Anonymous ID: 583f99 Dec. 29, 2019, 2:50 p.m. No.7656693   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The How-to get rich guide to the DEMon Party

 

So, I was digging into SR's history and mentioned his previous work experience with a company called Greensburg Quinlan Rosner. (GQR)

 

Here is the original post so you can catch up:

>>7646640 (sorry for the stale bread, bakers)

 

Anyway, I was digging more into Rosa (she is the child of Italian immigrants and let's face it.. "these children of immigrants" have a questionable reputation & behaviors as of late... Reminder: Yovafuzzyhead & Daddy-Issues-Vindman) As I was sayin', I came across this 2013 article that pretty much explains how these Dems keep getting so rich in better detail. It's a MUST read since it simplifies the pretty complicated process so well.

 

Article: https://rosadelauroexposed.wordpress.com/

 

Step One: Stink up the votes (Vote Fraud) (Greensburg and the like)

 

Step Two: Get the seat! (It's guaranteed, after all) (Rosa and the like)

 

Step Three: Move the money! (launder Money.)

 

Step Four: Use Your Unearned Power! (Change laws to benefit investments in your own companies and the companies of friends.)

 

Step Five: Make MORE money! (...while Americans suffer for your crap laws and policies you created to benefit yourself.)

 

They change laws to benefit their own investments... they do not give a dang about YOU. They are selfish and do not deserve the seats they are in. They cheated their way in to cheat your pockets at the cost of our safety, security, freedoms, and finances.

 

Too bad we are burning their playbook, eh?

 

GOD WINS!

Anonymous ID: 583f99 Dec. 29, 2019, 3:11 p.m. No.7656848   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7251

>>7656790

God Wins (Godwin's Law)

 

Notable

 

Interdasting! Especially this bit:

 

There are many corollaries to Godwin's law, some considered more canonical (by being adopted by Godwin himself) than others. For example, there is a tradition in many newsgroups and other Internet discussion forums that, when a Hitler comparison is made, the thread is finished and whoever made the comparison loses whatever debate is in progress. This principle is itself frequently referred to as Godwin's law.

 

Godwin's law itself can be abused as a distraction, diversion or even as censorship, fallaciously miscasting an opponent's argument as hyperbole when the comparisons made by the argument are actually appropriate.[10] Similar criticisms of the "law" (or "at least the distorted version which purports to prohibit all comparisons to German crimes") have been made by the American lawyer, journalist, and author Glenn Greenwald.

 

Mike Godwin himself has also criticized the overapplication of Godwin's law, claiming it does not articulate a fallacy; it is instead framed as a memetic tool to reduce the incidence of inappropriate, hyperbolic comparisons. "Although deliberately framed as if it were a law of nature or of mathematics," Godwin wrote, "its purpose has always been rhetorical and pedagogical: I wanted folks who glibly compared someone else to Hitler to think a bit harder about the Holocaust."

 

In December 2015, Godwin commented on the Nazi and fascist comparisons being made by several articles about Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, saying: "If you're thoughtful about it and show some real awareness of history, go ahead and refer to Hitler when you talk about Trump, or any other politician." In August 2017, Godwin made similar remarks on social networking websites Facebook and Twitter with respect to the two previous days' Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, endorsing and encouraging efforts to compare its alt-right organizers to Nazis.

 

In October 2018, Godwin said on Twitter that it is acceptable to call Brazilian politician (later became President) Jair Bolsonaro a "Nazi". In June 2019, after Chris Hayes invoked Godwin's Law in a discussion of whether it was appropriate to call the United States's refugee detention centers "concentration camps," Godwin explicitly stated his belief that the term "concentration camps" was appropriate.