***Official Political Discussion Thread***



Would look at how these aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaafrican americans are living....








Vehicles that get 5 miles per gallon, they are doing alright. What the hell do they have to lose, their badass rides, people. You too can be wealthy even if you live in a post apocalyptic wasteland, you just need a good state of mind.

All I see is da passing lane POWER, Comrade Rex :hat When these libbies realize that all you need is da coal powered Hemi, we'll finally be on da way to usurping ((((((solar)))))) and (((((((((wind)))))))) power for da future. Da hip hop intelligencia knew da game in da 90s, and the 90s were the bees knees of rap, B :emoji_high_heel::emoji_mans_shoe:
 
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Come at me you Coal covered bastards. Come get this work from dis (((((((((((((Globalist)))))))))) Steel
 
Da Knights King is coming, with his White Walker army on da COOOOOOAAAAAALLLLLLLL TRAIN, to conquer da (((kale))) gang. With da passing lane power of coal, da COOOAAAALLLLL TRAIN will prevail.

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And looking dapper af while he does it.
 
New weird one to consider - Stone Mountain. So someone decided that a memorial to the Confederate's was a good idea - they had some arguing and a false start but eventually completed a yuuuge carving of Stonewall Jackson, General Lee and Jefferson Davis.

There was clearly some KKK shenanigans going on at the beginning (and they used to meet there) but the part that stuck out to me was that it was only finished in 1972! Didn't we know better by then?

Now, it's protected by legislation so talk of removing it is always stopped but WTF Georgia?
 
I hope they eventually take all the confederate stuff off of Stone Mountain. i don't even go there anymore cause I just can't get past this building named confederate that street names confederate the flag flying you pass going up the mountain and then on the front a giant mural immortalizing those POS.
 
New weird one to consider - Stone Mountain. So someone decided that a memorial to the Confederate's was a good idea - they had some arguing and a false start but eventually completed a yuuuge carving of Stonewall Jackson, General Lee and Jefferson Davis.

There was clearly some KKK shenanigans going on at the beginning (and they used to meet there) but the part that stuck out to me was that it was only finished in 1972! Didn't we know better by then?

Now, it's protected by legislation so talk of removing it is always stopped but WTF Georgia?


Pretty sure they still meet there from time to time. Maybe not in white sheets, but it’s still a favorite gathering spot for those lames.

After buying a car near the mountain, I make sure to steer clear of that area whenever I’m around there. Seemed sketchy in some parts, and not in a hood way. Ironically, Pac lived in Stone Mountain back in the day. Bet those folks around there hated him. :lol:
 
http://amp.usatoday.com/story/582818001/

The White House, already facing a growing boycott by several honorees, announced Saturday that President Trump and first lady Melania Trump will not participate in this year's annual Kennedy Center Honors ceremony to avoid any "political distraction" for the recipients of the prestigious award.​

good. donald belongs nowhere near the arts.
 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...400c5c7e1cc_story.html?utm_term=.ac941ff5292f
Justice Department at odds with DEA on marijuana research, MS-13
The Justice Department under Attorney General Jeff Sessions has effectively blocked the Drug Enforcement Administration from taking action on more than two dozen requests to grow marijuana to use in research, one of a number of areas in which the anti-drug agency is at odds with the Trump administration, U.S. officials familiar with the matter said.

A year ago, the DEA began accepting applications to grow more marijuana for research, and as of this month it had 25 proposals to consider. But DEA officials said they need the Justice Department’s approval to move forward. So far, the department has not been willing to provide it.

“They’re sitting on it,” said one law enforcement official familiar with the matter. “They just will not act on these things.”

As a result, said one senior DEA official, “the Justice Department has effectively shut down this program to increase research registrations.’’

DEA spokesman Rusty Payne said the agency “has always been in favor of enhanced research for controlled substances such as marijuana.’’

Lauren Ehrsam, a Justice Department spokeswoman, declined to comment.

The standoff is the latest example of the nation’s premier narcotics enforcement agency finding itself in disagreement with the new administration. While President Trump and Sessions have vowed a crackdown on drugs and violent crime, DEA officials have publicly and privately questioned some of the administration’s statements and goals.

Late last month, acting DEA administrator Chuck Rosenberg wrote in an email to staff members that Trump had “condoned police misconduct” in remarking to officers on Long Island that they need not protect suspects’ heads when putting them into police vehicles. The acting administrator said he was writing his employees “because we have an obligation to speak out when something is wrong.” After public criticism, White House officials said the president was joking.

DEA officials say Sessions and his Justice Department have pressed the agency for action specifically on MS-13 despite warnings from Rosenberg and others at the DEA that the gang, which draws Central American teenagers for most of its recruits, is not one of the biggest players when it comes to distributing and selling narcotics.

Mexican cartels, DEA officials have warned, will use any gang to sell their drugs, and DEA leaders have directed those in their field offices to focus on the biggest threat in their particular geographic area. In many parts of the country, MS-13 simply does not pose a major criminal or drug-dealing threat compared with other groups, these officials said.

The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they could face professional consequences for candidly describing the internal disputes.

“Mexican cartels, Mexican transnational organizations are the greatest criminal threat to the United States,” Payne, the DEA spokesman, said. “There’s no other group currently positioned to challenge them. Whenever drug investigations that we do involve MS-13, we respond, but right now the No. 1 drug threat in the U.S. is the Mexican cartels.’’

Sessions frequently speaks harshly about marijuana use, and Justice Department officials have been reviewing the policy of his predecessor when it comes to enforcing federal laws on marijuana in states where the drug is legal. Sessions, too, has called medical marijuana “hyped, maybe too much,” and signaled that he is skeptical about the benefits of smoking it.

“Dosages can be constructed in a way that might be beneficial, I acknowledge that, but if you smoke marijuana, for example, where you have no idea how much THC you’re getting, it’s probably not a good way to administer a medicinal amount. So forgive me if I’m a bit dubious about that,” Sessions said earlier this year.

The DEA is no shrinking violet when it comes to marijuana enforcement. Last year, Rosenberg declined to lessen restrictions on its use, maintaining its classification as a Schedule 1 controlled substance — which means it has no accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.

But Rosenberg wrote at the time that the DEA would “support and promote legitimate research regarding marijuana and its constituent parts.” The DEA, he wrote, already had approved such research, registering 354 people and institutions to study marijuana and related components, including the effects of smoked marijuana on humans.

The DEA indicated at the time it was willing to see those studies expand, asking for applications from people who wanted to grow marijuana to be used for research. The only source of marijuana for researchers then was — and is — the University of Mississippi, which has permission to grow and distribute the drug for research.

One still-waiting applicant is Lyle Craker, a professor at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Craker has spent years seeking approval to do research into whether other parts of marijuana plants have medicinal value.

“I’ve filled out the forms, but I haven’t heard back from them. I assume they don’t want to answer,’’ Craker said. “They need to think about why they are holding this up when there are products that could be used to improve people’s health. I think marijuana has some bad effects, but there can be some good, and without investigation we really don’t know.’’

Craker submitted his latest application Feb. 14; after getting additional questions from the DEA in March, he supplied additional information in April.

Brad Burge, spokesman for the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, said that the federal government for years has prevented important research into marijuana.

“That’s a sad state of affairs,’’ he said. “If the DEA is now asking for permission to say yes, then the resistance is now further up the chain of command.’’

Rosenberg indicated in a call with The Washington Post that he still would support more marijuana research.

“I stand by what I wrote,” he said.

Tension between Rosenberg and Trump is perhaps unsurprising. Rosenberg was appointed during the Obama administration, and he had served as chief of staff and senior counselor to James B. Comey, who was the FBI director until Trump fired him earlier this year.

The Justice Department has not rejected any of the 25 people whose applications to grow marijuana the DEA is considering. Rather, the department is not taking any action at all, officials said. Before approving such applications, DEA officials have to assess each applicant and determine whether their facility is secure and whether they had previously been complying with federal law.
 
As someone whose family is black, Somoan, Martian, and was personally lynched before being brought back to life by the Red Woman, what about Antifa, Chicago, and Benghazi?

This is the Real question that Rusty and his LIBBIE SYMPATHIZERS don't answer. AMAZING POST AS EVER. THE WHITE KING AKA DAPPER DON IS the only way we will survive LIBBIE CONJECTURE AND INNUENDO.
 
I really can't stand republican bull_hit.

Also, "fiscal conservative, socially liberal" people piss me off. Until you vote for and help implement positive social policy, please **** off. Once you get around to supporting positive social progress, we'll be happy to talk about fiscal policy (which republicans are awful at by the way).
 
They're lucky the dude didn't yell over them and then they yell over him and it becomes a hot jumbled incoherent mess
 
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