I guess I'll repeat once more that I accosted the GOP, not Emperor Cheeto, for the LGBT stances. I pointed it out, repeated it, but A1ClintonFluffer feels like he needs to make multi-post rebuffs to...a point I didn't make.
Which is why it's right, even important, to mock and marginalize him as drooling dumbass he is.
On that note...
Or we can allow boys to pretend they are girls, or one of any other 268 genders ... and let them get surgery to change their gender.
Instead of treating the mental illness. (See Johns Hopkins experts).
Two can play the ZanjohnsonstenLGBQT game.
Hopefully we can get back to the OP - the russia collusion hoax.
Mentally ill and stupid.
Quote: @A1Janitor said:
LMAO I have probably done something that very few lawyers have done, and probably no non-lawyer has done.
Judicial Watch is a great orgainzation. They promote transparency in government.
Who cares what you think about Russia - Mueller said there was no collusion.
Who cares what you think about obstruction - Bill Barr said there was no obstruction.
Now the people who spied on the Trump campaign have to answer why they spied and lied to the FISA court.
Mifsud was “a russian agent” according the Weissman. But on Brennan’s payroll. LMAO.
Keep watching.
Stupid.
Oh so so stupid.
Barr said exactly what Trump wanted him to say, yet Barr never even read the Mueller report. I noticed you didn't bother to admit Mueller did find evidence of obstruction by Trump, 10 instances.
Judicial watch is nothing more than a rightwing nutjob team trying like hell to dig up dirt on Democrats. How many years did they claim proof of Hillary crimes and charges coming? Yet it never happened. They're the equivalent of televangelists for the right clinging to hope they'll get Hillary arrested while they kindly take your donations to keep fighting the good fight.
You're every bit as gullible as you are stupid. It's comical at this point.
LOL
Barr read the report assclown. He didn’t read all of the evidence.
1. Mueller left no doubt - Trump did not collude with Russia. Case closed.
2. Mueller said he could not decide obstruction ... he couldn’t prosecute with what he had.
3. Mueller’s report was directed to Barr. As AG, he looked over obstruction and he and Rod agreed there was jo obstruction.
4. I have never seen a prosecutor say I can’t bring charges ... maybe someone else can.
Quote: @SFVikeFan said:
I'm glad you think that you two think that ANY number is acceptable. I'm glad you think there needs to be a certain threshold of how many times this needs to happen before the act itself becomes disgusting and vile.
I admitted rape/incest is a tough call.
As others have pointed out, Alabama went FULL-BORE as to push/contest Roe v Wade.
But as you'll see below... I'll answer your 1% rape/incest with the flip/side 1% story.
Howz about the 1% of people born/delivered, as the baby of sexual assault?
They have a voice, too.
And for the record I live in the south,
No shit? Who's holding you hostage? Why would you live amongst people you despise, so much? I wanted to be here. First place I chose to live.
Thought I read a post from you awhile back that you lived in Oregon. My bad.
Welcome to God's country!
I deal with uneducated hillbillies just like you on a daily basis.
**sigh**
I don't think a curriculum vitae has anything to to with the validity of posts on a football message board.
I prefer to judge the posts, on the merits.
That said, can you beat a Doctorate, Bachelors in Science, national/state board certified/ US Naval officer/VFW?
Perhaps you can? I may be a hillbilly, but I'm not uneducamated. Got the student loan payments to prove it.
Clearly you have no idea how very little time rapists spend in jail IF they actually get a conviction, nor did you bother to say what happens when they get OUT, so you keep minimizing what a fucking sick inhumane policy this is.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/in-7-us-state...st-fathers
There are seven states without laws preventing rapists from gaining custody of children conceived without consent. In addition to Maryland, such states include Alabama, Mississippi, Minnesota, North Dakota, Wyoming and New Mexico, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL
I see you quote foxnews. Dismissed, out of hand.
But first... here is a story from a sexual assault product/baby/adult: https://www.feministsforlife.org/what-about-rape/
What about rape? What if your your daughter, who was raped? I would love her and my grandchild unconditionally, and I would do everything in my power to prosecute the perpetrator to the fullest extent of the law.
Out of our desire to save someone from suffering, it is normal to wish we could erase a painful memory such as rape. Unfortunately, the hard truth is that as much as we want to, we can’t.
Abortion doesn’t erase a memory. Think about it.
At my lecture at Vanderbilt University, a medical student told other students that abortion is a second act of violence against a woman who is raped, and said her “abortion was worse than the rape.”
Both victims — the woman and her child — deserve our unconditional support.
Pregnancy can be punishing, but a child is not a punishment. When Julie Makimaa was reunited with her birthmother, Lee Ezell (“Victory Over Violence,” The American Feminist, vol. 5, no. 3), Julie asked her if it would have been better for Lee if Julie was never born at all.
Lee told Julie that she was the “only good thing to come out of the rape.”
When someone asks about exceptions for rape and incest, we must also consider how that makes those feel who were conceived through sexual assault.
Well-meaning statements can hurt. As one UC-Berkeley grad student said to her pro-choice peers, “I have a right to be here.”
They responded, “We didn’t mean you!” She asked, “Whom did you think you meant?”
My mother told this story to a coworker who agreed and said, “People never think they are talking to an exception — like me.”
Could you look at someone conceived in violence and tell her that she never should have been born? What if it turned out to be your best friend — or a relative? Would that change the way you felt about her? Would you think less of her mother? Rebecca Kiessling, a young attorney and mother who was conceived through sexual assault, asks, “Did I deserve the death penalty?” Can you imagine if we ranked the value of people based on the circumstances of their conception?
We don’t discriminate based on parentage — that’s not equality! You are valuable no matter who your parents are, no matter the circumstances of your conception.
People used to value a woman based on who her father or husband was. It is similarly medieval to value a child by the actions of her father. That way of thinking is patriarchal and antifeminist, and it should have gone out with the Dark Ages.
Abortion after rape is misdirected anger. It doesn’t punish the perpetrator of the crime or prevent further assaults against other women.
25,000 pregnancies from rape victims every year, still not enough? Oh but it's only 7 states out of 50, so that's only 14% right? And what do you know, Alabama is one of those 7.
Too much cipherin' for us slow southern folk. 
Seriously what the fuck is wrong with you?
SICK, SICK, SICK
Yeah, ok.
Every watch a surgical abortion? Whilst you do, remember half of those aborted are very young women.
Naval Officer? What rank?
I day is coming up for my “choice”.
I want to re-post this from my post above.
That it wouldn't be lost in the argument, and since I was reprimanded (earlier) for daring to have lived/breathed/borne a daughter.
What about rape? What if your your daughter, who was raped? I would love her and my grandchild unconditionally, and I would do everything in my power to prosecute the perpetrator to the fullest extent of the law.
Out of our desire to save someone from suffering, it is normal to wish we could erase a painful memory such as rape. Unfortunately, the hard truth is that as much as we want to, we can’t.
Abortion doesn’t erase a memory. Think about it.
At my lecture at Vanderbilt University, a medical student told other students that abortion is a second act of violence against a woman who is raped, and said her “abortion was worse than the rape.”
Both victims — the woman and her child — deserve our unconditional support.
Pregnancy can be punishing, but a child is not a punishment. When Julie Makimaa was reunited with her birthmother, Lee Ezell (“ Victory Over Violence,” The American Feminist, vol. 5, no. 3), Julie asked her if it would have been better for Lee if Julie was never born at all.
Lee told Julie that she was the “only good thing to come out of the rape.”
When someone asks about exceptions for rape and incest, we must also consider how that makes those feel who were conceived through sexual assault.
Well-meaning statements can hurt. As one UC-Berkeley grad student said to her pro-choice peers, “I have a right to be here.”
They responded, “We didn’t mean you!” She asked, “Whom did you think you meant?”
My mother told this story to a coworker who agreed and said, “People never think they are talking to an exception — like me.”
Could you look at someone conceived in violence and tell her that she never should have been born? What if it turned out to be your best friend — or a relative? Would that change the way you felt about her? Would you think less of her mother? Rebecca Kiessling, a young attorney and mother who was conceived through sexual assault, asks, “Did I deserve the death penalty?” Can you imagine if we ranked the value of people based on the circumstances of their conception?
We don’t discriminate based on parentage — that’s not equality! You are valuable no matter who your parents are, no matter the circumstances of your conception.
People used to value a woman based on who her father or husband was. It is similarly medieval to value a child by the actions of her father. That way of thinking is patriarchal and antifeminist, and it should have gone out with the Dark Ages.
Abortion after rape is misdirected anger. It doesn’t punish the perpetrator of the crime or prevent further assaults against other women.
Quote: @A1Janitor said:
Naval Officer? What rank?
I day is coming up for my “choice”.
Medical Service Corps. Staff Officer. (MSC) My degree granted me O3 (LT) rank, at the end of OIS (Officer Indoctrination School)
"The Staff supports the Line".
You son is going to be a "Line Officer". Superior designation, by mission.
He will graduate with a star on his sleeve, I got one Acorn. https://www.usamilitarymedals.com/produc...=849982703&utm_medium=cpc&utm_source=google&utm_campaign=Google%20Shopping&gclid=Cj0KCQjwoInnBRDDARIsANBVyATxw9Cxso37VEtp2wMZURv54k5Lp43M99Z0Ux45cx5hAF_zidusg54aAiTYEALw_wcB
You should be VERY, VERY proud. 
Quote: @savannahskol said:
@ A1Janitor said:
Naval Officer? What rank?
I day is coming up for my “choice”.
Medical Corps. Staff Officer. My degree granted me O3 (LT) rank, at the end of OIS (Officer Indoctrination School)
"The Staff supports the Line".
You son is going to be a "Line Officer". Superior designation, by mission.
He will graduate with a star on his sleeve, I got one Acorn. https://www.usamilitarymedals.com/produc...lar-device
You should be VERY, VERY proud. 
I am so proud. Considered by admissions as a top candidate in the country. 
Didn’t get his brains from his mother.
And I am going to make sure you salute me when he is an admiral. It will be a new rule. 
Quote: @A1Janitor said:
@ savannahskol said:
@ A1Janitor said:
Naval Officer? What rank?
I day is coming up for my “choice”.
Medical Corps. Staff Officer. My degree granted me O3 (LT) rank, at the end of OIS (Officer Indoctrination School)
"The Staff supports the Line".
You son is going to be a "Line Officer". Superior designation, by mission.
He will graduate with a star on his sleeve, I got one Acorn. https://www.usamilitarymedals.com/produc...lar-device
You should be VERY, VERY proud. 
I am so proud. Considered by admissions as a top candidate in the country.
Didn’t get his brains from his mother.
And I am going to make sure you salute me when he is an admiral. It will be a new rule. 
Unfortunately, I/you don't get shit, at first salute.
His first salute will get 'monied' by folks who matter. Aint us. 
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