You should of bought the crack and not the meme from crackOTUS
If you are hypnotized by envy
They have you
He was a patsy
Its way guey guey too late homos
[ ]ult
[ ]n
[ ]merika
And judging from the cia fag actors
It's all slop and squealing
Ponychan please confirm dubs
Stfu fag actor
All this redundancy of pasta is left over AA drama from thd mind control
Notice the eighties nineties themed and archetypes
Cheesy fag actors
If you ever slaved away at a call center
You will notice the rebuttals
Emphatic appeals to belonging
Yada yada
It's like two opposing serial killer memes slanging crack to pol stools for conjecture rights
There is a ton of bot driven boxed rhetoric just larping at itself too
I can easily connect panama narcodrama to pedogate fyi
A couple files
Oh no
The mumu and the tweaker broke up in politics
So much drama
Noriega was a cia plant FYI
Crack is wack @fagOTUS
This guy will bite fart bubbles in a bathtub to get out of the shit ebot stirred
Stfu kike
We can't tell the public we are impeaching a poltergeist of crack head stock photos of muhsatan the cia keeps so handy next to csporns , like kys
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure%5Fof%5Fspeech
Four rhetorical operations Edit
Main article: Rhetorical operations
Classical rhetoricians classified figures of speech into four categories or quadripartita ratio:[2]
addition (adiectio), also called repetition/expansion/superabundance
omission (detractio), also called subtraction/abridgement/lack
transposition (transmutatio), also called transferring
permutation (immutatio), also called switching/interchange/substitution/transmutation
These categories are often still used. The earliest known text listing them, though not explicitly as a system, is the Rhetorica ad Herennium, of unknown authorship, where they are called πλεονασμός (addition), ἔνδεια (omission), μετάθεσις (transposition) and ἐναλλαγή (permutation).[3] Quintillian then mentioned them in Institutio Oratoria.[4] Philo of Alexandria also listed them as addition (πρόσθεσις), subtraction (ἀφαίρεσις), transposition (μετάθεσις), and transmutation (ἀλλοίωσις).[5]
Non sequiturs: a conclusion or statement that does not logically follow from the previous argument or statement
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non_sequitur_(literary_device)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charactonym
Charactonym: a name which suggests the personality traits of a fictional character
Dysphemism: intentionally using a word or phrase with a harsher tone over one with a more polite tone
" fuck sessions"
" trust sessions"
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysphemism
Homophone: words with same sounds but with different meanings
Stroke strozk