Today in Fascism

🚨👀 WOWZERS.. SENATOR LINDSEY GRAHAM HAS DIED AT 71.

He had Just back from Kyiv, Ukraine meeting with Zelenskyy on Friday.

He found unresponsive Saturday night at his Capitol Hill home in D.C. cardiac arrest passed at 71 after SUDDEN illness.

All this just as President Trump was about to strike Iran. The President even mentioned maybe taking Kharg Island like Lindsey advocated for in March.

This is unreal. Maybe he got too excited about the idea of that happening. And after JUST being in Ukraine?

Now we have one Republican Senator that has died and we don’t even know WTF is going on Senator McConnell. 😏

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I’m sure he’s fine as long as Jake Tapper doesn’t say “McConnell is sharp as a tack”
 
Indeed, America DID vote for this.

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What a bueatiful story of forgiveness. We all have been betrayed and this story of the son returning to Daddy is amazing. It reminds me of Elon returning home.

Disgraced Lawyer Michael Cohen Says He and President Trump Have Reconciled, Bonded Over ‘Shared Experience of Betrayal’


He's going to write a new book called, "Coming Home."

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I was talking to one of my Dumocrate pals and he's starting to think this is all staged. I've been trying to this guy for years were watching a movie and T is one of the Stars. The military handpicked Donald to run as president in 2015. I believe he knew way back that this was the plan. The Deep State handpicked Barak when he was born. Two can play this game of deceit.

"Fight. Fight. Fight. 🇺🇸

Two years ago today, in Butler, PA, an assassin opened fire on President Donald J. Trump.

By the grace of God, his life was spared (and espola was not allowed to live out his life's dream of peeing on T's grave). As he rose to his feet - blood on his face, fist raised high - that moment became an enduring symbol of resilience, courage, & unbreakable determination for an entire nation." The White House

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Lindsey Graham is dead at 71. In 2016, he dared America on camera: "Use my words against me." This is his obituary. These are his words.

The facts first, plainly. Graham died Saturday night at his Washington home of what his office calls a brief and sudden illness. He served four terms, chaired the Judiciary and Budget committees, and spent decades as one of the loudest voices in American foreign policy.

By sunrise the whitewash had begun. Trump declared him a "true American Patriot." Netanyahu called him a beloved friend. The eulogies will tell you about his service.

They will not tell you about the ledger. So we will.

In December 2015, Graham looked into a camera and called Donald Trump a "race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot." By February 2016: "I think he's a kook. I think he's crazy." That May he wrote: "If we nominate Trump, we will get destroyed... and we will deserve it." He refused to vote for him.

Then Trump won, and Lindsey Graham discovered golf.

By late 2017 he was scolding the media for calling the president, yes, really, a kook.

His best friend was John McCain, a man Trump mocked for being captured in Vietnam and kept mocking after he was dead. Graham wept for McCain on the Senate floor, then deepened his devotion to the man who spat on his grave.

The words he wanted used came in 2016, when he swore that if a Supreme Court seat opened in an election year, the next president should fill it. In 2018 he repeated the promise and added: "hold the tape."

In October 2020, as Judiciary chairman, he rammed Amy Coney Barrett onto the Court eight days before the election.

In November 2020, Georgia's Republican secretary of state said Graham had called him asking about tossing legally cast mail ballots. Graham denied it, fought the grand jury subpoena all the way to the Supreme Court, and lost.

On January 6th, with the glass still on the Capitol floor, he announced: "Count me out. Enough is enough." He was back at Mar-a-Lago within months.

He cheered the country into Iraq. Three weeks ago he was on television promising that if diplomacy failed, Trump was "going to take the Strait of Hormuz."

Honesty requires one more line: he was, to the end, one of Ukraine's most reliable champions in the Senate, and he died the day after standing beside Zelensky in Kyiv. Even a ledger this dark has an entry in the other column.

But the ledger is the legacy. A man who saw exactly what Trump was, said so in the plainest English of his era, and then spent nine years kneeling to it for relevance.

He asked us to use his words against him.
Consider them used.
 
Lindsey Graham is dead at 71. In 2016, he dared America on camera: "Use my words against me." This is his obituary. These are his words.

The facts first, plainly. Graham died Saturday night at his Washington home of what his office calls a brief and sudden illness. He served four terms, chaired the Judiciary and Budget committees, and spent decades as one of the loudest voices in American foreign policy.

By sunrise the whitewash had begun. Trump declared him a "true American Patriot." Netanyahu called him a beloved friend. The eulogies will tell you about his service.

They will not tell you about the ledger. So we will.

In December 2015, Graham looked into a camera and called Donald Trump a "race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot." By February 2016: "I think he's a kook. I think he's crazy." That May he wrote: "If we nominate Trump, we will get destroyed... and we will deserve it." He refused to vote for him.

Then Trump won, and Lindsey Graham discovered golf.

By late 2017 he was scolding the media for calling the president, yes, really, a kook.

His best friend was John McCain, a man Trump mocked for being captured in Vietnam and kept mocking after he was dead. Graham wept for McCain on the Senate floor, then deepened his devotion to the man who spat on his grave.

The words he wanted used came in 2016, when he swore that if a Supreme Court seat opened in an election year, the next president should fill it. In 2018 he repeated the promise and added: "hold the tape."

In October 2020, as Judiciary chairman, he rammed Amy Coney Barrett onto the Court eight days before the election.

In November 2020, Georgia's Republican secretary of state said Graham had called him asking about tossing legally cast mail ballots. Graham denied it, fought the grand jury subpoena all the way to the Supreme Court, and lost.

On January 6th, with the glass still on the Capitol floor, he announced: "Count me out. Enough is enough." He was back at Mar-a-Lago within months.

He cheered the country into Iraq. Three weeks ago he was on television promising that if diplomacy failed, Trump was "going to take the Strait of Hormuz."

Honesty requires one more line: he was, to the end, one of Ukraine's most reliable champions in the Senate, and he died the day after standing beside Zelensky in Kyiv. Even a ledger this dark has an entry in the other column.

But the ledger is the legacy. A man who saw exactly what Trump was, said so in the plainest English of his era, and then spent nine years kneeling to it for relevance.

He asked us to use his words against him.
Consider them used.
Someone already posted, "He knew better".
 
What a bueatiful story of forgiveness. We all have been betrayed and this story of the son returning to Daddy is amazing. It reminds me of Elon returning home.

Disgraced Lawyer Michael Cohen Says He and President Trump Have Reconciled, Bonded Over ‘Shared Experience of Betrayal’


He's going to write a new book called, "Coming Home."

View attachment 39709
He can help t with his upcoming cookbook "Made from Things Grown in a Prison Garden".
 
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