Trump Defense Lawyer Baffles Viewers With Confounding, Meandering Opening Argument: ‘Just… Ad-Libbing?’ Mediaite 2/9/2021
Bruce Castor, one of the lawyers representing former President
Donald Trump in his impeachment trial, gave an opening statement Tuesday that baffled a great deal of political observers.
Castor spent a lot of time talking at remarkable length about history and talking up the Senate and saying that senators are patriots (as you can see in the MSNBC video above) and Athens and Nebraska and the British system and a lot more.
A
If Trump still had his Twitter account, he may Tweet-fire this lawyer on the spot.
Some mornings, we wish we could make one for everybody.
Your Daily Dose of Mostly Peaceful Protest
Looks like an insurrection to us.
Google Is Awful (And Maybe Worse Than You Know)
“Shut up,” they explained.
Insanity Wrap would advise you to not use any Google products or services so that this vile beast of a company might suffer financially.
will serve as Google’s milch cow:
Hill did literally everything an internet-connected human being can do to disconnect themselves from Google. But you don’t have to be a Google customer in order to have the company garner 100,000 little bits of data about you every single week. Or as Hill herself says, “Google, like Amazon, is woven deeply into the infrastructure of online services and other companies’ offerings, which is frustrating to all the connected devices in my house.”
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Ed MorrisseyPosted at 11:14 am on January 25, 2021
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That’s very curious indeed, since the previous “no plan” CDC leadership seemed perfectly capable of conducting inventory tracking. Joe Biden’s pick to run the CDC told
“I can’t tell you how much vaccine we have, and if I can’t tell it to you then I can’t tell it to the governors and I can’t tell it to the state health officials,” CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky told “Fox News Sunday.”
“If they don’t know how much vaccine they’re getting not just this week but next week and the week after they can’t plan. They can’t figure out how many sites to roll out, they can’t figure out how many vaccinators that they need, and they can’t figure out how many appointments to make for the public,” Walensky said.