Anonymous ID: a7dd17 June 2, 2020, 6:18 a.m. No.9427987   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9427284 (LB)

Lurn to read - Earthquake sequences like these are common and account for roughly 50% of the total seismicity in the Yellowstone region. Yellowstone earthquake activity remains at background levels.

 

No, you don't get to make stuff up when the piece you're citing says the opposite of what you imply.

Anonymous ID: a7dd17 June 2, 2020, 6:46 a.m. No.9428252   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8324

>>9428143

And the moderate Dems as well -

A liberal professor says this:

What’s often hard for people to see is that there are these white moderates who are part of the Democratic coalition as long as they perceive there to be order, but when they perceive there to be too much disorder they shift to the party that has owned the issue of order, which is the Republican Party. For some people, the idea that there are these swing Democratic-minded voters is hard to grasp, but there is pretty strong evidence that in 2016, and in 1968, that was an important and influential niche of voters.

You are absolutely right that Trump, to a lot of people, is an instigator of chaos rather than a restorer of order, so I think that potentially works against him. But if you are this white moderate, and perceive the disorder to be coming from African-Americans in cities, then turning to Trump, even if you see him as a rough character, is appealing: He’s a street fighter, but he is our street fighter. So the real danger for advocates of reform in Minneapolis trying to get better policing, and for those trying to pursue racial justice nationally, is that there are people who are turned off by Trump but who have a strong taste for order, and so if they are more concerned about racial disorder, then Trump is their racial order.

 

https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/how-violent-protests-change-politics?utm_source=pocket-newtab