i dont understand i dont understand bitch i dont understand i dont understand....
someone tell me again that theres no racism in america.
i dont understand i dont understand bitch i dont understand i dont understand....
someone tell me again that theres no racism in america.
It wouldn't work. White people are terrible dancers.
They could the the conga
a succession line dance.
fact: white people and asians love line dancing.
not saying anything about asians, but they do love that shit.
Election time is right around the corner. Who do you side with?
http://www.isidewith.com/
Your Party Affiliation
This is how you side with each party...
91%
Democrats
on domestic policy, social, environmental, economic, immigration, and healthcare issues
89%
Green Party
on domestic policy, environmental, social, economic, healthcare, and immigration issues
57%
Libertarians
on social and immigration issues
55%
Socialist
on social issues
20%
Conservative Party
on no major issues
19%
Republicans
on education issues
18%
Constitution Party
on no major issues
Should we start a 2014 thread?
I hope that when the world comes to an end, I can breathe a sigh of relief, because there will be so much to look forward to. - Donnie Darko
I was challenged to share my voting story, so I'll share it here too.
I was born In the closing days of the Eisenhower administration. My first visit to the polls came just a month later when I accompanied my mother to the polls to cast our vote for John Kennedy. I understand that the lines were quite long and that I was passed from voter to voter as we waited. Maybe that?s why I?m such a political junkie? What to get some love from the electorate again?
I?m sure ?we? voted in ?62 but I don?t recall it and I don?t think I?ve heard any stories about that trip to the polls. Perhaps my two year old self wasn?t as adorable as my infant self had been. I do, remember the next trip to the polls. We voted against ?the lunatic? Barry Goldwater (now, of course Goldwater seems much less of a right wing wacko than he did then.)
Later we voted for Humphry of course. (HHH was a South Dakota boy, even though he?d fled to the cities to find fame and fortune.
I personally campaigned (as much as an 11 year old could) for McGovern. After all I knew the man. OK, I met him at the Central States Fair. He kissed my cheek and presented me with a bumper sticker that Dad wouldn?t let the car wear, and a button that he grudgingly allowed his daughter to wear. I was shocked and heartbroken when Nixon won the election. Not the first time I?d been let down by a politician (see HHH) and it wouldn?t be the last? later I gleefully tacked up my ?Don?t blame me?? bumper sticker in my room, being still too young to own an actual bumper to stick it to.
I don?t want you to get the wrong idea though. It?s not like I grew up in some left wing hot house. Dad was a staunch Republican. He was of the opinion that it made no sense for him or my mother to vote, as they?d ?just? cancel each other out. Mom would smile and agree, and then go vote. Everyone likes Mom, she seems so agreeable, almost a pushover, but she has always had her way of doing what she thought was right.
I finally got to vote In my first presidential election. I voted for Carter. Not his first, successful election, of course, but in his second disappointing campaign. This was followed by many more electoral disappointments. But eventually I figured out that it isn?t really the big ticket races that make a real difference. It?s the local stuff. It?s the vote for County Commission and Water district and the like. These are the people that make a day to day impact and the people you can button hole on the street and maybe make a real difference.
One of my proudest political activities was our work to convince the County Commission that yes, Pennington County residents did want library service and that they were willing to fund it. The AAUW got the ball rolling and we lobbied the commission, we got the issue on the ballot, won the election, threatened to sue if the commission didn?t respect the will of the people, voted again won in a landslide? and the rest, as they say is history.
So got to go vote. My candidates may not win, but some of the issues I care about need my support.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A once-homeless Ohio man whose smooth radio voice made him an Internet sensation says he's running for president as an independent.
Ted Williams was propelled into the spotlight in 2011 after he appeared in a video by The Columbus Dispatch panhandling on a highway ramp with a sign advertising his golden voice. The video's millions of views led to national television appearances and earned Williams numerous voice-over jobs.
Williams announced his plans this week on Scott Spears' "Now" radio program on WWGH-FM in Marion.
Williams says he hasn't established a campaign staff and won't elaborate on fundraising efforts. He says he plans to focus on fair housing, veterans' issues, jobs and improving schools.
He says he's recently been appearing at corporate events and public speaking engagements.http://www.10tv.com/content/stories/...president.html
Is anyone not running for president at this point.
i turn 35 in a few weeks. i'll be turning in my paperwork as soon as that happens.
what happened to Puerto Rico becoming a state?
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