US Army retired. West Point grad. Husband & father. NFL Owner #GoPackGo. Follow Army Black Knights #BeatNavy, UW Badgers, UVA Wahoos. Oxford comma advocate.
Paul Krugman: “We really need to do a thorough purging of the United States."
“We need a deMAGAfication…similar to de-Nazification."
This deranged lunatic was employed by NYT for 20+ years.
The truth is called hateful in Belgium. Therefore speaking it is against the law.
This is more frightening than calling the truth "misinformation". They have stopped pretending completely. They are openly admitting that they have criminalized the truth.
@thedrmikejones Like sanctuary cities that don't enforce federal immigration laws? Or Commonwealth's Attorneys who don't prosecute "non-violent" crime?
No sale this weekend, so let's do a free giveaway. Here's another vintage cigarette package filled with pre-war cigarette sports and non-sports trading cards from the 1930s. Simply follow and retweet / repost this for a chance to win. Will draw a winner on Sunday (5/24).
@fball_insights What do "vs expectation" and "relative to opponents faced" mean? What do the percents mean? Jordan Love throws deep the most often? Or vs the "expected coverage" of single high man pass defense? What did Daniel Jones check down against?
@WSJ@WSJFreeEx@WSJopinion@robkhenderson How about calling it stealing? This is what happens when DAs stop prosecuting petty crime. Stealing should not be "normalized".
As my colleagues and I walked toward the Hilton for the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, a man shouted “F*** you!” right at us — simply because we were attending.
Later that night, after the shooting, we were running to the White House for the briefing when we passed three teenage girls glued to their phones, reacting to the news. One of them said, “Aw man, I wish they got him,” and her two friends giggled.
That moment stopped me cold. When our young people casually cheer for violence like it’s a game, we have a serious problem. Radicalization isn’t some abstract issue — it’s showing up casually in everyday conversations and in our kids’ attitudes.