Yeah, just like Trump: A liar and a loser. One difference, though, is that Trump has been accused of rape and she hasn't.
At some point, people noticed that whatever Republicans were campaigning on/accusing Democrats was the actual opposite of their actions.Trump, Done with Democracy, Calls on Kari Lake to Be 'Installed' as Arizona's Governor
Former President Donald Trump called for Kari Lake to be "installed" as governor or Arizona despite her losing the election.www.rollingstone.com
So much for the "law and order" President
Today is election day in Georgia for the 100th Senate siege.At some point, people noticed that whatever Republicans were campaigning on/accusing Democrats was the actual opposite of their actions.
The "law and order" GOP mantra is especially laughable coming from Trump. But in keeping with the theme of GOP campaign/rhetoric is actually projection, guess the last president that campaigned on "law and order?" That would be Richard Nixon--yeah that Richard Nixon
Trump Declared Himself the ‘President of Law and Order.’ Here’s What People Get Wrong About the Origins of That Idea
Elizabeth Hinton, a historian of U.S. inequality, says the focus on Nixon obscures the real Presidential origins of modern "law and order"time.com
I just saw that WARNUCK won in Georgia against WALKER.So go WARNUCK for another BIG slap in the face of this sordid moron....he will do it......
So true and so troubling. The prognosis for the long-term survival of the US is guarded.Get ready for a bumpy ride. Most human societies rarely survive beyond 250 years in their original form, and America is not going to be the exception.
Preparing for the Worst
Unless voters wake up—and Democrats wake them up—we’re on the verge of permanent, minoritarian, single-party rule.newrepublic.com
The Republicans in power today have every intention of ending democracy via voter suppression, gerrymandering, and simply abusing their power to overturn election results they don’t like. Three grim scenarios for America’s future cannot be dismissed. The first two put us back in the post-Reconstruction era. The second is a threat we’ve never seen before: the functional end of our democracy for generations. The closest analogy is 1860, with the difference that the South had somehow managed to game the system into overturning the election of Lincoln and installed John Breckinridge as president.
Unless voters wake up—and Democrats wake them up—we’re on the verge of permanent, minoritarian, single-party rule, and few seem to realize what that would look like, much less the consequences. Once we reach that point, there’s a limited number of potential outcomes. This article explores how we might reach each of them, and what they would look like. Spoiler alert: None of them are good.