A true Nazi who could become a senator. He has the ss symbol on his chest. He must be proud of it bc there are pictures of him with his shirt off. Maine, get better.
CNN’s Michael Smerconish calls out Graham Platner over n*zi tattoo,
“He didn’t cover it until October of 2025, 18 years after getting it and only when it became a political problem.”
@ianmiles While she makes millions from Democratic NGOs. How much did her charities make from the $100m palisades fire fundraiser? The newsomes just bought a 9.1m home is Ross yet didn’t sell their $5m home. How?
This is genuinely one of the most insane things I’ve ever seen in baseball. Robbing a homerun is hard and rare enough. Robbing two in a game is the record. But three?? One in a million chance. Take a bow, Jo Addell. #RepTheHalo
@scrowder@BillAckman He’s a coward who hides behind his microphone while he blasts Truman’s decision to drop the bomb. My grandfather flew in the pacific and lost 40s on Guadalcanal.
@BernieSanders Communism.,…in Russia….in Iran. How many dead? Capitalism and Free will are the solution. Yet you continue to push socialism. Then again, you have never had a job outside of government.
People always ask me if I knew USC was paying players back when I was around the team and was a player, and my answer is always the same: honestly, no — we weren’t. After the NCAA dropped unprecedented, program‑altering sanctions on USC because of a non‑affiliated, wannabe agent who gave benefits to Reggie Bush’s parents, USC had no choice but to go by the book in every possible way.
Everyone in college football knew the truth: other big programs were paying players and everyone looked the other way. But not USC. Not after what happened. The NCAA, the media, and rival programs watched USC like a hawk. Compliance wasn’t just a department — it was a lifestyle. We refused to even sniff the line, let alone cross it.
And here’s the part that always blows people’s minds:
we all knew Alabama was paying players. Everybody did. It was the worst‑kept secret in college football. But USC? We were the one school that absolutely couldn’t. We were under a microscope while other programs operated in broad daylight.
As long as I live, I won’t be able to say enough how unfairly and badly the NCAA treated USC — and how those sanctions reshaped not just our program, but the entire landscape of college football. And now, with players from other schools openly admitting what everyone already knew… it just makes the whole thing even more frustrating.
USC wasn’t paying players.
We couldn’t.
We were the example the NCAA chose to make.