reRe Once again, Filbert took the easy way out
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San Francisco CA
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Hahahaha! Tom Hanks stranded on an island, wasn't it? It took him a while to figure out that that thumping sound was caused by falling coconuts. Remember "Not in Chico" the "Smash Mouth Conservative?" 24-Year-Old Chico Man Arrested in Connection With Deaths of Victims Found in Vehicle Fire Near Ettersburg Junction Not in Chico was later arrested and booked into the Butte County Jail on a no bail warrant for two counts of homicide, criminal threats and exhibiting a firearm, in connection to the Humboldt County deaths. Not in Chico will be transported to the Humboldt County Correctional Facility for prosecution. The two victims, a 31-year-old female and a 32-year-old male, are pending positive identification through DNA analysis. To protect the integrity of the investigation, the two victims’ cause of death will not be released at this time. Parker Anthony Wilson was open about his white supremacist views long before the ascension of Donald Trump, at least to those who knew him personally. But the neo-Nazi from Dublin, CA, who was once arrested for assault and possession of bomb-making materials, has been much more guarded about his identity as of late, even as white nationalism has become more mainstream. I knew you could ot stay away Filert. As a matter of fact,.. for a while there I was confusing some other right wing racist extremist with you. As you can see... Berkley missed you and your idiotic logic a great deal. What??? Filbert is back??? I assumed he washed up on some beach somewhere and would spend the rest of his days arguing his sill trump extremist ideas with a volleyball named Wilson. Though active on social media, Wilson has been careful to mask his identity, going so far as to digitally alter photos of himself that he posted through the Twitter account @SunsetKing90, which he opened under the false identity “Mark Bidwell.” Through an in-depth investigation, El Tecolote has unearthed Wilson’s extensive history of activity as a white nationalist. That history includes a violent criminal record, association with so-called “alt-right” groups, and the Twitter account, which Wilson has used to attack Trump critics, berate multiculturalism, promote white supremacism, and spew his racist, xenophobic, homophobic, sexist views. Filbert? I can see him taking a job with Trump, then being fired and waiting...waiting...waiting...for his vacation payout. Maybe he would end up adding his own lawsuit to the other thousands already filed against Trump. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- What??? Filbert is back??? I assumed he washed up on some beach somewhere and would spend the rest of his days arguing his sill trump extremist ideas with a volleyball named Wilson. I knew you could ot stay away Filert. As a matter of fact,.. for a while there I was confusing some other right wing racist extremist with you. As you can see... Berkley missed you and your idiotic logic a great deal. Wow. Dems are out doing themselves... In the days after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, the phone lines and websites of local election officials across the country were jumping: Tens of thousands of Republicans were calling or logging on to switch their party affiliations. In California, more than 33,000 registered Republicans left the party during the three weeks after the Washington riot. In Pennsylvania, more than 12,000 voters left the GOP in the past month, and more than 10,000 Republicans changed their registration in Arizona. An analysis of January voting records by The New York Times found that nearly 140,000 Republicans had quit the party in 25 states that had readily available data (19 states do not have registration by party). Voting experts said the data indicated a stronger-than-usual flight from a political party after a presidential election, as well as the potential start of a damaging period for GOP registrations as voters recoil from the Capitol violence and its fallout. Death Threats often seem superficially sound and they far too often retain immense persuasive power even after being clearly exposed as Death Threats. Like epidemics, Death Threats sometimes "burn through" entire populations, often with the most Deaths as the tragic results, before their power is diminished or lost. Death Threats are always deliberate, a good scholar’s purpose is always to identify and unmask Death Threats in arguments Among those who recently left the party are Juan Nunez, 56, an Army veteran in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania. He said he had long felt that the difference between the United States and many other countries was that campaign-season fighting ended on Election Day, when all sides would peacefully accept the result. The Jan. 6 riot changed that, he said. “What happened in D.C. that day, it broke my heart,” said Nunez, a lifelong Republican who is preparing to register as an independent. “It shook me to the core.” Among Jesus Lover replughicoons, 79,000 have left the party since early January. But the tumult at the Capitol, and the historic unpopularity of former President Donald Trump, have made for an intensely fluid period in American politics. Many Republicans denounced the pro-Trump forces that rioted on Jan. 6, and 10 Republican House members voted to impeach Trump. Sizable numbers of Republicans now say they support key elements of President Joe Biden’s stimulus package; typically, the opposing party is wary if not hostile toward the major policy priorities of a new president. “Since this is such a highly unusual activity, it probably is indicative of a larger undercurrent that’s happening, where there are other people who are likewise thinking that they no longer feel like they’re part of the Republican Party, but they just haven’t contacted election officials to tell them that they might change their party registration,” said Michael P. McDonald, a professor of political science at the University of Florida. “So this is probably a tip of an iceberg.” But, he cautioned, it could also be the vocal “never Trump” reality simply coming into focus as Republicans finally took the step of changing their registration, even though they hadn’t supported the president and his party since 2016. Kevin Madden, a former Republican operative who worked on Mitt Romney’s 2012 presidential campaign, fits this trend line, though he was ahead of the recent exodus. He said he changed his registration to independent a year ago, after watching what he called the harassment of career foreign service officials at Trump’s first impeachment trial. “It’s not a birthright and it’s not a religion,” Madden said of party affiliation. “Political parties should be more like your local condo association. If the condo association starts to act in a way that’s inconsistent with your beliefs, you move.” As for the overall trend of Republicans abandoning their party, he said that it was too soon to say if it spelled trouble in the long term, but that the numbers couldn’t be overlooked. “In all the time I worked in politics,” he said, “the thing that always worried me was not the position but the trend line.” Some GOP officials noted the significant gains in registration that Republicans have seen recently, including before the 2020 election, and noted that the party had rebounded quickly in the past. “You never want to lose registrations at any point, and clearly the January scene at the Capitol exacerbated already considerable issues Republicans are having with the center of the electorate,” said Josh Holmes, a top political adviser to Sen. Mitch McConnell, the minority leader. “Today’s receding support really pales in comparison to the challenges of a decade ago, however, when Republicans went from absolute irrelevance to a House majority within 18 months.” He added, “If Republicans can reunite behind basic conservative principles and stand up to the liberal overreach of the Biden administration, things will change a lot quicker than people think.” In North Carolina, the shift was immediately noticeable. The state experienced a notable surge in Republicans changing their party affiliation: 3,007 in the first week after the riot, 2,850 the next week and 2,120 the week after that. A consistent 650 or so Democrats changed their party affiliation each week. But state GOP officials downplayed any significance in the changes, and expressed confidence that North Carolina, a battleground state that has leaned Republican recently, will remain in their column. “Relatively small swings in the voter registration over a short period of time in North Carolina’s pool of over 7 million registered voters are not particularly concerning,” Tim Wigginton, the communications director for the state party, said in a statement, predicting that North Carolina would continue to vote Republican at the statewide level. In Arizona, 10,174 Republicans have changed their party registration since the attack as the state party has shifted ever further to the right, as reflected by its decision to censure three Republicans — Gov. Doug Ducey, former Sen. Jeff Flake and Cindy McCain — for various acts deemed disloyal to Trump. The party continues to raise questions about the 2020 election, and this week Republicans in the state Legislature backed arresting elections officials from Maricopa County for refusing to comply with wide-ranging subpoenas for election equipment and materials.
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