@ccourson2b@its_The_Dr Nope, you're thinking of the Gapp/Roush 4 door. Glidden drove a mustang, pinto, fox body fairmont, Plymouth arrow, t-bird and probe.
@Barning2Pats@rjcyd6qqt2@Police_Clips@grok All but the most skillful drivers will fail at accurately predicting the oncoming weapon's arrival when it's traveling nearly twice the limit. Surely you've seen the skillful drivers all around us π€ͺ, kinda the reason for a limit, eh?
@vmhhoy @FarmGirlCarrie By definition, if he is an illegal alien he is unemployable. So he is either committing tax fraud by working under the table, or he is using a stolen SSN.
Do you see the problem now?
@theAlexGarzon@GregLamb1066@ChrisMurphyCT Labor shortages? "Peaceful" illegal aliens, by definition, are unemployable.
Either they're working under the table (tax fraud) or they're using a stolen SSN.
Look up the law.
@sirmayorricky@FillmoreWhite@JenRuthGreen You won't see me defend 45's response to the pandemic, then or now.
However, by the time of the vax rollout, it was very clear who were dying and who wasn't and I suggest, half the country had recovered and at no further risk and no need for a rushed vaccine.
@FillmoreWhite@sirmayorricky@JenRuthGreen General Biden, on the other hand, vaccinated everyone he could (and tried to vax those he couldn't) a year into the virus.
Zero thought to a novel treatment to a novel virus and the risks of ill effects on soldiers without risk.
@FillmoreWhite@sirmayorricky@JenRuthGreen He didn't have much of a choice. His troops were self-enoculating without quarantining, the Brits were generations into the virus and immune from survival, not inoculation.
@sirmayorricky@FillmoreWhite@JenRuthGreen I never suggested that both treatments aren't explicitly linked. Fact remains, in 1777, one treatment was implemented, the other didn't exist. Thankfully, general Washington knew enough of the mechanics to only inoculate soldiers that needed it. You?
@CobaltDaisy@JenRuthGreen Agreed. In this historical context, vaccination wasn't a thing, inoculation through variolation was. Except for soldiers that had survived a smallpox infection, including general Washington.
@FillmoreWhite@JenRuthGreen Again, "vaccination" wasn't a thing. In the continental army's case, inoculation through viriolation using live cowpox virus was.
EXCEPT for soldiers that had survived infection of the smallpox virus, including GW. They did need it.
@LudgeThomas@JenRuthGreen "Vaccines" didn't exist during the revolutionary war. General Washington mandated inoculation for new recruits. A highly controversial treatment at the time. Unlike Biden's reckless mandate, Washington exempted himself and other smallpox surviving soldiers.
@LtColPhillips@altonido1@JenRuthGreen Except soldiers with immunity from previous infection. They, including general Washington, were exempt from the mandate and were critical in maintaining a defense while new recruits were being inoculated.
@altonido1@JenRuthGreen Perhaps you're thinking of inoculation (vaccines weren't a thing during the revolutionary war). Soldiers with immunity from previous infection were exempt from the new recruit's mandate, including general Washington.
@CobaltDaisy@JenRuthGreen Vaccinations wasn't a thing in 1777. Inoculations were and were also highly controversial. Which is why general Washington and others with immunity from previous infection were exempt from the mandate.
@FillmoreWhite@JenRuthGreen Vacation wasn't a thing during the revolutionary war. Inoculation was mandated for new recruits and those with immunity from previous infection were exempt from the mandate, including general Washington.
@aaron_davi77975@oldmanweed@JenRuthGreen And those already infected were exempt from the mandate (including general Washington) and were critical in maintaining a defense while recruits were being inoculated.
@oldmanweed@JenRuthGreen You know who he didn't mandate the inoculation for? Himself and other soldiers with immunity from previous infection. They were critical in maintaining a defense while his new recruits were being inoculated. "Vaccine" wasn't a thing during the revolutionary war.