Anonymous ID: 2389e6 Nov. 26, 2023, 6:39 a.m. No.19979409   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9432 >>9454 >>9480

>>19978951

>Business Insider slammed for trying to 'normalize the death of Trump' in new 'what if' piece

Rawstory did one too

under the guise of reporting on the report from BI

>https://archive.ph/ukfJ9#selection-521.9-521.28

 

Donald Trump dying before the 2024 election would throw GOP primaries into chaos: report

David McAfee

November 25, 2023 3:03PM ET

 

There are numerous ways in which Donald Trump could throw a wrench into the Republican primary leading up to the 2024 election, and one of them is to not survive.

 

The former president, who is currently 77 and turns 78 in June, recently mourned the loss of his older sister. He also used that event to complain that the "fake news went after her mercilessly." Trump has also called into question the health of President Joe Biden, who is a few years older than Trump.

 

If Trump were to die, the change in the election cycle would be dependent upon when in the process that loss of life occurred, according to a Business Insider report. The outlet also reported that such a change would be highly dependent upon the states.

 

"There are currently eight declared candidates, including Trump, on the GOP side. If Trump were to die before January 1, 2024, there would likely be other Republicans who want to jump into the race," according to the news report. "Many states' filing deadlines have already passed, however, meaning that state election officials would need to adjust them to allow new candidates to enter the race."

 

There's also the possibility that Trump dies before the middle of June, when the primary season ends, according to the analysis.

 

"If Trump died during primary season — which ends in mid-June — some states may postpone their scheduled primaries," the report states. "There's some precedent for this; at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, more than a dozen states postponed their primaries or expanded vote-by-mail options."

 

Lastly, there's a potential scenario in which Trump dies even later.

 

"If Trump died after the last primary contest but before the Republican National Convention, the other GOP presidential candidates would have to make a case to every state delegation at the convention for why they should be the party's nominee," according to the report. "And if Trump secured the GOP nomination but died between the convention and Election Day 2024, the RNC would convene to select another presidential candidate."

Anonymous ID: 2389e6 Nov. 26, 2023, 6:54 a.m. No.19979480   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9490 >>9565 >>9640 >>9762 >>9852

>>19979432

>@secretservice

 

>Check the comments

 

>>19979409

>@secretservice

 

>Check the comments

>>19978951

 

Anons, check out this guy's disqus comments.

 

Donald Trump dying before the 2024 election would throw GOP primaries into chaos: report

Hassanbensober

Hassanbensober

>

dommyluc

• 16 hours ago

The planetary celebrations would go on for weeks.

4 

View in discussion

Hassanbensober

Hassanbensober

• 16 hours ago

Die Trump die. Like right now. Scumbag.

 

Discussion on Raw Story • 194 comments

Mike Lindell tries to save floundering MyPillow with deep Black Friday price cuts: report

Hassanbensober

Hassanbensober

• 2 days ago

We need to abolish this asshole from the planet.

 

 

Discussion on Raw Story • 197 comments

'Enough is enough!' Ex-prosecutor calls for gag order 'with teeth' to make Trump 'shut up'

Hassanbensober

Hassanbensober

• 3 days ago

There's only one way to stop Trump. We all know what it is.

 

 

Discussion on Raw Story • 106 comments

Elon Musk's latest lawsuit set to backfire spectacularly

Hassanbensober

Hassanbensober

• 4 days ago

Why don't we just execute Trump, Eloon and scores of other criminal repukkke assholes,wipe our hands and be done with it.

 

using the language of Congressman Dan Goldman

 

Discussion on Raw Story • 273 comments

Mike Lindell claims he has been vindicated

Hassanbensober

Hassanbensober

• 5 days ago

These 2 seditious assholes need to be exterminated.

 

Discussion on Raw Story • 271 comments

Trump's next potential attorney general threatens to put MSNBC host in prison after…

Hassanbensober

Hassanbensober

>

Walldude

• 6 days ago

I'm waiting to see the look on his face right before he's hanged for treason.

6 

View in discussion

Hassanbensober

Hassanbensober

• 6 days ago

I'm pretty sure that this fucking scumbag will be whacked before he gets anyways near the AG's office. Hopefully very soon. Pretty much guaranteed.

 

 

> https://archive.ph/g96P6

Anonymous ID: 2389e6 Nov. 26, 2023, 8:08 a.m. No.19979852   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19979640

>Kitchen Knife Forum Profi

This faggot looks old enough to be a Stooges fan.

 

Loud Celebrity Chef from Minnesota

Andrew Zimmern

>>19979480

 

>>19979490

>>19979640

>>19979762

>>19979565

 

These 7 celebrity chefs are representing Minnesota on TV

From A to Z — or Andrew Zimmern to Zöe François — there are a number of familiar faces putting the state on the map.

By Sharyn Jackson Star Tribune

February 25, 2022 — 7:30am

 

 

Andrew Zimmern Sharpens His Voice in the Deeply Political ‘What’s Eating America’

 

The first episode of the docuseries, which airs on MSNBC, attempts to explore immigration through the lens of food

by Jenny G. Zhang@jennygzhang Feb 21, 2020, 9:12am EST

 

What’s Eating America, Andrew Zimmern’s new five-part documentary series on MSNBC, is unabashedly political. That much is clear within the first two minutes of the debut episode, “Who’s Feeding America,” which premiered on February 16. “Immigration is fundamental to who we are as Americans,” Zimmern says in a voiceover, as the show opens in Washington, D.C., with shots of the White House and the Capitol Building. “I’ve spent 40 years in the food business, and I can tell you, without immigrants and migrant workers, our food system would collapse.”

 

What follows is an in-depth look at immigration in the U.S. through the lens of food: from the catered buffets served to lawmakers on Capitol Hill, to the California fields in which migrant workers harvested those ingredients, to the undocumented cooks keeping restaurant kitchens running. The sheer number of narrative threads that come with an issue as complex as immigration reform, when thrown at the viewer all at once, can be disorienting. But this knottiness is a welcome change to see from Zimmern; you get the impression that, after 14 years of his entertainment-oriented Travel Channel series Bizarre Foods, he is eager to tackle thornier topics and actualize the brainier show he had long envisioned.

 

That’s not to say that Zimmern is without his familiar brand of affability on What’s Eating America. He’s a good listener and finds easy ways to relate to his subjects. Perhaps unsurprisingly for MSNBC, he does have a tendency to fall back on white liberal cliches about immigration and food as a unifying force: eating is “how we find common ground,” “sharing a meal reveals […] there’s more that unites us than divides us,” immigrants are of value because they are “hard-working” and “put food on our tables.”

 

https://www.eater.com/2020/2/21/21145918/andrew-zimmern-whats-eating-america-msnbc-documentary-series-review-episode-1-politics-immigration

More compelling are the harder-edged moments in which Zimmern tries to interrogate power that can’t be so easily dismantled around the dinner table, like American imperialism, hypocrisy, and corporate interests. In one particularly engrossing segment, the host visits Springdale, Arkansas, home to the headquarters of Tyson Foods and a large population of Marshallese people, many of whom work for the poultry processor. The reason there are so many Marshallese there, we learn, is that decades after the U.S. conducted nuclear testing on several of the Marshall Islands’ atolls in the mid-1900s, the two countries signed an agreement that allows Marshallese to work in the U.S. without a visa, resulting in many of them leaving their radiation-polluted homes for Springdale.