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  • It's required viewing when you register Democratic, Tom. You get handed a unicorn tshirt, a pink dildo, and a Season 3 DVD of Toddlers & Tiaras. Well, and 200 ballots to fill out at home.

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    • I doubt that those ballots need to be "filled out".

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      • Kari Lake promoting a conspiracy theory that claims Trump won California and Illinois because Dominion and Smartmatic voting machines rig the vote to whatever George Soros wants. Seems like these people practically begging for a defamation suit. Never heard of this Greg Rubini guy.

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        • And another county experimenting with hand counting ballots finds out it’s far more time consuming than they realized.

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          • 25 ballots in 87 minutes? 3 1/2 minutes per ballot?

            Sounds like a public-sector union job.

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            • LOL at California being red.
              Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
              Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.

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              • Originally posted by Da Geezer View Post
                25 ballots in 87 minutes? 3 1/2 minutes per ballot?

                Sounds like a public-sector union job.
                People forget that in even numbered years there's potentially dozens of races and issues on the ballot. I checked and my ballot from last year's midterm had at least 20 races/issues/bonds on it. If I lived in Columbus proper it would've been even more. A couple minutes per ballot sounds realistic if you're keeping track of every single race by hand.

                I'm pretty sure in a lot of countries the Presidential race is held separately from any local ones. Maybe, MAYBE, you can get away with a hand count then. But probably not anywhere with a big population.

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                • Originally posted by iam416 View Post
                  LOL at California being red.
                  Heh, yeah there's delusional and then there's straitjacket padded cell cuckoo.

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                  • Yeah, I'm not even sure that supports a defamation claim because no one of this planet and vaguely connected to reality could believe it.
                    Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
                    Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.

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                    • recount of california govenor tells you everything you need to know about california.

                      far as america being great it is.

                      I think most people are better off then their parents

                      day to day i think most people get along

                      I think most would rather be in this country then any other country.

                      whether we think our kids and grandkids are gonna be better off that is the question

                      Education in this country lags far beyond much of the world that teaches the basics instead of being politically motivated breeding grounds

                      Patriotism and people in the military are both trending down in general support

                      we owe a lot of money there has to be a point where economically we crash and burn

                      we cant sit on the sidelines and let rule of law be a joke. when you have to close stores because of massive organized shoplifting and theft there's something wrong with this country

                      and finally there's been generations of Americans who worked there asses off for their kids and grandkids, for love of a country to wave a flag or root for america in the olympics or the world cup celebrate the 4th of july or welcome home Americans who were overseas fighting for their country. They are now called White supremicists as kind of a catchall term used by certain media figures and politicians as a fearmongering expression which drives us apart

                      I love the country that gave me my chance
                      fear for the country im leaving my descendants




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                      • ....... decent punctuation and general proper use of the English language earned a "Like" from me. Oh, and I share Crashes sentiments for the most part.
                        Mission to CFB's National Championship accomplished. But the shine on the NC Trophy is embarrassingly wearing off. It's M B-Ball ..... or hockey or volley ball or name your college sport favorite time ...... until next year.

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                        • **Crash’s
                          "The problem with quotes on the Internet is that it is sometimes hard to verify their authenticity." -Abraham Lincoln

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                          • In other news today, the Senate passed (House already passed it and sent to the Senate) a Republican sponsored bill blocking Biden's plan to forgive $20K of Pell Grant loans for borrowers earning less than $125k/y. It is estimated to cost tax payers $400B. This is more of a symbolic move because (1) Biden has said he'll veto it and R's don't have the numbers to over-ride. (2) The USSC has a ruling pending on a law suit brought by a conservative group that says that Biden exceeded his executive powers by creating the plan - he set the plan in motion sighting the authority of the Department of Education to create such EOs in an emergency (COVID emergency still in effect when he issued the EO).

                            SCOTUS seemed skeptical of Biden's claimed authority in legal briefings. That's entirely consistent with SCOTUS' trend in undercutting the administrative state that has emerged under both D and R administrations.
                            Mission to CFB's National Championship accomplished. But the shine on the NC Trophy is embarrassingly wearing off. It's M B-Ball ..... or hockey or volley ball or name your college sport favorite time ...... until next year.

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                            • Originally posted by Dr. Strangelove View Post
                              Kari Lake promoting a conspiracy theory that claims Trump won California and Illinois because Dominion and Smartmatic voting machines rig the vote to whatever George Soros wants. Seems like these people practically begging for a defamation suit. Never heard of this Greg Rubini guy.

                              Huge if true

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                              • For your Saturday morning coffee read. Sorry, I too hate print material that won't resize. This is a great article from the Economist. It's already been reprinted elsewhere so......

                                Bakhmut and the spirit of Verdun

                                Two small front-line towns that symbolise the horrors of war



                                Jun 1st 2023

                                A hollow crater bright with wild flowers marks the spot where the little village school used to stand. Another, the former bakery. Today, on the ridge above Verdun in eastern France, buttercups and clover waft in the breeze where shrapnel, blood and ground flesh once scarred the soil. Swallows dart to and fro. During the Battle of Verdun in 1916, the village of Fleury-devant-Douaumont swapped hands over a dozen times, as French and German troops bombarded each other in a pitiless war of attrition to advance the front line. By the end of the battle, one of the bloodiest of the first world war, the French had lost 163,000 men and the Germans 143,000; the front line scarcely budged. Listen to this story. Enjoy more audio and podcasts on iOS or Android.
                                The unimaginable slaughter, in a small place of little renown, came to mark an existential struggle against an imperialist aggressor. In the French mind, Verdun stands for resistance and honour, sacrifice and unity. It was at Verdun in 1984, before the cemetery, that François Mitterrand and Helmut Kohl, then French president and German chancellor, held hands in a gesture that became emblematic of Franco-German reconciliation and peace in Europe.

                                Now, over 1,400 miles to the east, another small place of little renown has come to symbolise a modern existential struggle to repel an expansionist invader: Bakhmut. Since August 2022 Vladimir Putin’s Russia has pounded the Ukrainian town, sending tens of thousands of men to their deaths to try to capture the place, street by street. A former home to 70,000 people has been razed in many parts to rubble. Yesterday’s horrors in Verdun—the filth of the trenches, the relentless shelling, the sandbagged bunkers—are today’s in Bakhmut.

                                Any parallel between Verdun and Bakhmut is of course imprecise. In 1916 the battlefield lay outside the town, in orchards and woods above Verdun; Bakhmut is an urban battle, fought amid blocks of apartment buildings and wide roads. The number of dead in Bakhmut, estimated at perhaps 20,000-30,000, is a fraction of the number that fell by the end of the Battle of Verdun, on December 18th 1916. In the ten months of fighting, 60m shells pounded the ground at Verdun. When it began at 7:15am on February 21st 1916 the German artillery assault shook the villages and fields above Verdun with “an incalculable deluge of shells” wrote Captain Anatole Castex, a French officer. Louis Barthas, a barrel-maker from the Languedoc region conscripted into the French army, noted “thousands of shredded, pulverised corpses…at places where the earth was soaked with blood, swarms of flies swirled and eddied.” Yet for all the differences between Verdun and Bakhmut, three points nonetheless link the two battles.

                                One is the raw, muscular nature of the warfare involved, requiring staggering effort for meagre advances. It took the Germans a mere five days to capture the fort at Douaumont, the largest of the defences protecting Verdun. Yet it took four months for German forces to advance the three kilometres from the fort to take Fleury. To this day, the soil around Verdun is filled with unexploded ordnance and the remains of an estimated 80,000 bodies. “The forest here is a shroud,” says Nicolas Barret, director of the Verdun Memorial. Fleury and other villages flattened during the battle have never been rebuilt.

                                Despite today’s precision weaponry, the artillery battle in Bakhmut has been rudimentary, exhausting ammunition supplies and putting factories on a war footing, just as at Verdun. Shelling has forced soldiers into trenches or underground as it did then, underscoring the value of picks and shovels, cover and concealment. The fight for Bakhmut has now lasted even longer than that at Verdun, the longest in the first world war. Its battlefield is a “meat grinder”, noted Yevgeny Prigozhin, who fed the meat while leading the assault as head of Russia’s Wagner mercenaries.

                                A second point, as Anthony King at Warwick University points out, is that a small town of little consequence can take on strategic value if it becomes the place where opposing forces concentrate their forces. Initially, Russia put offensive power into taking Bakhmut in the hope of securing roads to the cities of Slovyansk and Kramatorsk. In 1916 Germany’s military chief, Erich von Falkenhayn, thought he could take Verdun swiftly with superior artillery, to secure railway lines and distract French forces from the Somme. Both attempts met fierce resistance. At Verdun, as in Bakhmut, each side drew the other into committing vast military resources to avoid slim territorial losses, turning inconsequential towns into places of military significance. All not quiet


                                Above all, each place has acquired a symbolic importance that outweighs its original strategic value. At Verdun, the French were caught ill-prepared. Under Philippe Pétain’s command, they built resistance around the rotation of forces, limiting soldiers’ time at the front and supplying the effort by road from Bar-le-Duc. “They shall not pass” became the Verdun battle cry, a defiant call to hold the town, just as President Volodymyr Zelensky called Bakhmut “our fortress”. “What Bakhmut shares with Verdun is the notion of prestige,” says Nicolas Czubak, a historian at the Verdun Memorial. The war was not won or lost at Verdun; but the French turned it into an emblem of strength that made retreat unthinkable.

                                The Ukrainians’ defiant attempt to hold Bakhmut was set back in May when Russian mercenaries claimed to have taken the town. Its symbolic value, though, remains. Russia threw all its force into the capture of Bakhmut. Yet it is no closer to victory in its war against Ukraine. The battle has exposed splits in Russia’s armed forces. And the Ukrainians still hold a sliver of the town as well as the outskirts; Russian troops are vulnerable inside it.

                                Back at Verdun, the Ukrainians’ valiant efforts are being followed closely by those who keep alive the memory of the horrors of 1916. As a mark of respect and fellow-feeling, they would like to invite Mr Zelensky to visit, when the time is right.​
                                Mission to CFB's National Championship accomplished. But the shine on the NC Trophy is embarrassingly wearing off. It's M B-Ball ..... or hockey or volley ball or name your college sport favorite time ...... until next year.

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