a bit of it serious, about impeaching others. In the past half century, America has almost impeached one president, impeached another, is about to impeach yet another, and has talked a lot about impeaching almost all the rest. This means that an awful lot of flip-flopping is going on.

One of the most important words in the Anglo-American legal system is reasonable. In criminal cases, guilt must be proved beyond a “reasonable” doubt, and in other legal fields, the standard for behavior is often what a “reasonable” person would do or think. Reasonableness is a purportedly objective standard, imposed by the law because it’s supposedly one on which Americans as a community would tend to agree. The requirement of a two-thirds supermajority in the Senate for any impeachment conviction suggests a sort of reasonableness standard for determining the requirements of an impeachable offense.


But in recent decades, America has seen an increase in impeachment efforts that go beyond mere grandstanding yet don’t rise to the level that a consensus of citizens or senators would agree involves an impeachable offense. Instead, these efforts seem to be driven largely by a visceral contempt for the target of the impeachment. The frantic search isn’t for reasoned analysis but, instead, for politically acceptable justification. (As one law professor I know likes to tell his students, “Your client doesn’t want justice. Your client wants to win!”) In his recent interview, Nadler spoke of using Judiciary Committee hearings to educate and inform the American public, which for him apparently translates into bringing the public around to his way of thinking about Trump. This approach has precedents, the most famous being that of President Andrew Johnson in 1868: For more than a year before he was actually impeached, the House of Representatives was actively engaged in trying to find some—any—legal basis for the impeachment it wanted so badly.


There are still-earlier precedents. Like the current generation and the 1860s, the 1790s was a tremendously partisan era. That first decade under the Constitution saw the birth of political parties, something the Founders neither foresaw nor wanted. Shaped by sharply divergent views in both domestic and foreign politics, and having no experience of peaceful transfer of power from one party to another, the members of the Federalist and Jeffersonian parties viewed each other as fundamentally un-American. Because the Federalists controlled Congress, the Jeffersonians adopted a highly restricted view of the national government’s power, including impeachment.

The Federalists, by contrast, adopted a theory of impeachment that was astoundingly broad. During the first federal impeachment, that of Senator William Blount in the late 1790s, they suggested that anyone, even private citizens who’d perhaps never held public office, could be impeached, tried, convicted, and thus barred from holding federal office in the future. Obviously they were thinking about going after Jeffersonians, for this argument came at the same moment that the Federalist-controlled government had adopted the 1798 Sedition Act. This hugely controversial law criminalized the publication of falsehoods, especially by newspaper publishers, that were critical of federal policy or Federalist officials. Several Jeffersonians, including a member of the House of Representatives, went to jail under this law.

Understandably, this extreme theory of impeachment, along with the Sedition Act, enraged and mobilized the Jeffersonians. During the Blount proceedings, they argued instead for highly restricted impeachment power. Given the backlash against the sweeping Federalist claims, the Jeffersonians easily managed to defeat the Federalists’ effort to convict Blount. The following year, with the public still angry at the Federalists, the Jeffersonians won control of both the presidency and Congress.

Then came the reversal. President Thomas Jefferson, who had decried the now-lapsed Sedition Act when he was out of power, began to denounce the Federalist press for publishing fake news—or, as he put it, for destroying the freedom of the press by “pushing its licentiousness & its lying to such a degree of ******* as to deprive it of all credit.” The remedy, he believed, was straightforward: “[A] few prosecutions of the most prominent offenders would have a wholesome effect in restoring the integrity of the presses.”

Simultaneously, the same Jeffersonians who had tried so hard to shackle impeachment a few years earlier now unleashed it, not once but twice: first against District Court Judge John Pickering, an aging Federalist who was not mentally well enough even to appear and defend himself; and then against Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase for partisanship on the bench. In the first case, the Jeffersonians were successful, apparently through finding that Pickering’s mental-health issues amounted to a high crime and misdemeanor. In the second instance, they failed to convict Chase—and by a wide margin—despite his plain political intemperance.

While Chase’s conduct far exceeded norms of judicial detachment and objectivity, the Jeffersonians’ motives for impeaching him were equally partisan. “We want your offices,” one Jeffersonian senator proclaimed bluntly to Chase’s Federalist colleagues on the Court, “for the purpose of giving them to men who will fill them better.” Jeffersonian men, of course. (It’s a statement one can easily imagine having heard from Republicans during Clinton’s impeachment or hearing from Democrats today in reference to Trump.) Chase was to be impeachment’s first major victim, with the remaining Federalists in the judicial branch squarely in the crosshairs once he was eliminated. A number of Jeffersonians, more concerned about judicial independence than about pushing a partisan agenda, broke ranks with the extreme senators from their party and saved Chase by voting to acquit. Still, many Jeffersonians in the House and Senate had very conveniently switched their view on the expansiveness of impeachment power once they themselves controlled that power.

Nothing much changes about politics. Ultimately, as the leading political scientist Harold Lasswell once noted, it is about “who gets what, when, how.” Nor does the character of politicians change much. If they have power, they use it as much as they can. If they lack it, they try to restrict it, at least until they gain it back.

One of the greatest reversals of recent years is that of Senator Harry Reid, who in 2005, as the Democrat’s minority leader, made an impassioned plea to preserve the filibuster in the face of Republican threats to destroy it. “What they are attempting to do in this instance is really too bad,” said Reid, in a long speech emphasizing the importance of Senate tradition. “It will change this body forever … There will be a precedent set that will be here forever if the vote we take tomorrow prevails.” Eight years later, as the majority leader, Reid sharply disagreed. “The Senate is a living thing,” he declared, “and to survive it must change, as it has over the history of this great country … To remain relevant and effective as an institution, the Senate must evolve to meet the challenges of this modern era.” Later that day, the Democrats dramatically revised the Senate filibuster rules.

Nobody should be surprised, then, to see the same thing happen with regard to impeachment. Many of the most outspoken defenders of President Trump today were pushing hard for the president’s impeachment just a few years ago. The difference is that the president then was Barack Obama. Many of Obama’s actions seemed, to his critics, to be those of an imperial president who was out of control. Republicans openly went after more than one Obama official: In 2015, the Republican-controlled House Oversight Committee moved without success to impeach IRS Commissioner John Koskinen for, among other things, failing to comply with a House subpoena. The late Elijah Cummings, then the committee’s ranking Democrat, retorted that the “ridiculous resolution” would do nothing other than show the Republicans’ “obsession with diving into investigative rabbit holes that waste tens of millions of taxpayer dollars while having absolutely no positive impact on a single American.” What a difference four years can make.

The same pattern is visible in the Clinton and Trump proceedings, as Nadler’s comments reveal. “The allegations are grave,” Republican Senator Mitch McConnell declared in 1998, “the investigation is legitimate, and ascertaining the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the unqualified, un-evasive truth is absolutely critical.” But a few weeks ago, McConnell opined that “House Democrats have been indulging their impeachment obsession for nearly three years now: a never-ending impeachment parade in search of a rationale.”

Quite clearly, then, impeachment has once again been politicized—one might almost say weaponized—during the past two or three decades. But the more troubling question is whether Democrats and Republicans in this hyperpartisan age are simply more willing than their predecessors to use impeachment as a political weapon, or whether they are, in fact, living in two different worlds that make their narratives so different that they genuinely can’t understand each other, at least regarding what constitutes a threat to the American system of government. In 1998, Republicans in the House impeached Clinton, knowing that they almost certainly wouldn’t get a conviction in the Senate. Why do such a thing? Was it truly a matter of principle, as they maintained, or merely a strategy to energize their base for the upcoming elections? At any rate, their stated reason was that the nation’s top law-enforcement officer, himself a lawyer, had intentionally lied under oath, and for that reason he had to go. The Democratic narrative was that this was about nothing more than a private sexual escapade—a consensual tryst—that had no effect on the public interest.

Fast-forward to 2019. The Democrats argue that if Trump offered a quid pro quo to Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate the ******* of his potential 2020 presidential opponent, it represents an existential threat to the integrity of the American electoral process. They suggest further that Trump’s refusal to cooperate with their investigation may in itself be an impeachable offense, a menace to the very notion of constitutional government. The Republican position is that . . . well, who knows exactly what their position is, but it certainly differs from the Democrats’. Either no quid pro quo took place, or Trump didn’t intend one, or, if he did, that he was acting squarely within his foreign-policy prerogatives, or it’s in America’s interests to make sure that the country is not funding a corrupt regime and any personal benefit to Trump is purely incidental. “Does not the U.S. have a right to put conditions on its foreign aid and to seek guarantees that our money will not be used as graft to grifters?” Pat Buchanan recently asked in a column he wrote for Chronicles, a conservative magazine published by the Rockford Institute. The Republican administration further argues that the principle of separation of powers means that the president need not cooperate with a coequal branch in its attempts to remove him.

The point is that these radically differing narratives seem to be about more than just politics. They seem to reflect the new reality of two Americas, so far apart from one another in worldview that they can’t even understand each other.
This will result in major fallout and help turn impeachment into just another disruptive and partisan weapon. It also brings to mind Abraham Lincoln’s dire warning about a house divided.

On one point, though, there’s a consensus. In both the Clinton and Trump episodes, the opposition party has viewed the president, on a personal level, as a morally contemptible human being who doesn’t deserve to hold office. That in itself is probably not an impeachable offense. The big question is how far such views will drive our politicians to find something—anything—they think they can use to justify impeachment and removal in the future, and what collateral damage this will inflict on our constitutional system.

This story is part of the project “The Battle for the Constitution,” in partnership with the National Constitution Center.





Lincoln's House Divided Speech
Book
The House Divided Speech was an address given by Abraham Lincoln, later President of the United States, on June 16, 1858, at what was then the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield, after he had accepted the Illinois Republican Party's nomination as that state's US senator. The speech became the launching point for his unsuccessful campaign for the seat, held by Stephen A. Douglas; the campaign would climax with the Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858.
 
Your impeachment of our president is a shame and is just pissing off the people of this country. You’ll pay in 2020.



don't think so...…...the people of the country are you talking the 30%....and I know I have posted this a bunch of times.....3/4 of the country does NOT want him back in 2020

you guys could be hitching your wagon to a dead horse
 
Your polls are as accurate as 2016 - pretty sure on election night I heard a so-called journalist say Hillary had a 97% chance of winning - same guy that was holding back tears after the results came in :}
 
these crooks just don't give up just like with Mueller report......he has enough appointees in place he is confident that he can do whatever he wants

Giuliani Travels to Europe to Interview Ukrainians
giuliani-travels-to-europe-to-interview-ukrainians
15 hours ago · Giuliani Travels to Europe to Interview Ukrainians December 4, 2019 at 12:16 pm EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment Rudy Giuliani met in Budapest on Tuesday with a former Ukrainian prosecutor, Yuriy Lutsenko, who has become a key figure in the impeachment inquiry, the New York Times reports.
 
Merry Christmas to the Poor...……..got to cover those tax breaks for the well to do at the expense of those who have not!

Happy Holidays: The Trump Admin Is Trying to Kick Millions Off of Food Stamps


In addition to demonizing immigrants and ruining the United States’ reputation abroad, one of the many pet projects of Donald Trump’s administration is to make life more miserable for the poor. Over the summer the president indicated that his team thought low-income families were getting a little too greedy about food, and on Wednesday, said team announced a new plan designed to kick hundreds of thousands of people off of food stamps.
The rule, which has just been finalized, will tighten work requirements for able-bodied adults with no dependents, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said in a call with reporters, and as with most Trump administration policies, the details are uniquely cruel. Per the Washington Post:

 
But now with trump trying to do away with the EPA

America's most hazardous contaminated sites

The Environmental Protection Agency created the Superfund program in 1980 to clean up some of the nation’s most contaminated land and respond to environmental emergencies, oil spills, and natural disasters.

The goals of the Superfund are to protect the health of people and the environment by cleaning up contaminated sites; make those responsible pay for the cleanup work; get communities involved in the process; and return the sites to productive use. Cleaning up toxic waste is a hazardous business. Here are the most dangerous jobs in America.


12 Ways Soil Affects Your Food and Your Health

The ground beneath our feet is as important to human health as clean air and pure water. The soil is where nearly all the food people consume comes from, making healthy soil the foundation of a healthy life.

24/7 Tempo reviewed information from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, and other online sources to identify ways soil affects food quality and people’s health.

Healthy soil is a complex living ecosystem with many layers, each playing an important role in growing crops that nourish people and animals. It’s packed with tiny and large organisms that interact to convert minerals to plant nutrients and to improve soil structure, improving crop production in the long run. When that system is interrupted, reliable food production is jeopardized, and both food quality and quantity suffer.



Soil Pollution: The Health Risk No One Is Talking About

 
you have to get out of this Mass is the world thinking.....we...as a country have ingrained into our society you have to have a college education to go anywhere...…..we need to improve what the skilled workers get and do whatever to make it more appealing

Plumber shortage threatens America’s building industry
plumber...
Dec 07, 2015 · Twenty years ago, this wasn’t the case. It was common for a plumbing company to be family owned, dating back at least five generations. Boys and girls were introduced to the construction industry and trained for apprenticeship opportunities through their school’s educational programs. Now, things are different.

Why Do We Have A Skilled Trade Shortage? | Angie's List
skilled-trade-shortage.htm
Every day, the shortage in the skilled trades becomes more acute. According to numbers from the National Electrical Contractors Association, 7,000 electricians join the field each year, but 10,000 retire.

Shortage of Qualified Plumbers Plaguing The Plumbing ...
plumbing.com/qualified-plumber-job-shortage
Plumber
Job Shortage: A Looming Concern Installing and maintaining plumbing systems for your residential or commercial plumbing needs is an occupation that requires extreme focus and dedication. Unfortunately, there seems to be an insufficient pool of qualified workers in the field.

Solving the American plumber shortage | 2018-01-30 ...
solving-the-american-plumber-shortage
Jan 30, 2018 · Solving the American plumber shortage Dale Powell, CDA project manager and piping applications specialist, advises plumbing apprentices practicing proper soldering and brazing technique during the UA Instructor Training Program in Ann Arbor, Mich., in August 2017.

Massive Shortage of Electricians Predicted for U.S ...
shortage-electricians-predicted-us
Canadian analysts warn that most of that nation's skilled electricians will retire in the next 10 years, triggering a massive shortage. In Australia, the dwindling ranks of electricians and other skilled trades has become so severe that it is now the number one constraint on business investment, according to a recent survey by the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Will There Be Enough Electricians to Go Around? | Angie's List
electricians-go-around.htm
“The shortage of electricians in Oklahoma City is real,” Harlow says “I’d guess part of the reason is the amount of destruction from the tornadoes we’ve had in the past couple of years. “One of the electricians that bailed was rewiring a new home in Moore [Oklahoma] and was short three [workers] to finish the job.”

America's Skilled Trades Dilemma: Shortages Loom As Most ...
https://www.forbes.com/sites/emsi/2013/03/07/americas-skilled-trades-dilemma-shortages...
Mar 07, 2013 · Meanwhile, a third of electrical and electronics repairers are at least 55, while 72 percent are 45 years and older. We’ve broken the 21 occupations into three groups – the oldest, the not-so ...



The U.S. Furniture Industry Is Back---but There Aren't Enough Workers

HICKORY, N.C—Here’s the good news: There are now more reasons to make furniture in the U.S. than at any point since the financial crisis. Crate & Barrel and Williams-Sonoma Inc. are expanding manufacturing in the U.S., and the factories of longtime furniture makers are humming.

Here’s the bad news: There aren’t enough skilled workers available to support the renaissance.

 
If you don't think Russian hackers have mastered the art and can alter the election you are sadly mistaken

Russian Hacking Group Evil Corp. Charged By Federal Prosecutors In Alleged Bank Fraud


December 5, 201910:02 AM ET

Updated at 10:30 a.m. ET

Federal law enforcement officials have announced criminal charges and sanctions against Russian nationals who operate a hacking organization known as Evil Corp., a group officials say is responsible for one of the most sweeping banking fraud schemes in the past decade.

Officials say Evil Corp. developed and distributed a type of malware that infected computers around the world and harvested banking credentials in order to steal some $100 million.

According to officials with the Justice and Treasury departments, the malware software was known as Dridex, which automated the theft of confidential information from banking customers after someone clicks on a phishing emails.

Investigators believe that the Russian government may have been complicit in the criminal enterprise.

"It's simply inconceivable that an organization like this can steal that amount of money from that money places using a distributive malware like Dridex without the Russian government being well-aware of those activities," a senior Treasury officials said.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin called the group "one of the world's most prolific cybercriminal organizations" in what he called a "money mule" cybercrime.

He continued: "Our goal is to shut down Evil Corp, deter the distribution of Dridex, target the 'money mule 'network used to transfer stolen funds, and ultimately to protect our citizens from the group's criminal activities."

Trump officials say the leader of Evil Corp is an individual named Maksim Yakubets, and the State Department is offering $5 million for information that leads to his arrest.

Yakubets is alleged to have committed separate cyber crimes on behalf of the Russian government, working for Russia's Federal Security Service, officials say. Last April, he was in the process of getting a license to work with classified information on behalf of the Russian government, according to authorities.

"Evil Corp and their Dridex software serves as yet another example of the Russian government enlisting the assistance of cyber criminals to carry out malign activities," a senior Treasury official said.

 
How come during the debate in 2012 when Mit Romney stated that Russia was our biggest threat and Obama mocked him for it and Dems all agreed - is it that now all of a sudden Russia is omnipresent and so insidious - I think it’s because Dems are just full of shite.
 
How come during the debate in 2012 when Mit Romney stated that Russia was our biggest threat and Obama mocked him for it and Dems all agreed - is it that now all of a sudden Russia is omnipresent and so insidious - I think it’s because Dems are just full of shite.


again just showing your ignorance and lack of the facts!

you have two separate conversations put together because it suits your stupid argument...….go back and read Romneys statement...…...get your grand children to show you how your search engine works...…..but you won't you cult member like being in the dark and spouting what you want to believe


Why do Trump Cult members ignore facts? - #resist ...
trump-cult-members-ignore-facts-resist
Jan 02, 2019 · Make no mistake here, the cult of Trump ticks all these boxes are more. It is not a political movement, instead it is a political cult that instills fear to draw people in and utilises emotional manipulation via propaganda to keep people in line.
 
How come during the debate in 2012 when Mit Romney stated that Russia was our biggest threat and Obama mocked him for it and Dems all agreed - is it that now all of a sudden Russia is omnipresent and so insidious - I think it’s because Dems are just full of shite.


one of you will piss me off and get me wound up...…...so to answer your question......if you remember right it was in the middle of a debate.…..Romney was complaining about our military and Russia being our biggest threat....he wanted to build up our military...his comment had something to do with our troop levels being lower than a long time...…...THAT is when Obama laughed...not at the Russia comment....but if you remember it was about the military comment and Obama told him we didn't have nor need a cavalry anymore....we needed aircraft...ships...tanks..and computers
 
I guess you are wise in the ways o shite - being that you’re fulla it : }

but kind sir...I just offer opinions different than yours.....your dispute would be that mine are correct and yours not...….now where would the blame lie there.....or are you going to blame the education system for failing in your mental developement


now if I want any more ******* from you I will just tip your head and dip it out
 
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but kind sir...I just offer opinions different than yours.....your dispute would be that mine are correct and yours not...….now where would the blame lie there.....or are you going to blame the education system for failing in your mental developement


now if I want any more ******* from you I will just tip your head and dip it out

:poop: 😝
 
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