Anonymous ID: 02d65c Oct. 1, 2020, 8:02 a.m. No.10868956   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8962 >>8963 >>8973

https://mobile.twitter.com/ValaAfshar/status/1311640090939215876

 

Vala Afshar

@ValaAfshar

Former President Jimmy Carter is 96 years old today.

 

This is what compassion, empathy, generosity, grit and kindness looks like.

 

President Carter, the oldest living former president in US history, at age 95, built Habitat for Humanity homes in Nashville

7:12 AM · Oct 1, 2020·

 

jimmy's eye

Anonymous ID: 02d65c Oct. 1, 2020, 8:07 a.m. No.10868998   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>10868960

>he would put the US back in the Paris Accord?

because I think that Trump wants to hit Biden on stuff that the radical left would not like biden doing….like not agreeing to the green new deal.

 

antifa likes the paris accord.

trump going after Joe not agreeing with them in health care and green deal…Trump trying to turn Biden's base away from him.

Anonymous ID: 02d65c Oct. 1, 2020, 8:19 a.m. No.10869102   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9129

>>10868901

anyone notice that this particular ear of corn is either way past it's time to be cut .

 

I do believe all corn ,both sweet and field corn, is GREEN when it is cut..and then put in storage to dry.

 

So, why did Nunes use this old shriveled up piece?

Anonymous ID: 02d65c Oct. 1, 2020, 8:21 a.m. No.10869128   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9166

>>10869106

>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8782463/Brad-Parscale-investigation-stealing-40M-Trumps-2020-campaign.html

 

it is from Sept 29

if you look in past breads, it was posted in nearly every bread .

 

If it is the first time you posted it, why does it look exactly like the other posts 2 days ago?

Anonymous ID: 02d65c Oct. 1, 2020, 8:33 a.m. No.10869283   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9552

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/it-is-what-it-is-debate-moderator-reflects-on-trump-biden-clash/ar-BB19Bi4h?ocid=msedgntp

 

'It is what it is': debate moderator reflects on Trump-Biden clash

Martin Belam 5 hrs ago

 

Chris Wallace, the Fox New journalist who acted as moderator during Tuesday’s chaotic US presidential debate between Donald Trump and Joe Biden, has spoken for the first time about the experience, saying: “I never dreamt that it would go off the tracks the way it did.”

 

At the start of the evening, when Trump first started speaking directly at Biden, Wallace recalled thinking: “This was great – this is a debate!” But it soon transpired that Trump’s plan was to attempt to steamroller Biden with constant hectoring interruptions.

 

“I guess I didn’t realise – and there was no way you could, hindsight being 20/20 – that this was going to be the president’s strategy, not just for the beginning of the debate but the entire debate,” Wallace observed.

 

On the reaction to his performance in the chair, Wallace said “I’ve read some of the reviews. I know people think, well, gee, I didn’t jump in soon enough.”

 

Describing the process on the night, the Fox News Sunday anchor said “You’re reluctant — as somebody who has said from the very beginning that I wanted to be as invisible as possible, and to enable them to talk — to rise to the point at which you begin to interject more and more.

 

“First to say ‘please don’t interrupt’, then ‘please obey the rules’, and third ‘this isn’t serving the country well’. Those are all tough steps at real time, at that moment, on that stage.”

 

Wallace said that as he told the two candidates “the country would be better served if we allowed both people to speak with fewer interruptions”, he felt “desperation”.

 

Speaking to the New York Times, Wallace refused to directly apportion blame to any one party for what happened during the debate. Asked if it had been Trump who had derailed it, Wallace diplomatically said: “Well, he certainly didn’t help. To quote the president, ‘it is what it is’.”

 

Wallace moderated a 2016 debate between Trump and Hillary Clinton, where his performance was generally well received, but of the 2020 debate he said: “I’ve never been through anything like this.”

 

Wallace’s ultimate reflection was: “I’m just sad with the way Tuesday night turned out.”

 

Early numbers from the ratings organisation Nielsen suggest the widely criticised debate was watched by 29 million viewers, markedly down on the 45 million who tuned in for the first Trump-Clinton debate in 2016. However, those figures do not include people who viewed it via online streaming.