@PaulChato Whatever happened to live and let live? If someone is happier living their life as a gender other than the one they were born into, so what? Let them.
@WokeMitt He wants to overthrow the Cuban government first. He's driving the US' aggressive anti-Cuba policy and knows if he leaves Trump will back down.
@ShakeLS What you made clear was you thought Clarkson has cancer because somehow he deserves it. He may be a prick but that's still a horrible thing to say, and hurtful to people who either have cancer or have loved ones who have it or have died of it.
@ShakeLS So are you arguing that people get cancer because they deserve it? So do you think King Charles and the Princess of Wales deserve it too? What about members of your family - or the family members of your friends who've gotten cancer?
@PaulChato@koshercockney@alexandrmenashe I don't know whether the claims in question are true in this case - but as a matter of historical record there are documented incidents of both the Chilean junta and the Nazis using dogs to rape prisoners https://t.co/24SisGSkvG
@CBSNews US politics has become a loyalty cult. Democrats were too deferential to tell Biden he needed to sit 2024 out until it was too late and Republicans are too frightened to oppose Trump (or to have impeached him after January 6 which would have barred him from running again)
@kinsellawarren A traitor to Israel? I would rethink those words. Trump may be completely untrustworthy and self-interested but you can't be a traitor to a country you're not a citizen of. Trump may be a traitor to the US but a US president owes no loyalty to Israel or any other state.
@PaulChato@pawelwargan It is a fact that the greater the concentration of wealth in a society, the more poor people you have. The concentration of wealth in the US today is even more extreme than in the Gilded Age. https://t.co/KTbkKM3Cfz
@PaulChato@pawelwargan Generally if someone has become a billionaire it's at the expense of many others who have become poorer. Wal-Mart's negative impact on wages in US communities is a classic example. But why let mere statistics get in the way of the trickle down theory?