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And Let's not forget about the other Deplorables

Nancy Mace was one of 34 Republicans in the House who voted against the bill containing wildfire prevention funding this past December.

I can't believe that she and others like her don't just burst into flames as they are writing this kind of bullshit.



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Some good news. Anita Bryant dead at last at age 84.

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I can't let this be the last picture of Mrs Bryant that we see.

Let's remember her this way:
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Oh, good lord. Virginia Foxx, age 81, is the chair of the House Rules committee that controls bills coming to the floor of the House for debate and votes. Rep Foxx [R-NC] is notorious for being the Emily Latilla of the US Congress.

I guess when the alternative was Chip Roy...

Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has selected Rep. (R-N.C.) to serve as chair of the House Rules Committee, installing the veteran lawmaker at the helm of the panel that will play a key role in legislating throughout the 119th Congress.

Johnson selected Foxx to lead the committee over Rep.Chip Roy, whom many hardline conservatives were pushing for, and Reps. Michelle Fischbach (R-Minn.) and Pete Sessions (R-Texas), who also expressed interest in the role. Foxx will be the only female committee chair in the 119th Congress. Foxx’s selection was ratified during the House GOP conference meeting Tuesday morning, a source told The Hill.

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We all knew that "the apps" would be buzzing next week when all of the Republican closet cases descend upon DC.

They're bringing their favorite gay disco band from the 80s to town, too.

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Remember the good old days when we would watch videos of fistfights between Parliament members in Japan or Turkey and think, "Thank god, we have a civil political system".

Well...


View attachment CNN-Congresswoman challenges colleague to ‘take it outside’ during House hearing.m4v

Last Congress, one of the "fairer sex" was displaying Hunter Biden's dick pics on a poster board during a hearing that was being broadcast live on CSPAN.

This Congress, we're only a week in, and Nancy Mace [R-SC] has a bill to ban the half-a-dozen transwomen, who she described as "chicks with dicks" on a live broadcast, from women's sports.
 
Tim Dunn and Kyle Stallings are described as a "Midland oilmen". They are more than that- they are evangelical ministers who made millions in the oil industry and the have poured millions into Dominionist and White Christian Nationalist causes. Imagine the Koch Brothers with the believe that Jesus is on their side.

Note the "only Christians should be in leadership positions" in government quote in the article...



Well, well... guess who is now BFF with Trump? Elon's not the only billionaire with an agenda. Tim Dunn is a billionaire White Christian Nationalist who is willing to pay millions to Republican politicians to pass legislation he wants. Like public money vouchers for Christian schools. Like anti-abortion legislation. Like anti-LGBT legislation.

Donald Trump has a new friend in the oil industry, but billionaire Tim Dunn probably has a lot more in mind than “drill, baby, drill.”

The CEO of CrownRock is an evangelical Christian from Midland who pulled an oil fortune from the plains of West Texas. He remains largely unknown outside of the Lone Star State, where he has spent more than $30 million to push state politics and policy far to the right.

Now, he’s going national with his efforts. Late last year, the Texas oilman ensconced himself among Trump’s top donors with a $5 million contribution.
 
Nancy Mace and the Republicons.

Once again, they are able to hoodwink their stupidest base voters and shift everything to culture wars in order to hide that they are doing nothing to actually help Americans.

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When you look across the range of lowlife that make up the new admin, it becomes inconceivable that there is not one but several men who have had to arrange abortions for their numerous prostitutes, misstresses and girls they have sexualy assaulted. Statisically, how can it be otherwise? There must be some really radioactive dirt on these chancers. What if such dirt got out? Would it be career's end or have standards fallen so steeply that they could just change the subject and get away with it?
 
When you look across the range of lowlife that make up the new admin, it becomes inconceivable that there is not one but several men who have had to arrange abortions for their numerous prostitutes, misstresses and girls they have sexualy assaulted. Statisically, how can it be otherwise? There must be some really radioactive dirt on these chancers. What if such dirt got out? Would it be career's end or have standards fallen so steeply that they could just change the subject and get away with it?

As long as they hate immigrants, gays, trans people, and worship der Trumpenführer, they'll get away with it.
 
When you look across the range of lowlife that make up the new admin, it becomes inconceivable that there is not one but several men who have had to arrange abortions for their numerous prostitutes, misstresses and girls they have sexualy assaulted. Statisically, how can it be otherwise? There must be some really radioactive dirt on these chancers. What if such dirt got out? Would it be career's end or have standards fallen so steeply that they could just change the subject and get away with it?
Most could shoot someone on 5th avenue and no one would blink an eye.
 
Most could shoot someone on 5th avenue and no one would blink an eye.
It's a two-way trap. One side that has numbed their followers to scandal and is determined to neuter the investigators who provide the evidence of the scandal. The other side that continues to play by the old rules and purge anyone who has the least bit of scent of scandal.
 
It's a two-way trap. One side that has numbed their followers to scandal and is determined to neuter the investigators who provide the evidence of the scandal. The other side that continues to play by the old rules and purge anyone who has the least bit of scent of scandal.
What side are you saying purges anyone with the least bit of scandal? I don't know of any side like that.
 
What side are you saying purges anyone with the least bit of scandal? I don't know of any side like that.
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The reason that you couldn't remember examples of Democrats who were turfed by the party or the voters is that the list of national politicians involved in scandals is skewed so far to the Republican side.

Here's the Biden Administration Scandals (from Wikipedia): [There's only 4 on the list]
Executive branch
  1. Sam Brinton (D) the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Spent Fuel and Waste Disposition in the Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Energy, was twice accused of stealing luggage from airports. They were subsequently fired. (2022)
  2. Eric Lander (D) Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy (cabinet level position). Lander had multiple staff accusations of insulting and embarrassing behavior. On February 7, 2022, he resigned.
  3. Tyler Joseph "TJ" Ducklo (D) Deputy Press Secretary, threatened a reporter by telling her that he would "destroy her" if she published a story about his affair. He then apologized, and resigned the next day.
  4. Kimberly Cheatle (D) Director of the United States Secret Service accepted ultimate responsibility for events during the attempted assassination of Donald Trump and resigned.


Contrast that with the list of the Trump Administration Scandals (or are those just "Lawfare"? ): [There's 39 on the list]

Executive branch
  1. Donald J. Trump (R) President, First Impeachment of Donald Trump. In 2019, Trump was accused of trading $400 million in congressionally approved aid to Ukraine in exchange for damaging information on Presidential Candidate Joseph Biden (D) and his son Hunter Biden. This came to be known as the Trump-Ukraine scandal. He was impeached for Obstruction of Congress by a vote of 229–198, with a second vote of impeachment for Abuse of Power by a vote of 230–197. The charges were presented to the US Senate for trial, where he was acquitted with a vote of 52–48 for Abuse of Power and 53–47 on Obstruction of Congress, both votes being on party lines. (2019)
  2. Donald Trump (R) President, Second Impeachment of Donald Trump, (January 6 United States Capitol attack). On January 6, 2021, Trump spoke at a rally outside the US Capitol, claiming the 2020 election had been 'stolen' and that he was actually still president and that Joe Biden was not. He urged the crowd to "take back our country" and "fight like hell". The crowd then assaulted police officers, broke windows, forced their way inside the US Capitol and vandalized the building. One policeman and four marchers died and 140 police officers were injured.
    On January 12, 2021, the House passed a resolution calling for Vice President Mike Pence (R) and Trump's still sitting cabinet to remove Trump from office under the 25th Amendment because he was unfit to serve the rest of his 8 day term. Pence and the cabinet refused.
  3. Donald Trump (R) President. After Vice President Mike Pence (R) and the cabinet refused to remove Trump, the next day on January 13, 2021, the House impeached Trump again alleging his Incitement of Insurrection under the Fourteenth Amendment. The Senate vote was 57–43 to find him guilty, but a 67-vote supermajority vote was required for conviction.
  4. Donald Trump (R) President, was accused of sexual assault by writer E. Jean Carroll in the Bergdorf Goodman department store in New York City in 1996. In 2019 she described the incident in a book. Trump denied her charges and publicly ridiculed her. She then sued Trump for defamation of character. At trial, the jury found Trump guilty of sexual assault for forcibly kissing her, pulling down her clothes and penetrating her with his fingers. They awarded Carroll $5 million in damages. See also Donald Trump sexual misconduct allegations. (2019)
  5. Donald Trump (R) President, on January 26, 2024, after he was found guilty of the sexual assault of E. Jean Carroll, he again publicly defamed her, was found guilty, and Carroll was awarded an additional $83.3 million.
  6. Donald Trump President). A NY County jury found Trump guilty on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records concerning a breeched agreement with porn actress Stormy Daniels. (2024)
  7. Donald Trump (R) President, his company, executives, and two eldest sons were accused by NY Attorney General Letitia James, of massively exaggerating his net worth. He was found guilty of having lied. He fined $355 million. The ruling also imposes a three-year ban on Trump serving as an officer or director of any New York company.(2023)
  8. Allen Weisselberg (R) Chief Financial Officer of the Trump Organization, was accused of larceny, tax fraud, and false Social Security claims. He was found guilty, sentenced to five months in jail, and eventually paid more than two million in back taxes and penalties. In 2024, he was found guilty of perjury and sentenced to another five months in prison.
  9. Elliott Broidy (R) Deputy Finance Chairman of the Republican National Committee, was accused of not revealing he had received $9 million from the government of Malaysia to act as their agent to try and hinder a Department of Justice investigation of Malaysian fraud, plus the possibility of extradition of a Chinese billionaire living in the US. Broidy pled guilty to one count of conspiracy. He forfeited most of the money to the US Government. He was then pardoned by President Donald Trump (R). (2018)
  10. Paul Manafort (R) 2016 Campaign Manager for President Donald Trump (R), was charged with 18 counts of tax and bank fraud for keeping $65 million in foreign bank accounts and spending $15 million on himself. He was found guilty on 8 counts. In March 2019, he was sentenced to 7 1/2 years in prison, although he was later released to home confinement.
  11. Rick Gates (R) 2016 Deputy Campaign Chairman to President Donald Trump (R), pleaded guilty to conspiracy and lying to investigators concerning his work lobbying with Ukraine as well as tax and bank fraud. He was sentenced to 45 days in prison and three years' probation. (2018)

Cabinet and Assistants
  1. Chad Wolf (R) acting U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security was found unlawfully appointed by Nicholas Garaufis of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York as the DHS failed to follow the order of succession as it was lawfully designated.
  2. Tom Price (R) U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services was forced to resign on September 29, 2017, after it was discovered that he spent hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars on private flights.
  3. Ryan Zinke (R) U.S. Secretary of the Interior, when the Inspector General of the Interior Department referred one of several investigations about Zinke to the Justice Department. He was then investigated for his conduct in office and questionable real estate dealings in Montana. He resigned in December 2018.
  4. William Perry Pendley (R) acting Director of Bureau of Land Management within the U.S. Department of the Interior was removed from office by Judge Brian Morris of the U.S. District Court of Montana, who ruled that Pendley had been running the agency unlawfully for 424 days without US Senate approval, in violation of the Appointment Clause of the U.S. Constitution and the Federal Vacancies Reform Act (FVRA). It found that David Bernhardt (R) Secretary of the Interior, illegally promoted Pendley from deputy director of the B. L. M. for Policy and Programs to "temporary" Director of the Bureau of Land Management.(2020)
  5. Alex Acosta (R) U.S. Secretary of Labor resigned on July 12, 2019, after a contentious news conference about his role as a U.S. attorney in 2008, when he dismissed federal charges against Jeffrey Epstein, "that allowed the financier to plead guilty to lesser offenses in a sex-crimes case involving underage girls". Epstein committed suicide on August 10, 2019 in the Metropolitan Correctional Center, New York City. After Price, Pruitt, Shulkin and Zinke, and Nielson Acosta became the sixth Trump Cabinet member to resign or be fired.
  6. Michael Flynn (D/R) National Security Advisor (United States), was forced to resign on February 13, 2017, over conversations he had with Russian envoys about sanctions during the transition. On December 1, 2017, Flynn pleaded guilty to charges of lying to the FBI as a plea bargain. (2017)
  7. Scott Pruitt (R) Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, resigned citing increasing numbers of investigations into his administration. The EPA's own Chief Ethics Official had been pushing for independent studies into Pruitt's actions and 13 other separate investigations were under way, including alleged corruption for personal gain, salary increases without White House approval, use of government staff on personal projects and unnecessary spending on offices and security. He resigned July 5, 2018.
  8. Albert Kelly (R) EPA Superfund Task Force Director and top aide to EPA Chief Scott Pruitt (R), resigned amid scrutiny of his previous actions as leader of a bank in Oklahoma which led to $125,000 fine and lifetime ban from banking. (2018)
  9. Pasquale "Nino" Perrotta, EPA Security Administrator, resigned after allegations of lavish spending and improper contracts (2018)
  10. Samantha Dravis (R) EPA Associate Administrator and Senior Counsel in the Office of Policy resigned abruptly after allegations of being a no show employee. (2018)
  11. Donald Kempf Jr. (R) Deputy Assistant to the U.S. Attorney General. An investigation concluded that he had viewed sexually explicit images on government computers and then made false statements about it under oath. He resigned. (2018)
  12. William C. Bradford (R) resigned from the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Indian Energy amid reports that he had made racial slurs directed at Barack Obama on Disqus and Twitter. Bradford had claimed that some of the comments were the result of identity theft and not his. (2017)
  13. Brenda Fitzgerald (R) Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services was forced to resign on January 31, 2018, after it was discovered that she bought stock in tobacco, the leading cause of preventable death in the US, creating a conflict of interest.
  14. Taylor Weyeneth (R) Deputy CoS at the White House office of National Drug Control Policy, resigned when it was revealed the 24-year-old had no qualifications for the position and no related work history other than working on President Trump's 2016 campaign. (2018).
  15. Vivieca Wright Simpson, Chief of Staff to David Shulkin (I) Secretary of U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs resigned after an Inspector General report charged that she altered an email to make it appear Shulkin was getting an award during a trip to Europe in order to gain approval to use taxpayer dollars to pay for Shulkin's wife to accompany him. Six weeks later, Donald Trump fired Shulkin via Twitter.
  16. Tony Tooke, Chief of the US Forest Service part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, after a series of sexual harassment and retaliation accusations, he resigned. (2018)

Lawyers
  1. Rudy Giuliani (R) Lawyer for Donald Trump was accused of making "demonstrably false and misleading" statements about the results of the 2020 presidential election, which he claimed was stolen from Donald Trump. The Manhattan appeals court revoked his law license and ruled he is no longer allowed to practice law in the state of New York. (2024)
  2. Sidney Powell (R) Attorney for Donald Trump (R) was charged with racketeering for Attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election, see also Georgia election racketeering prosecution. She and 17 others, were accused of attempting to access Georgia voting machines and copy their software and data. In a plea deal, she pled guilty to six counts of conspiring to interfere with the performance of election duties. She was sentenced to six years of probation, fined $6,000 plus fees, and also agree to testify truthfully against her co-defendants at future trials. (2020)
  3. Jenna Ellis (R) Lawyer for Donald Trump. She was accused of planning to disrupt and delay the congressional certification of election results and urging state legislators to illegally appoint new electors after the election. See Attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election. She pled guilty to one felony count of aiding and abetting false statements and was sentenced to five years of probation, community service, apologize to the people of Georgia, pay restitution and swear to tell the truth in future cases. (2023) See Georgia election racketeering prosecution.
  4. Kenneth Chesebro (I) Lawyer for Donald Trump. Chesebro was charged with 19 others, of racketeering for commandeering voting information in an attempt to reverse the election of (2016). He was also accused of coordinating a plan to have 16 Georgia Republicans declare themselves the state's "duly elected and qualified" electors to replace the original electors. He pled guilty to one felony charge of conspiracy. (2020) See Georgia election racketeering prosecution.[821]
  5. Michael Cohen (R) Personal Attorney to President Donald Trump (R) and vice-president to the Trump organization, pleaded guilty to tax evasion, bank fraud and illegal campaign contributions. He also helped arrange non-disclosure agreements to Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal who allegedly had affairs with Trump. Cohen pleaded guilty to eight counts of tax evasion and making false statements. (2018)

Advisors and Staff
  1. Peter Navarro (R) Assistant to President Trump and Director of the Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy. In February 2022, he was subpoenaed to testify before the United States House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack, but Navarro claimed he had executive privilege and refused to appear. He was indicted by the U.S. Justice Department for Contempt of Congress, found guilty, and on January 25, 2024, he was sentenced to four months in jail and fined.
  2. Rob Porter (R) White House staff secretary, resigned from the position on February 7, 2018, following public allegations of spousal abuse from his two ex-wives. The allegations were supported by photographs of a black eye and a restraining order.
  3. David Sorensen (R) White House speechwriter, resigned after his ex-wife Jessica Corbett came forward with abuse allegations. (2018)
  4. George Papadopoulos (R) Foreign Policy advisor, pleaded guilty to making false statements to FBI agents relating to contacts he had with agents of the Russian government while working for the Trump campaign. He was sentenced to 14 days in prison, 12 months' probation, and 200 hours' community service. (2017)
  5. Michael Flynn (D/R) National Security Advisor, was forced to resign on February 13, 2017, over conversations he had with Russian envoys about sanctions during the transition. On December 1, 2017, Flynn pleaded guilty to charges of lying to the FBI as a plea bargain. (2017)
  6. Steve Bannon (R) Chief White House Strategist and Counselor to President Donald Trump was subpoenaed to appear before the United States House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack and answer questions. He refused to appear or cooperate. He was then cited for Contempt of Congress and was found guilty of refusing to appear. On July 22, 2022, the jury found Bannon guilty on both charges and was sentenced to four months in prison with a $6,500 fine. (2022)
  7. B. J. Pak (R) U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia appointed by President Trump. On January 3, 2021, in a recorded call, Trump called top Georgia officials and pressured them to help him "find" more votes. During the call Trump referenced to Georgia's Atlanta and Fulton counties and a "never-Trumper U.S. attorney there". Pak resigned the next day citing "unforeseen circumstances". (2021)
 
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