BREAKING: Whitmer fednapping conviction overturned...
"In over 30 years of practicing law, I have never reviewed a trial more violative of due process than this one," defense attorney says.
https://t.co/mvajJa0MJk
LASIK isn’t covered by insurance. Neither is most cosmetic surgery.
Both got cheaper and better every single year for two decades.
The one corner of medicine where patients pay cash and see prices.
Funny how the “market failure” vanishes the second the market’s allowed to exist.
Friedman called this in 1980. The tape doesn’t lie.
Aside from Carl Barks, this cartoon is the media most responsible for Donald Duck absolutely eclipsing and utterly mogging Mickey Mouse outside of America
Americans have no idea how much the rest of the world loves Donald Duck, moreso than Mickey Mouse
Sorry to break it to you but some communist from the DSA has your sister's name on a list and they found a homeless person on Skid Row to fill out a ballot in her name voting for Raman.
Her real vote will of course be disqualified.
Reading legal commentary from Karmelo Anthony supporters really helps to explain those bodycam videos where they turn a traffic infraction into an arrest.
🚨Los Angeles Election Fraud Caught on Hidden Camera
LA election petitioners were caught on tape giving homeless individuals other voters' information, instructing them to forge voter names and signatures, and offering cash and drugs as incentives to register to vote.
“It’s not about left vs right,” is a psyop against MAGA to make people think there is some reasonable middle ground. Go ahead and tell the person saying “it’s us vs them,” that you support mass deportations and don’t want men in girl’s locker rooms. That’ll give up the scam.
Women mostly base their opinions on consensus, not reason
That's why this woman doesn't bother making an actual argument or rebuttal
She thinks all she has to do is signal that his opinion is "weird" and others will agree with her
It's shockingly effective
Most people don't know this, but Salvador Dalí built his entire career on tapping into his unconscious mind on purpose.
Dalí's most famous trick was a micro-nap he called "slumber with a key." He'd sit in a heavy Spanish-style armchair, head tilted back against the leather, both arms hanging completely limp off the armrests, and in his left hand he'd hold a heavy metal key pinched lightly between his thumb and forefinger.
Directly under that hand, on the floor, he'd place an upside-down plate. He'd then let himself drift into sleep. The instant he actually fell asleep, his muscles would go slack, the key would slip out of his fingers, hit the upside-down plate, and the clang would jolt him awake.
The whole nap was meant to last less than a quarter of a second. He called that half-second window the "taut and invisible wire which separates sleeping from waking," and he'd immediately sketch the hallucinations he saw in that flash.
The melting clocks, the elephants on stilts, the burning giraffes, a lot of that came straight out of those quarter-second naps. He picked the trick up from Capuchin monks and wrote it down as one of his "50 Secrets of Magic Craftsmanship."