COULD USE A FEW DONATIONS! THANKS!
"Everyone knows that alcohol destroys brain cells. But I have dedicated my life to testing the theory that if you drink exactly the right amount, only the weak brain cells will die!" -- Michael Rivero
Democratic Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota has somehow made his running mate, Vice President Kamala Harris, look statesmanlike by comparison.
Indeed, if you do not believe that a pro-censorship tyrant with a decades-long love of communist China and an unhealthy interest in children’s sexuality could serve as a source of unintentional humor, then you have not yet seen Walz’s over-the-top behavior.
In a 27-second clip posted Monday to the social media platform X, Walz clapped like a seal before awkwardly welcoming Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Democratic Gov. Tony Evers of Wisconsin to the stage during a campaign rally, thereby prompting one of former President Donald Trump’s supporters to declare “something seriously wrong” with Walz.
According to WLUK-TV in Green Bay, Wisconsin, the three governors appeared together at an event Monday in Green Bay.
After clapping five times, as if expecting someone to throw him a fish, Walz made a dramatic pointing gesture.
Then, after more nervous-looking clapping, he gave Whitmer an awkward high-five. The unfortunate Evers received a handshake and brief embrace.
As repulsive as Whitmer is to every red-blooded, freedom-loving American male, the sight of Walz giving a female governor a high-five while reserving a handshake and embrace for a male governor looked, well, weird.
Over 600 service members died suddenly after being given the drug Remdesivir by doctors despite it not being approved by the FDA to fight COVID-19.
A military whistleblower leaked explosive documents from the Department of Defense Joint Trauma System, revealing that the deadly drugs were administered “liberally” to service members regardless of its official FDA approval.
The whistleblower, who chose to remain anonymous under the pseudonym Daniel LeMay, first gave the documents over to journalist J.M. Phelps.
While discussing the contents of the documents, LeMay explained that the “initial trial depicted data manipulation in favor of remdesivir.”
President Donald Trump helped raise money for New York City's most vulnerable women and children Thursday evening by bashing Kamala Harris, suggesting that some of her remaining male supporters are cuckolds and insinuating that Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) was a direct beneficiary of the tampons he put in boys' restrooms.
Trump's humorous critique of his opponent and the Democratic Party — which had the crowd in stitches and subsequently prompted many a meltdown in the liberal media and among Harris boosters — was thematically reinforced at the 79th annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation dinner by an unlikely source: Jim Gaffigan, a left-leaning comedian who called Trump a "fascist" in 2020.
Although Gaffigan made sure to poke fun at Trump, he risked the ire of his leftist peers by similarly knocking Harris — questioning her decision to blow off the event and suggesting that she became the Democratic candidate by undemocratic means.
"The Democrats have been telling us Trump's re-election is a threat to democracy," said Gaffigan. "In fact, they were so concerned of this threat that they staged a coup, ousted their democratically elected incumbent, and installed Kamala Harris."
Biden committed ‘impeachable conduct,’ ‘defrauded United States to enrich his family’
⚠️When are the REAL CRIMINALS going to pay for their crimes ?⚠️#NoEqualJustice #ThursdayMorning #Elections2024 pic.twitter.com/f3RAshonbq— AGNEWSLIVE (@AMErikaNGIRLLL) October 17, 2024
A group of shareholders is suing Moderna alleging the company knowingly inflated claims about the efficacy of its RSV vaccine for older adults. When the drugmaker later lowered expectations for the vaccine’s efficacy the stock price dropped precipitously.
A class-action lawsuit accuses Moderna of making “materially false and misleading statements” about the efficacy of its respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) shot, leading to significant damages for investors.
The lawsuit, filed Aug. 9 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, covers investors who owned or purchased Moderna stock between Jan. 18, 2023 — the day that Moderna announced that mRNA-1345, its candidate RSV vaccine, met primary efficacy endpoints in Phase 3 clinical trials — and June 25, 2024.
According to the lawsuit, Moderna misled investors by failing to disclose that “mRNA-1345 was less effective than Defendants had led investors to believe” and that “mRNA-1345’s clinical and/or commercial prospects were overstated.”
Our nation was founded, as every schoolchild knows, as a consequence of our aversion to “taxation without representation.” The North American colonies rose up in rebellion, after Britain imposed a raft of new taxes – including the much despised Stamp Tax, which required that stamps, for a fee, be put on most legal and commercial papers and documents1 to defray the expense of defending the newly expanded North American frontiers and the broader British empire. After winning the fight for self-determination, the Founding Fathers sought to establish a nation whose citizens were free to enjoy the fruits of their labors, unimpeded by a tax-hungry government. No less a figure than Thomas Jefferson wrote that excessive taxation was in direct opposition to this ideal.
In fact, Jefferson’s writings on taxation favor the concept of a simple system based on a single tax. “Having already paid its tax as Income, to pay another tax on the thing it purchased, is paying twice for the same thing; it is an aggrievance on the citizen . . . [and] contrary to the most sacred of the duties of a government,” he wrote in 1816.
Alexander Hamilton, our first secretary of the treasury, discouraged the idea of an income tax. He asserted in the Federalist Papers, “It is evident from the state of the country, from the habits of the people, from the experience we have had on the point itself, that it is impracticable to raise any very considerable sums by direct taxation.”
Hamilton backed the dollar with gold, consolidated debt, instituted a simple system of taxation and allowed government bonds to be used as currency to pay taxes. His initiatives produced a steady stream of revenue that propelled the nation to solvency and bolstered the economy – all the while maintaining relatively low taxes.
Pagination
- Previous page
- Page 49
- Next page


