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Pedo Prez's DOJ Says AG Merrick Garland Immune from Prosecution for Contempt of Congress, Increases Speculation about the Pedophile's Mental Ability

President Joe Biden’s Department of Justice issued a memo Wednesday declaring that Attorney General Merrick Garland is protected from prosecution for contempt of Congress because of Biden’s use of executive privilege.

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Rep. David Joyce (R-OH)

The lone Republican to vote against the House resolution holding Garland in contempt for the Hur deposition tape…

"As a former prosecutor, I cannot in good conscience support a resolution that would further politicize our judicial system to score political points," Joyce said. "The American people expect Congress to work for them, solve policy problems, and prioritize good governance. Enough is enough.”


Republicans have the transcript…they think it’s been doctored lol



carry on

An NIL discussion from the Ohio State wrestling forum


I use this site for all thing Ohio State. They use real names and are even handed when it comes to opinions. This thread included a ton of internal discussion about NIL and the lay of the land in wrestling from the Ohio State POV. It's a great read, and I'd love to get your opinions on it.

Deep Question for our Time from one of the Great Thinkers of our Time

Kackles Harris has some questions for you... No kidding, this is the opening paragraph...

ONE AFTERNOON IN LATE APRIL, Vice President Kamala Harris climbed into a large black car parked in the garage of the CBS Broadcast Center on New York’s West 57th Street and sat bolt-upright in the leather seat. She’d just finished taping an episode of The Drew Barrymore Show — remaining magnanimous as Barrymore had pawed at Harris’ burgundy blazer and pleaded with her to be the country’s “Momala” — and was shortly on her way to a dinner in the GM Building that software and investment executive Charles Phillips had arranged in order for Black finance leaders to share their advice for the campaign (“We’ve got a lot to fight, but this is a fight we can win,” she’d assured those assembled at one end of a sleek room with soaring views of Manhattan). These were strategic visits, and evidence of the administration’s growing reliance on Harris to connect with key demographics (suburban women, Black men) who may not be overly enamored with the prospect of another four years helmed by one of two old white men.


LSU Baseball Coach Spot On

he's right. No more building a program, but it's a one year deal. Said his team was too deep and needs to build it one year at a time. He said he wants that player that Skip Bertman redshirted, and then get in there in some type of role, and then elevate that role to the point that everyone remembers who the kid is. Unfortunately, it's much more difficult to do that in this environment. Everyone is adapting and improvising. Building a program is tough.

It's going to be interesting who comes up with the best formula. Their job (head coach) has gotten a lot tougher.

punishment for first time offender, hunter crack boy?

i'll start

1) jail time? whatever is the ave jail time for non violent first time offenders. 6 months? 12 months? whatever other convicted felons not named biden are doing in the gray bar hotel, hunter should be doing in the gray bar hotel. remember, time in huntsville prison saved david crosby's life, he finally got straight in a texas prison. and he was there over a gun charge.

2) while on parole or probation, 1000 hours of public service. he could start speaking to AA/drug groups about how he was able to overcome his disease, you know, give back to the community.

3) unannounced random hair follicle and blood drug tests while on parole or probation. fail a drug test, back in prison.

4) during parole or probation, not allowed to travel outside the continental united states.

after some time in prison, i could live with house arrest with an ankle monitor, but at least 2 random drug tests every week.

don't you just love joe's quote, "my son did nothing wrong" also, the demorats knew phase for djt, "convicted felon" now that crackboy is in the same fraternity with djt, i bet you stop hearing every dem shill on msnbc, cnn, and cvnt view using the phrase before donald trump's name.

i bet being a convicted felon will effect crackboy's coming tax evasion case, as convicted felons are prosecuted much more aggressively.

and i guess madcow maddow missed her adderal, she said donald trump will send her to a re education camp, along with aoc. and some women wonder why some men don't take some woman seriously.

thots?

one bullet at a time

Interesting Interview

At about the 3:15 mark the IDF spokesman said upon extracting the hostages the rescuers came under intense enemy fire from RPG’s, AK’s, explosive devices and mortar rounds, all from a 360 degree angle, literally surrounded. Assuming he’s telling the truth (he is an IDF spokesman so who knows if he is) have there been any reports of how many IDF rescuers were killed or wounded during the rescue operation?


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One thing I will give Bill Clinton credit for….

This was a damned fine speech. D-Day, 1994. (spoilered due to length)


[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1994, Book I)]
[June 6, 1994]
[Pages 1044-1046]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks on the 50th Anniversary of D-Day at the United States Cemetery
in Colleville-sur-Mer, France
June 6, 1994

Mr. Dawson, you did your men proud today. General Shalikashvili, Mr.
Cronkite, Chaplain, distinguished leaders of our Government, Members of
Congress, members of the armed services, our hosts from France, and most
of all, our veterans, their families, and their friends:
In these last days of ceremonies, we have heard wonderful words of
tribute. Now we come to this hallowed place that speaks, more than
anything else, in silence. Here on this quiet plateau, on this small
piece of American soil, we honor those who gave their lives for us 50
crowded years ago.
Today, the beaches of Normandy are calm. If you walk these shores on
a summer's day, all you might hear is the laughter of children

[[Page 1045]]

playing on the sand or the cry of seagulls overhead or perhaps the
ringing of a distant church bell, the simple sounds of freedom barely
breaking the silence, peaceful silence, ordinary silence.
But June 6th, 1944, was the least ordinary day of the 20th century.
On that chilled dawn, these beaches echoed with the sounds of staccato
gunfire, the roar of aircraft, the thunder of bombardment. And through
the wind and the waves came the soldiers, out of their landing craft and
into the water, away from their youth and toward a savage place many of
them would sadly never leave. They had come to free a continent, the
Americans, the British, the Canadians, the Poles, the French Resistance,
the Norwegians, and others; they had all come to stop one of the
greatest forces of evil the world has ever known.
As news of the invasion broke back home in America, people held
their breath. In Boston, commuters stood reading the news on the
electric sign at South Station. In New York, the Statue of Liberty, its
torch blacked out since Pearl Harbor, was lit at sunset for 15 minutes.
And in Newcastle, Pennsylvania, a young mother named Pauline Elliot
wrote to her husband, Frank, a corporal in the Army, ``D-Day has
arrived. The first thought of all of us was a prayer.''
Below us are the beaches where Corporal Elliot's battalion and so
many other Americans landed, Omaha and Utah, proud names from America's
heartland, part of the biggest gamble of the war, the greatest crusade,
yes, the longest day.
During those first hours on bloody Omaha, nothing seemed to go
right. Landing craft were ripped apart by mines and shells. Tanks sent
to protect them had sunk, drowning their crews. Enemy fire raked the
invaders as they stepped into chest-high water and waded past the
floating bodies of their comrades. And as the stunned survivors of the
first wave huddled behind a seawall, it seemed the invasion might fail.
Hitler and his followers had bet on it. They were sure the Allied
soldiers were soft, weakened by liberty and leisure, by the mingling of
races and religion. They were sure their totalitarian youth had more
discipline and zeal.
But then something happened. Although many of the American troops
found themselves without officers on unfamiliar ground, next to soldiers
they didn't know, one by one they got up. They inched forward, and
together, in groups of threes and fives and tens, the sons of democracy
improvised and mounted their own attacks. At that exact moment on these
beaches, the forces of freedom turned the tide of the 20th century.
These soldiers knew that staying put meant certain death. But they
were also driven by the voice of free will and responsibility, nurtured
in Sunday schools, town halls, and sandlot ballgames, the voice that
told them to stand up and move forward, saying, ``You can do it. And if
you don't, no one else will.'' And as Captain Joe Dawson led his company
up this bluff, and as others followed his lead, they secured a foothold
for freedom.
Today many of them are here among us. Oh, they may walk with a
little less spring in their step, and their ranks are growing thinner.
But let us never forget, when they were young, these men saved the
world. And so let us now ask them, all the veterans of the Normandy
campaign, to stand if they can and be recognized. [Applause]
The freedom they fought for was no abstract concept, it was the
stuff of their daily lives. Listen to what Frank Elliot had written to
his wife from the embarkation point in England: ``I miss hamburgers a la
Coney Island, American beer a la Duquesne, American shows a la Penn
Theater, and American girls a la you.'' Pauline Elliot wrote back on
June 6th, as she and their one-year-old daughter listened on the radio,
``Little DeRonda is the only one not affected by D-Day news. I hope and
pray she will never remember any of this, but only the happiness of the
hours that will follow her daddy's homecoming step on the porch.''
Well, millions of our GI's did return home from that war to build up
our nations and enjoy life's sweet pleasures. But on this field there
are 9,386 who did not: 33 pairs of brothers, a father and his son, 11
men from tiny Bedford, Virginia, and Corporal Frank Elliot, killed near
these bluffs by a German shell on D-Day. They were the fathers we never
knew, the uncles we never met, the friends who never returned, the
heroes we can never repay. They gave us our world. And those simple
sounds of freedom we hear today are their voices speaking to us across
the years.
At this place, let us honor all the Americans who lost their lives
in World War II. Let us

[[Page 1046]]

remember, as well, that over 40 million human beings from every side
perished: soldiers on the field of battle, Jews in the ghettos and death
camps, civilians ravaged by shell fire and famine. May God give rest to
all their souls.
Fifty years later, what a different world we live in. Germany,
Japan, and Italy, liberated by our victory, now stand among our closest
allies and the staunchest defenders of freedom. Russia, decimated during
the war and frozen afterward in communism and cold war, has been reborn
in democracy. And as freedom rings from Prague to Kiev, the liberation
of this continent is nearly complete.
Now the question falls to our generation: How will we build upon the
sacrifice of D-Day's heroes? Like the soldiers of Omaha Beach, we cannot
stand still. We cannot stay safe by doing so. Avoiding today's problems
would be our own generation's appeasements. For just as freedom has a
price, it also has a purpose, and its name is progress. Today, our
mission is to expand freedom's reach forward; to test the full potential
of each of our own citizens; to strengthen our families, our faith, and
our communities; to fight indifference and intolerance; to keep our
Nation strong; and to light the lives of those still dwelling in the
darkness of undemocratic rule. Our parents did that and more; we must do
nothing less. They struggled in war so that we might strive in peace.
We know that progress is not inevitable. But neither was victory
upon these beaches. Now, as then, the inner voice tells us to stand up
and move forward. Now, as then, free people must choose.
Fifty years ago, the first Allied soldiers to land here in Normandy
came not from the sea but from the sky. They were called Pathfinders,
the first paratroopers to make the jump. Deep in the darkness, they
descended upon these fields to light beacons for the airborne assaults
that would soon follow. Now, near the dawn of a new century, the job of
lighting those beacons falls to our hands.
To you who brought us here, I promise we will be the new
pathfinders, for we are the children of your sacrifice.
Thank you, and God bless you all.

Note: The President spoke at 5:58 p.m. In his remarks, he referred to
Walter Cronkite, master of ceremonies, and Maj. Gen. Matthew A.
Zimmerman, USA, Chief of Chaplains.

Interesting Super Scores

FSU 24...UConn 4....sort of proves how bad ou was.
NC 8...WVU 6...at least they were competitive. NC was a national 6 seed.
Virginia 7...KSU 4...competitive and UV was an 18 seed.

Tenn 11...Evansville 6

I doubt the B12 makes it past today.

And a little tidbit....

COLLEGE BASEBALL: OSU standouts Nolan Schubart and Gabe Davis were both invited to the 2024 USA Baseball Collegiate National Team Training Camp on Thursday. They are among a group of 56 players. Schubart led the Cowboys with a .370 batting average, 23 home runs and 68 RBIs. Davis, a Choctaw graduate, made 18 appearances this season, including five starts, and was 2-4 with a team-high three saves and a 4.17 ERA. He had 55 strikeouts in 45 1/3 innings.
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