Live Breaking News & Updates on பெரும்பாலானவை ஜனநாயகவாதிகள்|Page 12
Stay updated with breaking news from பெரும்பாலானவை ஜனநாயகவாதிகள். Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Govt. Attacks Small Business/ IRS Agents Plan Audits Writes Bill Sardi: This is worse than Martin Armstrong reports. Banks want to eradicate all small business and create online mega-portals that provide all small business services to the masses. Insurance, food, medical/dental care will all be ordered through these banker portals. Americans will own nothing no businesses, no homes, no cars, no furniture, not even a vacuum cleaner everything will be rented. Restaurants will be eradicated with mandates for hot food home delivery only. Tax revenues generated to cities from small business will produce ghost towns as the electronic marketplace soars. Home delivery of virtually everything will wipe out the value of retail commercial property. Small business entrepreneurs are largely Republican. The reigning Demoncrats want a slave class to govern. -B Sardi ....
POLITICO GOP winning the Georgia ad war as Dems shift money to ground game Super PACs have tilted the advertising battle toward Republicans, as Democratic donors invest in groups working on the ground. Sen. David Perdue speaks to the crowd during a rally with Vice President Mike Pence in support of himself and Sen. Kelly Loeffler on Dec. 10, 2020 in Augusta, Ga. | Jessica McGowan/Getty Images Link Copied Democrats are getting out-advertised in the Georgia Senate runoffs thanks to a megadonor-funded blitz from GOP super PACs in the races that will decide control of the Senate. Republicans hold an overall advertising advantage across the state, largely fueled by $86 million in outside spending supporting their candidates, compared to just $30 million spent by Democratic outside groups on TV advertising so far, according to AdImpact. Democratic candidates Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock are hauling in record small-dollar cash, far ahead of GOP Sens. David Perdu ....
Speaking With Kurt Santini, Army Ranger And Candidate for VA Governor Ammoland Inc. Posted on U.S.A. –-(Ammoland.com)- Kurt Santini is an Army Ranger who served his country with pride before suffering a severe spinal cord injury that took him off his feet for 18 years. With Operation Backbone’s help, he received a life-changing surgery that allowed him to enjoy life again. Instead of sitting back and enjoying life, Santini felt the call to give his life over to serve his home state of Virginia and his country once more. He saw what he believes to be unconstitutional laws that the state legislature passed in Virginia and wanted to push back against them. He decided the best way to accomplish his new mission was to take control of the Commonwealth. He decided to run for Governor of Virginia. ....
Three-quarters of states will elect governors in the next 2 years. Here’s a field guide. The races could reveal the mood of the nation as it moves from the pandemic. Will the decisions governors made in 2020 become anchors or buoys for their careers? Gov. Andrew Cuomo holds a press briefing on the coronavirus in the Red Room at the State Capitol in Albany, N.Y. | Darren McGee/Office of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo via AP Updated: Link Copied The year 2020 showed just how important governors are and the next two years could dramatically reshape who occupies those offices. Thirty-eight of 50 states accounting for nearly 85 percent of the U.S. population will hold gubernatorial elections between 2021 and 2022. A dozen states are likely in play, if not more, raising the potential for one party to expand its influence across the nation. Republicans will have a four-seat advantage in statehouses starting in January, though the majority of Americans will sti ....
Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what s clicking on Foxnews.com. Hope and relief are voters’ most common reactions to the presidential election. More are embarrassed than angry, while many feel scared. Sixty-seven percent feel hopeful, up from 59 percent who felt that way after the 2016 election. And 59 percent are relieved, up from 50 percent. Over half feel embarrassed (55 percent), excited (52 percent), and scared (51 percent). Just under half are angry (49 percent) and empowered (47 percent). The fewest, although still a sizable minority, are depressed (39 percent). The new Fox News nationwide survey also finds the biggest shifts in sentiment compared to 2016 are a 12 percentage-point increase in the number of voters feeling angry, and a 10-point increase in both the number who are embarrassed and scared. ....