Someone threw a drink on Tomi Laren?
Good for whoever did it; I hope it was red wine, or something else that stains permanently.
Someone threw a drink on Tomi Laren?
Good for whoever did it; I hope it was red wine, or something else that stains permanently.
It was half a glass of water while she was out for brunch with her mom
Followed by something like “Fuck that bitch!” There’s video.
Substitute in our lobster lovers name and that would work for that thread.
Right?
45’s name needs to be replaced with a blank space so that it can be recycled and reused as needed.
So… constitutional crisis incoming? Will democracy in the US collapse over Twitter?
You know… I would not be surprised in the least if that did in fact happen.
“Not with a bang, but a tweet…”
Our very long epitaph shall read: America… we had a decent run, but we never got the democracy thing right (a little up at the end there) and then we all got twitter and that was pretty much it. We twitted our democracy away.
I have that in my meme folder!
It’s quite useful, I imagine.
Someone needs to make cards out of that.
Reminds me of Adrian Piper’s art piece (which ive seen in two museums now) “My Calling Card.”
Happy cake day!
When big events, like gun shows or race weekends, come to town, police say gun thefts rise. They tell us crooks scan parking lots during the events, looking for NRA stickers and those are the vehicles they break into. Reporter Amanda Foster is sounding the alarm for anyone who leaves a gun in their car.
Just wait until the NRA hears about this and starts claiming that cars need to learn how to use firearms to protect themselves.
Him and his cronies now have their hands on a stash of limited edition rare and historic challenge coins. I bet the coins are already being exfiltrated to dresser drawers, attics and basements.
Donated second-hand clothes? Meet unintended consequences.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-rwanda-usa-trade-insight/trump-versus-rwanda-in-trade-battle-over-used-clothes-idUSKCN1IP0WB
Rwanda has bounced back in the past decade or so. As part of a drive to become a middle-income country by 2020, it is nurturing a garment sector it hopes can create 25,000 jobs.
But domestic demand for locally produced clothes has been stifled, east African governments say, by the ubiquity of cheap, second-hand garments imported from Europe and the United States.