1. Hello,


    New users on the forum won't be able to send PM untill certain criteria are met (you need to have at least 6 posts in any sub forum).

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  2. Hello,


    You can now get verified on forum.

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    Please note that verification is completely optional and it won't give you any extra features or access. You will have a check mark (as I have now, if you want to look) and verification will only mean that you are who you say you are.

    You may not use a fake pictures for verification. If you try to verify your account with a fake picture or someone else picture, or just spam me with fake pictures, you will get Banned!

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    Best regards,

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  1. mstrman

    mstrman Porn Star

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    JOE BIDEN
    Biden's ballot issues in Ohio aren't going away as state Democrats receive another urgent warning
    Biden is on track to miss Ohio's candidate certification deadline, officials say.

    President Biden may not appear on the ballot in Ohio come Election Day, Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose warned Tuesday.

    The Ohio Democratic Party has received weeks of warnings from both LaRose's office and the state legislature saying that Biden is on track to miss the state's deadline for filing as a candidate. LaRose, a Republican, says the Democratic Party has yet to offer a solution that fits with existing law.

    Biden's problems arise from Ohio's requirement that parties certify their presidential candidates at least 90 days before Election Day. The Democratic Party won't certify Biden until its national convention in Chicago, which is scheduled for Aug. 19, just 75 days before the election.

    "I’ve said from here to Colorado that it’s in the best interest of voters to have a choice in the race for president. I’m also duty-bound to follow the law as Ohio’s chief elections officer," LaRose said in a statement Tuesday.

    "As it stands today, the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee will not be on the Ohio ballot. That is not my choice. It’s due to a conflict in the law created by the party, and the party has so far offered no legally acceptable remedy," he continued.
     
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  2. mstrman

    mstrman Porn Star

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    Bill Maher battles journalist over Biden’s re-election chances: ‘He’s going to f---ing lose!’
    Liberal HBO host also slammed critics who've claimed he's 'changed' over the years.

    HBO host Bill Maher predicted President Biden would lose the presidential election to Donald Trump on this week's episode of his "Club Random" podcast.

    The talk show host was debating the November election outcome with his liberal guest, journalist Kara Swisher.

    Maher confessed he would "vote for [Biden's] head in a jar of blue liquid" over Trump, but he was still concerned Biden would lose to Trump.

    Read entire story here: www.foxnews.com/media/bill-maher-battles-journalist-over-bidens-re-election-chances-hes-going-f-ing-lose
     
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  3. Ifwetry

    Ifwetry Porn Star

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    Biden average approval nationally drops a full percentage point in one day from 38.8 to 37.8 with many saying it's because he is taking credit for the bill that weakly replaces the one Trump had in place and that Biden got rid of his first day in office.
     
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    1. Ifwetry
      Biden down another 0.2% today
       
      Ifwetry, Jun 6, 2024
      Barry D, mstrman and odi144 like this.
  4. mstrman

    mstrman Porn Star

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    Screenshot 2024-06-06 081252.png
     
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  5. mstrman

    mstrman Porn Star

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    Screenshot 2024-06-06 081203.png
     
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  6. mstrman

    mstrman Porn Star

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    01HZPJHF0VSJTJB5X9WS8VYRFK.jpeg
     
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  7. mstrman

    mstrman Porn Star

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    01HZN155R9BYCXVW2PMCAGSFH3 (1).jpeg
     
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  8. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    OOPS
    <iframe width="660" height="371" src="" title="Awkward moment Jill Biden appears to tell Joe not to sit at D-Day ceremony, but he does anyway" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen></iframe>
     
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  9. CS natureboy

    CS natureboy Porn Star

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  10. CS natureboy

    CS natureboy Porn Star

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    Joe Biden's Attempt to Mock Reporters Turns Into Another 'Is He Okay?' Moment
    June 17, 2024


    [​IMG]
    AP Photo/Susan Walsh

    Discussions around Joe Biden's mental acuity are reaching a fever pitch, with even the White House feeling the need to respond.

    On Monday, Karine Jean-Pierre claimed that all the recent videos of the president appearing senile were "cheap fakes," which is an allegation that they are manipulated or outright created in some way. To be clear, there is no evidence that this video of Biden freezing up and needing to be led off stage by Barack Obama is altered in any way.

    There is also no evidence that the video below, showing the president speaking with all the precision of a permanent nursing home patient is "misinformation."

    https://twitter.com/RNCResearch/sta...e-weirdest-moments-of-his-presidency-n2175603

    It wasn't long after Jean-Pierre's gaslighting session that a new "cheap fake" dropped. During an Oval Office meeting with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, Biden had another "Is he okay?" moment.

    https://twitter.com/RNCResearch/sta...e-weirdest-moments-of-his-presidency-n2175603

    I'd transcribe what you just heard, but I have no idea what he said or was even trying to say. It appears he was attempting to mock the reporters who were shouting questions at him, but in doing so just came across as a bumbling, senile old man making unintelligible noises. That video is like watching a drunk homeless guy who hangs out in a park and shouts at birds.

    What kind of president acts that way? For all the hand-wringing about Donald Trump and "decorum" over the years, Biden's tendency to expose his lack of mental acuity while also diminishing the office has become legendary. Far from bringing normalcy back, the president has shown he's an angry, disrespectful person. Couple that with his severe mental decline, and it's not a pretty sight.

    All of these videos only serve to hype the upcoming debate more. It may be the highest-rated political event in American history at this rate. Americans are going to be glued to their screens to find out if there are enough drugs in the world to help Biden deliver a halfway sentient performance.
     
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    1. odi144
      FJB
       
      odi144, Jun 18, 2024
      mstrman and sirius1902 like this.
  11. mstrman

    mstrman Porn Star

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    Top Dems: Biden has losing strategy

    Alex Thompson


    Senior Democrats, including some of President Biden's aides, are increasingly dubious about his theory for victory in November, which relies on voter concerns about Jan. 6, political violence, democracy and Donald Trump's character.

    Why it matters: Biden's core inner circle hasn't lost faith in that approach, the product of Biden and his longtime aide, Mike Donilon.

    • But that puts them on an island within much of the party about what will decide the election, as polls consistently have shown Biden tied or behind even after a slight bump following Trump's criminal conviction.
    • Several polls have indicated voters are deeply concerned about democracy but they are most worried about inflation and the economy. They've also shown Biden's support slipping among key Democratic voting groups: Blacks, Latinos, young adults and union members, but the Democracy message is resonating with older voters.
    • Biden's former chief of staff Ron Klain, who has known Donilon for decades, told Axios his view is: "In Mike I trust."
    What they're saying: A Democratic strategist in touch with the campaign told Axios: "It is unclear to many of us watching from the outside whether the president and his core team realize how dire the situation is right now, and whether they even have a plan to fix it. That is scary."

    • People close to the president told Axios they worry about raising concerns in meetings because Biden's group of longtime loyal aides can exile dissenters.
    • "Even for those close to the center, there is a hesitance to raise skepticism or doubt about the current path, for fear of being viewed as disloyal," a person in Biden's orbit told Axios, speaking on condition of anonymity because of those dynamics.
    • "There is not a discussion that a change of course is needed."

    Driving the news: Donilon, Biden's top political aide, privately has reassured people that voters will "do the right thing" in November by embracing democracy and rejecting Trump, according to a Biden aide who has heard Donilon say it.

    • "Joe Biden is a great president, and great presidents get re-elected," is another common Donilon refrain.
    • Donilon — one of the most experienced and understated Democratic operatives in the country — has worked with Biden since 1981. He has argued that polls aren't fully reflecting voters' concerns about democracy.
    • In response to questions for this story, Biden advisers told Axios: "These people have clearly not heard from Mike or anyone on the team the president's detailed case for re-election."
    Donilon articulated a nuanced version of this to The New Yorker's Evan Osnos earlier this year, saying that Jan. 6 would affect the 2024 election much like 9/11 was central to the 2004 election.

    • "The Democratic Party didn't want to believe it was a 9/11 election," Donilon told Osnos. "…I decided, after the election, I would never be part of a presidential campaign that didn't figure out — with clarity — what it wanted to say and stick to it."
    By Election Day this year, Donilon believes "the focus will become overwhelming on democracy. I think the biggest images in people's minds are going to be of January 6th."

    • The Biden advisers told Axios: "This is Joe Biden's strategy — and Mike Donilon and his top advisers are in agreement with the president. The polling shows that democracy ended up a top issue of concern for voters in 2022, and it will be in 2024."
    Biden's inner circle is cohesive but insular: Aides joke that there's an unofficial "no new friends rule."

    • The group includes First Lady Jill Biden's top aide, Anthony Bernal, and new Deputy Chief of Staff Annie Tomasini — low-profile but powerful aides who have worked mostly for the Bidens since 2008 and are known for their focus on loyalty.
    • When Tomasini was still head of Oval Office operations last year, she and Bernal surprised people by sitting in on interviews for Biden's campaign manager, a person involved in the process told Axios.
    • A source familiar with the interviews told Axios: "This was not a surprise. Annie and Anthony are part of the senior advisers group, and every senior adviser was part of the interviews."
    Zoom in: Despite a year head start, a larger campaign team and spending more than twice what Trump's team has spent on ads since early March, Biden's numbers against Trump have largely stayed the same the past few months, with the slight bump after Trump's conviction.

    • During the ad campaigns and Trump's trial, however, Biden's average approval rating hit an all-time low on June 9 of 37.4%, with 56.7% disapproving, according to FiveThirtyEight. His current approval rate is 38.4%.
    Longtime Democratic strategist Howard Wolfson, who worked for former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg in the 2020 primary against Biden, told Axios: "If the election were today, we would lose. Can that change? Yes. Is it on the path to do so? I don't see that yet."


    • "The stakes for the debate" on June 27 between Biden and Trump "are sky high," he said.
    • Biden campaign spokesperson Kevin Munoz responded: "Everything this campaign is doing is for the election in November."
    • He added: "Winning campaigns focus on voters, not the chattering class. We are heads down, doing the work we need to do to win again this November."
    Reality check: The angst among many Democrats is about the larger narrative Biden's team is telling rather than its tactics, as it's poured money into field programs and zeroed in on key voters.

    • Democrats close to the campaign told Axios that morale and management have largely improved since Jen O'Malley Dillon left the White House and joined the campaign earlier this year.
    • Donilon frequently talks about democracy, but the campaign's most-run TV ad so far is about Obamacare, according to an analysis by NPR and AdImpact.
    • And polls do show there are many voters concerned about democracy after Trump tried to overturn the results of the last election.
    The intrigue: Biden aides worry that they didn't take full advantage of the head start they had in 2023.

    • Biden's inner circle often makes decisions by committee. That slowed down the campaign's decision-making, people familiar with the dynamic told Axios.
    • There also has been internal second-guessing over the team spending $25 million-plus on an ad buy last fall that didn't move Biden's numbers.
    Zoom out: Many Democrats think the president and his closest aides learned the wrong lessons from Democratic wins in 2020 and 2022, and it's causing them to misread 2024.

    • Biden's core team, including Donilon, believes Biden won in 2020 because his "soul of the nation" message resonated and he presented a clear "moral contrast" to Trump.
    • In 2020, Donilon wanted to focus on Trump's character over the economy, even though "our own pollsters told us that talking about 'the soul of the nation' was nutty," he told the New Yorker.
    Biden's closest aides also argue that framing Republicans as "ultra MAGA" — along with Biden's speeches about democracy, which were mocked by some Democrats at the time — helped prevent a predicted "red wave" in 2022.

    • Biden and his close team have defied their doubters in the 2020 primary, the 2020 general election and the 2022 primaries. That's led them to be defiant toward those voices this time.
    But many Democrats — including some in the administration — say the Biden team's view of itself is distorted:

    • Biden won the 2020 Democratic primary largely because the party consolidated to stop Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and picked the candidate who polls showed as the most competitive.
    • Even with a once-in-a-century pandemic, Biden barely beat Trump by less than 45,000 votes across three states. "Biden didn't win, Trump lost," one Democrat close to the White House put it.
    One Democratic operative who worked on several close races in the midterms told Axios: "2022 was a classic case of running away from a president, and their takeaway was, 'Wow people really like us.' "

    • "... I get why they spun it that way, but I also think many of them believe it."