Anonymous ID: 737333 May 5, 2022, 11:28 a.m. No.16216034   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6076 >>6290 >>6357

>>16215961

 

MISSING POST RE: DEFCON [1]

Directly after POTUS alters Tweets to [1] min interval and adds "Q" - use graphics.

Learn.

Q510

 

''Be prepared for what you learn.''

 

Jan 7 2018 03:33:45 (EST)

Anonymous ID: 206942 No.13534

 

Jan 7 2018 03:27:17 (EST)

>>13497

''Then we need to dig Planned Parenthood. Whatever they're doing to babies/fetal tissue might be more sinister than ever imagined!''

 

>>13534

Review the Congressional investigation on PP.

Be prepared for what you learn.

Next question - how are they allowed to operate?

These people are SICK!

Q493

Anonymous ID: 737333 May 5, 2022, 11:36 a.m. No.16216062   🗄️.is 🔗kun

''Jeffery Toobin and Mia Love clash over abortion rights''

 

thehill.com/news/3476860-jeffery-toobin-and-mia-love-clash-over-abortion-rights

 

May 4, 2022

CNN pundit Jeffery Toobin pressed former Rep. Mia Love (R-Utah) about her stance on abortion following news of a leaked draft decision showing the Supreme Court is poised to overturn Roe v. Wade.

 

“So having this go back to states, I feel more comfortable working in my state of Utah for a bill that is going to be better for Utahns,” Love said Tuesday evening. “And the same thing with every other state instead of nine Supreme Court Justices making one decision that everybody has to live under.”

 

Toobin, when he joined the panel discussion, asked Love, “What are the penalties? You know, what are the penalties? Let me ask the congresswoman.”

 

Speaking directly to Love, Toobin said, “I mean, you know, you think that abortion is the taking of a life.”

 

“Congresswoman, how many years in prison should a woman get if she just — you know, not a rape, it wasn’t a product of a rape or incest, just an unwanted pregnancy. She has an abortion in Utah. She took a life intentionally. How many years should she go to prison for?” he asked.

 

“I am not going to be the judge, juror or executioner,” Love responded. “I am just going to do everything I can to make sure that that woman hopefully has all of the resources and all of the information that they need so they can make an informed decision and I am going to be incredibly compassionate.”

 

Boeing planning to move HQ to Arlington America is diversifying, but Rust Belt cities lag

Toobin pressed the conservative again.

 

“You’re a lawmaker. You’re a lawmaker,” he said. “What are the penalties? How many years in prison for that one?”

 

“I am not going to put somebody in prison for an unwanted pregnancy,” she shot back. “But what I said I would do is try and protect life. And I think we should all be in the business of protecting life. It doesn’t mean that you have to take somebody else’s life away to protect an unborn child.”

Anonymous ID: 737333 May 5, 2022, 11:43 a.m. No.16216115   🗄️.is 🔗kun

“Trump has been the most consequential president in history when it comes to minority employment. In June, for instance, the unemployment rate for Hispanics and Latinos 16 years and older fell to 4.6%, its lowest level ever, from 4.9% in May.”

11:10 AM - 12 Jul 2018

Anonymous ID: 737333 May 5, 2022, 11:47 a.m. No.16216137   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6138

''This is what happens when POTUS tweets out your email address''

 

nypost.com/2018/01/09/this-is-what-happens-when-potus-tweets-out-your-email-address

By Michael Goodwin, January 10, 2018

 

''It was a quiet Sunday night and I was deep in a magazine article when my wife looked up from her iPad to say, “Something’s going on with your email.” Just then, the phone rang and it was our daughter, Miranda.''

 

“Dad,” she said, “Trump tweeted about your column, but he included your email instead of the column link.”

 

Oy. Quiet time was over.

 

Emails were coming in by bunches of five or six at a time, so fast that the screen on my phone looked to be in perpetual motion as the new arrivals stacked on top of those that arrived a second earlier.

 

More than a thousand would land in the first hour alone. My email address has been in The Post for more than eight years, but the volume was in a league of its own.

 

I found the president’s tweet, and my daughter was right about the problem. Trump said nice things about my column in that day’s Post, in which I argued that, despite his missteps, America was better off with him in the White House than Hillary Clinton.

 

But instead of linking to the column, Trump mistakenly included my email address.

 

That meant his 46 million Twitter followers knew how to reach me, and many decided to do just that. To try to stop the flood, we quickly came up with a plan to respond to Trump’s tweet by thanking him and including the correct link to the column, hoping it would be widely shared.

 

Either he or someone on his staff also realized the mistake and deleted his original tweet and substituted a passage from my column and this time included the correct link.

 

That would eventually work, but not before my in-box got slammed with more than 2,000 emails.

 

A few thoughts on the experience:

 

First, without an exact count of each, I would divide the senders into three main groups. Many were eager to see what the president liked, and assumed that if they emailed me, I would respond with a copy of my column.

 

As Kelly Smith wrote, “Sounds great! Pls send me the entire column! Thank you!”

 

I would be delighted to do that, if I had nothing else to do. But because I always read all emails, I was going to be busy.

 

Loads of anti-Trumpers were also looking for the column.

 

“Please forward the full article that the dumbest president in the entire history of dumb states of America was alluding to in his recent tweet about himself,” wrote Richard Ireland.

 

“With apologies in advance for being the gazillionth person to ask.”

 

His apology set him apart from the likes of Carl Acquavivq, who wrote:

 

“The buffoon actually posted your email address on his Twitter. I hope you get 3 million hate emails.” He followed that by writing, in bold caps, “F–K YOU!” — 75 times.

 

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Anonymous ID: 737333 May 5, 2022, 11:47 a.m. No.16216138   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16216137

 

Another group consisted of those who found the column on their own, and either loved it or hated it. That’s standard fare, although the anti-Trumpers in this case were more numerous, which tells me many of his Twitter followers are looking for him to say something so they can get outraged or mock him.

 

…Clinton in the WH, doubling down on Barack Obama’s failed policies, washes away any doubts that America made the right choice. This was truly a change election — and the changes Trump is bringing are far-reaching & necessary.” Thank you Michael Goodwin! https://t.co/4fHNcx2Ydg

 

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 8, 2018

 

For example, the president’s initial tweet, where he quoted me as writing that his was a “consensual” presidency when I actually wrote “consequential,” was ammunition for many critics.

 

“You support an idiot who does not know the difference between consequential and consensual. You need to get out more,” wrote Donna Foth.

 

Dennis Heimforth chimed in: “I’m sure his misquoted ‘consensual presidency’ from your article will make you infinitely more proud of his mental prowess.”

 

Such barbed sentiments are also standard fare these days. And there was even some mischievous humor among some critics, who used my email to sign me up for liberal organizations that they apparently think will enlighten me.

 

Since then, I’ve spent considerable time trying to unsubscribe from Planned Parenthood, NARAL, various New York Times newsletters, the Communist Party, the Satanic Temple, MoveOn.org, Emily’s List, The Clinton Foundation and a petition to overturn the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling, to name a few.

 

Other anti-Trumpers thought I needed something else, so I was signed up for Russian brides, Russian Cupid, Ashley Madison, an Alzheimer’s group and numerous others I’m still trying to block.

 

Finally, maybe the largest group of ­emails came from people who are sick with hatred.

 

Indeed, they were so nasty, and there were so many of them, that reading them amounted to full immersion in the sewer that passes for the most active Trump resisters.

 

He’s Hitler, he’s demented, he’s evil, he is destroying the world — and so am I for supporting him.

 

“Saw the pres wanted us all to email you to say you’re doing a really terrif job up there in new yark,” wrote James Dion. “Hope they give you a big ass raise for making america grate again and again and again. Good job, Goodwin. (if your not a jew)”

 

Walter Maas was one of a handful who urged me to commit suicide, writing, “You are a bigger RETARD than Trump. Kill yourself.”

 

I was warned that both history and pitchforks would be out for me, was wished a slow death and that I should outlive my children. My late mother was also insulted.

 

I was accused of being bribed by Trump, of being insane, called immoral, a bigot and a misogynist. “Must be nice to be a white man,” wrote Erica Sonn, as if that explains everything to her.

 

And then there were the sexual insults, with scores using the most graphic terms to accuse me of having a physical relationship with Trump.

 

I was subscribed to gay websites, and penis images were attached to a number of emails sent my way.

 

All of which struck me as mighty strange. Here are these so-called liberals who still think the greatest insult is to call someone gay. Their homophobia is out of the closet.

 

Then again, I guess it’s not that surprising. Trump Derangement Syndrome is proving that lots of supposedly sophisticated people are actually mindless idiots brimming with hatred.

 

Thanks to Trump, we now know who they are. Count that as more proof his is an enormously consequential presidency.

 

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