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The Trump Warrant Had No Legal Basis

Wait, you are criticizing me for “Mensa this, test that” when I’m merely responding to his constant fake Mensa test claims?

Such a hypocrite. I’ve never ”conjured up“ anything. Save your white knighting for someone that deserves it.

LOL You are clearly pissed off by me mocking him, but whatevs…….

Pissed off? 😅 I think it's hilarious every time you attempt to mock him. So does he fwiw.

The irony of you and your white knight complaining about me white knight-ing wasn't lost on me btw. 😂
 
Ouch. That one left a mark.

Im always amazed when people bring those two up like they speak for the entire black community, when in reality they just say things that make white rednecks more comfortable with themselves for years of discrimination.

If he had called them tokens you would have enjoyed it more imo. That's just how you are...not that I'd excuse the behavior.
 
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Yes.

I really enjoy the easy questions. Keep them coming.


I guess he didn't make posts #4 & #12 ?

Capt Sav-A-Ho has put on his cape...

keep-calm-captain-save-a-ho-is-here.jpg
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Mdfgator
Pissed off? 😅 I think it's hilarious every time you attempt to mock him. So does he fwiw.

The irony of you and your white knight complaining about me white knight-ing wasn't lost on me btw. 😂
I don't think you know what the term white knight means.

Take a lap.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: RayGravesGhost
Pissed off? 😅 I think it's hilarious every time you attempt to mock him. So does he fwiw.

The irony of you and your white knight complaining about me white knight-ing wasn't lost on me btw. 😂
In addition to not understanding what a white knight is, I don’t think you understand how the internet works.

Let’s say I constantly bring up how rich and successful I am. Now that May bother some people who would be jealous of my success. However, should someone find out that I was actually an unemployed ditch digger, then people would have every right to mock me every time I tried to fake claim my riches.

Same thing here. Sunburnt for years kept talking about the Mensa test he passed, until I proved him to be a fraud. So now every time he makes his fake claim, I will continue to mock him, as is my internet right.

Now that may bother you since he is part of your crew, but you’ll just have to get over it. The mocking will continue until morale improves, as the saying goes.
 
Does time slow for me when I travel by air at 18,000 feet? Surely the board's 2 slowest can answer the question. I did. If time slows, by how much?

Would this place be worth visiting without the board's slowest entertaining the board's majority?
 
In comparison to someone on the ground?
Yes. marginally. The dilation of time is negligible but occurs according to Einstein

sunburnt thinks he gets to ask questions but not answer them...

Show the proof of your answer to time & energy


newFile.jpg
 
I guess he didn't make posts #4 & #12 ?

Capt Sav-A-Ho has put on his cape...

keep-calm-captain-save-a-ho-is-here.jpg

See post #8, which comes before 12, where @BSC911 begins crying about Mensa before Mensa was mentioned in #12 (hence my conjured comment).

😂

My post, post #9, made light of that fact.

You suck at this. 😂🤣🤣
 
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In addition to not understanding what a white knight is, I don’t think you understand how the internet works.

Let’s say I constantly bring up how rich and successful I am. Now that May bother some people who would be jealous of my success. However, should someone find out that I was actually an unemployed ditch digger, then people would have every right to mock me every time I tried to fake claim my riches.

Same thing here. Sunburnt for years kept talking about the Mensa test he passed, until I proved him to be a fraud. So now every time he makes his fake claim, I will continue to mock him, as is my internet right.

Now that may bother you since he is part of your crew, but you’ll just have to get over it. The mocking will continue until morale improves, as the saying goes.

Didn't read.
 
Ouch. That one left a mark.

Im always amazed when people bring those two up like they speak for the entire black community, when in reality they just say things that make white rednecks more comfortable with themselves for years of discrimination.
The most important thing that I get from listening to them is their belief in and inspiration by the Holy Spirit. In other words they recognize that our country is in a struggle between good and evil and they stand against evil. The racism constantly practiced by the Democrat Party is evil.
 
You do know that Candace Owens was a race baiter of the highest order right?
Took her claims of racism to court

She's also a rent freeloader

She also ran a democratic website after flunking out of school and not paying her rent but found out you can get paid way more money for being a sellout uncle tom for the conservative movement

Hallelujah !!! I think she found the Holy Spirit :rolleyes:
 
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Ouch. That one left a mark.

Im always amazed when people bring those two up like they speak for the entire black community, when in reality they just say things that make white rednecks more comfortable with themselves for years of discrimination.
Ever since I was a youth, I have tried to follow a path whereby I do not participate in this "race" business because I am convinced it does not involve any of the good things in life. When it comes to the human race,
we should consider everyone our brothers and sisters and place their well-being above that of our own. I got this from the teachings of the bible.
It is clear to me that the black race has been treated badly in the past in our country. A lot of this has been led by and imposed by Democrats. I would like to see us end this hurt and hate created by racism. Acting in a racial manner because of past or present wrongs is not going to end racism or make it right.
 
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The most important thing that I get from listening to them is their belief in and inspiration by the Holy Spirit. In other words they recognize that our country is in a struggle between good and evil and they stand against evil. The racism constantly practiced by the Democrat Party is evil.
But not by the Republican Party.

Got it.
 
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You do know that Candace Owens was a race baiter of the highest order right?
Took her claims of racism to court

She's also a rent freeloader

She also ran a democratic website after flunking out of school and not paying her rent but found out you can get paid way more money for being a sellout uncle tom for the conservative movement

Hallelujah !!! I think she found the Holy Spirit :rolleyes:
She certainly found her audience and is milking it for all its worth. AWMs
 
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Reactions: RayGravesGhost
Ever since I was a youth, I have tried to follow a path whereby I do not participate in this "race" business because I am convinced it does not involve any of the good things in life. When it comes to the human race,
we should consider everyone our brothers and sisters and place their well-being above that of our own. I got this from the teachings of the bible.
It is clear to me that the black race has been treated badly in the past in our country. A lot of this has been led by and imposed by Democrats. I would like to see us end this hurt and hate created by racism. Acting in a racial manner because of past or present wrongs is not going to end racism or make it right.

Acting in a "racial manner" means what exactly? You mean mention race?

You can look to Candace Owens (political operator) and Jason Whitlock (sports writer) for black leaders who inspire you through the Holy Spirit...though I've never heard either them talk about the bible or the Holy Spirit

Black people tend to look to church leaders for that sort of thing...not secular TV personalities

Rev Raphael Warnock is a good example

But I was going to introduce you another real black leader and as luck would have it he just wrote a new opinion piece about the student debt issue

Let me just say he ain't no Candace Owens or Jason Whitlock

God must have been listening 🙏

The Rev William Barber II - Founder of the multiracial "Poor People's Campaign"

6rbrh5.jpg


https://www.yahoo.com/news/republicans-opposing-student-loan-relief-155051754.html
Republicans Opposing Student-Loan Relief Are Forgetting the Biblical Tradition of Debt Forgiveness
William J. Barber II
Thu, August 25, 2022 at 11:50 AM·5 min read

While President Biden’s announcement of student-debt forgiveness elicited shouts of joy from many of the 43 million Americans who could experience relief under his plan, Republicans have responded by declaring their opposition to the very idea of debt forgiveness. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell accused Biden of “socialism,” while Pennsylvania Representative Dan Meuser declared it a “moral hazard” to forgive “self imposed debt.” For decades, Republicans have claimed to champion biblical values, and MAGA enthusiasts like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene have more recently embraced the goal of a “Christian nation.” But nothing exposes the hypocrisy of Christian nationalism more than Republicans’ knee-jerk reaction against debt forgiveness. It is, after all, something Jesus taught his disciples to pray for.

“Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors,” is more than a line from the Lord’s Prayer that children memorize in Sunday school. For practicing Christians, it is a regular reminder of the Jubilee tradition that Jesus embraced in his first sermon in Luke’s gospel. “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,” Jesus declared from the prophet Isaiah, “and has anointed me to proclaim… the favorable year of the Lord.” As his 1st-century hearers knew, Jesus was referring to the debt forgiveness laid out in Leviticus 25, which prescribes a regular social practice of clearing debts in order to correct for the accumulated injustice of an unequal distribution of resources in society. The idea doesn’t come from Karl Marx, as McConnell suggests, but from ancient Scripture.

It’s amazing to us that many of the same people who consistently vote for corporate tax breaks and policies that give more money to our wealthiest neighbors cry “socialism” when anyone proposes relief to poor people who are saddled by debt. As people who took vows to proclaim the biblical text, we find such reactionary defense of wealth to be the antithesis of biblical values.

While the Jubilee is a clear command of Scripture, biblical scholars have debated how often it was actually practiced in ancient Israel. But the economic historian Michael Hudson, who has directed a decades-long study at Harvard’s Peabody Museum, argues in his book …and forgive them their debts that the notion of Jubilee wasn’t simply an ideal for ancient Israel, but rather a practical lesson learned during the Babylonian exile. Ancient Mesopotamian societies had learned from experience that crippling debt was an inevitable consequence of lending at interest (what the Bible calls “usury”). For the good of the whole, a practice of “Clean Slate” debt forgiveness emerged to keep society functioning. The children of Israel came to understand this practice as God’s design.

Of course, people of goodwill can disagree on policy. While some conservatives have expressed concern that Biden’s debt-forgiveness plan could exacerbate inflation, we side with those who argue that the Administration should do more, along with Congressional action, to address extreme inequality and the racial wealth gap in America. By forgiving twice as much for borrowers who qualified for Pell Grants as undergraduates, Biden’s plan does target relief to low-income families, which are disproportionately Black, brown, Asian, and Native. Equally important to the plan is its hedge against interest going forward. For borrowers who pay 5% of their expendable income toward repaying the undergraduate loans each month, interest will be forgiven. And low-income debtors who make less than 225% of the federal poverty line will not owe any payments until their income rises to a living wage. These, too, are steps toward an economy where people who go to work every day can afford to feed, clothe, and house their families, and even take a little time off now and then to enjoy time with one another.

But it’s not enough. The $20,000 cap for Pell Grant recipients, for instance, leaves millions of those most severely impacted by predatory lending still saddled with debt. To experience the full benefit of Jubilee, we need to wipe the slate clean for those who are carrying the heaviest burdens of debt.

As Christian pastors, we know that the false promise of a “Christian nation” has persuaded millions of Americans to support policies that hurt God’s people. In a multi-faith democracy, we don’t need our faith to be privileged by state power. But every faith can and should inform our vision for our common life. The tradition of debt forgiveness, which is shared by Christians, Jews, and Muslims alike, offers a powerful vision for a way forward from the historic inequality that currently harms our economy. It’s no surprise that defenders of the wealthy elite are crying “socialism.” Their forebearers attacked New Deal and Great Society programs along the same lines. But moral movements throughout our nation’s history have made the case that moral policies that lift from the bottom are good for all of us.

Biden’s student-loan forgiveness plan won’t bring the Jubilee we pray for every day, but it’s a step in the right direction. Some of us would love to hear the President and other Democrats talk more about how policies like this help poor and low-income people, not just the “working class.” Such public commitments to the common good can go a long way toward motivating voters who don’t believe politicians from any party care about them. If a moral movement of people committed to the common good can rally for the midterms, this week’s action shows that the Biden Administration is ready and willing to push further toward an economy that works for all of us in 2023. That’s a vision we pray more Americans can get behind.
 
Time and energy. Most of my questions are designed to measure one's ability to reason. If energy does not degrade time cannot exist. The majority here gets it. The board's slow do not.

Among my favorites:

1. Are there any among us who has a fear of heights?
2. Sarah said, "my two young daughters have absolutely nothing in common." is Sarah lying?
3. BamaFan1137 favorite. A thunderstorm knocks out Ramon's electricity. In Ramon's sock drawer are 5 orange socks and 5 blue socks. How many socks must Ramon remove from his sock drawer and feel his way out to his lightning-lit driveway to insure he has a matched pair?
4. Ghost and nail were born April 26, 1982 at 5:10 AM and 46 seconds. Which one is older?

These questions are designed to measure one's ability to reason. gator1776 can ask me a million questions I can't answer. I'm not trained in his field. BSC thinks he can ask NavigatorII a million questions he can't answer.
 
Time and energy. Most of my questions are designed to measure one's ability to reason. If energy does not degrade time cannot exist. The majority here gets it. The board's slow do not.

Time does NOT stop when energy degradation no longer occurs


https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang/does-time-exist-182965/

When we talk about a state of maximum entropy, we’re talking about a state from which no further energy can be extracted; a maximum entropy system cannot perform work, as we say in physics.

But whether the entropy of your system remains constant, increases slowly, increases rapidly, or is even artificially decreased by inputting energy into it, the perceived arrow of time never ceases to flow nor reverses direction.
 
Time does NOT stop when energy degradation no longer occurs


https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang/does-time-exist-182965/

When we talk about a state of maximum entropy, we’re talking about a state from which no further energy can be extracted; a maximum entropy system cannot perform work, as we say in physics.

But whether the entropy of your system remains constant, increases slowly, increases rapidly, or is even artificially decreased by inputting energy into it, the perceived arrow of time never ceases to flow nor reverses direction.
Do you know what theory is?
 
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Reactions: nail1988
Things that make you go hmmmmmm...........

My understanding is that he has CIA/FBI SAPs that detail the 2016 plot to portray him as a toady of Vladimir Putin and the Kremlin. Too bad for the CIA and FBI. Trump had the full legal authority to declassify that intelligence product. The CIA and FBI are frantic to protect the identities of the British , Australian and Italian intelligence personnel who helped plant evidence to frame people working for Trump. That is one of the motives behind the decision to raid Trump’s Florida residence and try to keep that information from the public.

 
Acting in a "racial manner" means what exactly? You mean mention race?

You can look to Candace Owens (political operator) and Jason Whitlock (sports writer) for black leaders who inspire you through the Holy Spirit...though I've never heard either them talk about the bible or the Holy Spirit

Black people tend to look to church leaders for that sort of thing...not secular TV personalities

Rev Raphael Warnock is a good example

But I was going to introduce you another real black leader and as luck would have it he just wrote a new opinion piece about the student debt issue

Let me just say he ain't no Candace Owens or Jason Whitlock

God must have been listening 🙏

The Rev William Barber II - Founder of the multiracial "Poor People's Campaign"

6rbrh5.jpg


https://www.yahoo.com/news/republicans-opposing-student-loan-relief-155051754.html
Republicans Opposing Student-Loan Relief Are Forgetting the Biblical Tradition of Debt Forgiveness
William J. Barber II
Thu, August 25, 2022 at 11:50 AM·5 min read

While President Biden’s announcement of student-debt forgiveness elicited shouts of joy from many of the 43 million Americans who could experience relief under his plan, Republicans have responded by declaring their opposition to the very idea of debt forgiveness. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell accused Biden of “socialism,” while Pennsylvania Representative Dan Meuser declared it a “moral hazard” to forgive “self imposed debt.” For decades, Republicans have claimed to champion biblical values, and MAGA enthusiasts like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene have more recently embraced the goal of a “Christian nation.” But nothing exposes the hypocrisy of Christian nationalism more than Republicans’ knee-jerk reaction against debt forgiveness. It is, after all, something Jesus taught his disciples to pray for.

“Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors,” is more than a line from the Lord’s Prayer that children memorize in Sunday school. For practicing Christians, it is a regular reminder of the Jubilee tradition that Jesus embraced in his first sermon in Luke’s gospel. “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,” Jesus declared from the prophet Isaiah, “and has anointed me to proclaim… the favorable year of the Lord.” As his 1st-century hearers knew, Jesus was referring to the debt forgiveness laid out in Leviticus 25, which prescribes a regular social practice of clearing debts in order to correct for the accumulated injustice of an unequal distribution of resources in society. The idea doesn’t come from Karl Marx, as McConnell suggests, but from ancient Scripture.

It’s amazing to us that many of the same people who consistently vote for corporate tax breaks and policies that give more money to our wealthiest neighbors cry “socialism” when anyone proposes relief to poor people who are saddled by debt. As people who took vows to proclaim the biblical text, we find such reactionary defense of wealth to be the antithesis of biblical values.

While the Jubilee is a clear command of Scripture, biblical scholars have debated how often it was actually practiced in ancient Israel. But the economic historian Michael Hudson, who has directed a decades-long study at Harvard’s Peabody Museum, argues in his book …and forgive them their debtsthat the notion of Jubilee wasn’t simply an ideal for ancient Israel, but rather a practical lesson learned during the Babylonian exile. Ancient Mesopotamian societies had learned from experience that crippling debt was an inevitable consequence of lending at interest (what the Bible calls “usury”). For the good of the whole, a practice of “Clean Slate” debt forgiveness emerged to keep society functioning. The children of Israel came to understand this practice as God’s design.

Of course, people of goodwill can disagree on policy. While some conservatives have expressed concern that Biden’s debt-forgiveness plan could exacerbate inflation, we side with those who argue that the Administration should do more, along with Congressional action, to address extreme inequality and the racial wealth gap in America. By forgiving twice as much for borrowers who qualified for Pell Grants as undergraduates, Biden’s plan does target relief to low-income families, which are disproportionately Black, brown, Asian, and Native. Equally important to the plan is its hedge against interest going forward. For borrowers who pay 5% of their expendable income toward repaying the undergraduate loans each month, interest will be forgiven. And low-income debtors who make less than 225% of the federal poverty line will not owe any payments until their income rises to a living wage. These, too, are steps toward an economy where people who go to work every day can afford to feed, clothe, and house their families, and even take a little time off now and then to enjoy time with one another.

But it’s not enough. The $20,000 cap for Pell Grant recipients, for instance, leaves millions of those most severely impacted by predatory lending still saddled with debt. To experience the full benefit of Jubilee, we need to wipe the slate clean for those who are carrying the heaviest burdens of debt.

As Christian pastors, we know that the false promise of a “Christian nation” has persuaded millions of Americans to support policies that hurt God’s people. In a multi-faith democracy, we don’t need our faith to be privileged by state power. But every faith can and should inform our vision for our common life. The tradition of debt forgiveness, which is shared by Christians, Jews, and Muslims alike, offers a powerful vision for a way forward from the historic inequality that currently harms our economy. It’s no surprise that defenders of the wealthy elite are crying “socialism.” Their forebearers attacked New Deal and Great Society programs along the same lines. But moral movements throughout our nation’s history have made the case that moral policies that lift from the bottom are good for all of us.

Biden’s student-loan forgiveness plan won’t bring the Jubilee we pray for every day, but it’s a step in the right direction. Some of us would love to hear the President and other Democrats talk more about how policies like this help poor and low-income people, not just the “working class.” Such public commitments to the common good can go a long way toward motivating voters who don’t believe politicians from any party care about them. If a moral movement of people committed to the common good can rally for the midterms, this week’s action shows that the Biden Administration is ready and willing to push further toward an economy that works for all of us in 2023. That’s a vision we pray more Americans can get behind.

TLDR
 
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Acting in a "racial manner" means what exactly? You mean mention race?

You can look to Candace Owens (political operator) and Jason Whitlock (sports writer) for black leaders who inspire you through the Holy Spirit...though I've never heard either them talk about the bible or the Holy Spirit

Black people tend to look to church leaders for that sort of thing...not secular TV personalities

Rev Raphael Warnock is a good example

But I was going to introduce you another real black leader and as luck would have it he just wrote a new opinion piece about the student debt issue

Let me just say he ain't no Candace Owens or Jason Whitlock

God must have been listening 🙏

The Rev William Barber II - Founder of the multiracial "Poor People's Campaign"

6rbrh5.jpg


https://www.yahoo.com/news/republicans-opposing-student-loan-relief-155051754.html
Republicans Opposing Student-Loan Relief Are Forgetting the Biblical Tradition of Debt Forgiveness
William J. Barber II
Thu, August 25, 2022 at 11:50 AM·5 min read

While President Biden’s announcement of student-debt forgiveness elicited shouts of joy from many of the 43 million Americans who could experience relief under his plan, Republicans have responded by declaring their opposition to the very idea of debt forgiveness. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell accused Biden of “socialism,” while Pennsylvania Representative Dan Meuser declared it a “moral hazard” to forgive “self imposed debt.” For decades, Republicans have claimed to champion biblical values, and MAGA enthusiasts like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene have more recently embraced the goal of a “Christian nation.” But nothing exposes the hypocrisy of Christian nationalism more than Republicans’ knee-jerk reaction against debt forgiveness. It is, after all, something Jesus taught his disciples to pray for.

“Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors,” is more than a line from the Lord’s Prayer that children memorize in Sunday school. For practicing Christians, it is a regular reminder of the Jubilee tradition that Jesus embraced in his first sermon in Luke’s gospel. “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,” Jesus declared from the prophet Isaiah, “and has anointed me to proclaim… the favorable year of the Lord.” As his 1st-century hearers knew, Jesus was referring to the debt forgiveness laid out in Leviticus 25, which prescribes a regular social practice of clearing debts in order to correct for the accumulated injustice of an unequal distribution of resources in society. The idea doesn’t come from Karl Marx, as McConnell suggests, but from ancient Scripture.

It’s amazing to us that many of the same people who consistently vote for corporate tax breaks and policies that give more money to our wealthiest neighbors cry “socialism” when anyone proposes relief to poor people who are saddled by debt. As people who took vows to proclaim the biblical text, we find such reactionary defense of wealth to be the antithesis of biblical values.

While the Jubilee is a clear command of Scripture, biblical scholars have debated how often it was actually practiced in ancient Israel. But the economic historian Michael Hudson, who has directed a decades-long study at Harvard’s Peabody Museum, argues in his book …and forgive them their debtsthat the notion of Jubilee wasn’t simply an ideal for ancient Israel, but rather a practical lesson learned during the Babylonian exile. Ancient Mesopotamian societies had learned from experience that crippling debt was an inevitable consequence of lending at interest (what the Bible calls “usury”). For the good of the whole, a practice of “Clean Slate” debt forgiveness emerged to keep society functioning. The children of Israel came to understand this practice as God’s design.

Of course, people of goodwill can disagree on policy. While some conservatives have expressed concern that Biden’s debt-forgiveness plan could exacerbate inflation, we side with those who argue that the Administration should do more, along with Congressional action, to address extreme inequality and the racial wealth gap in America. By forgiving twice as much for borrowers who qualified for Pell Grants as undergraduates, Biden’s plan does target relief to low-income families, which are disproportionately Black, brown, Asian, and Native. Equally important to the plan is its hedge against interest going forward. For borrowers who pay 5% of their expendable income toward repaying the undergraduate loans each month, interest will be forgiven. And low-income debtors who make less than 225% of the federal poverty line will not owe any payments until their income rises to a living wage. These, too, are steps toward an economy where people who go to work every day can afford to feed, clothe, and house their families, and even take a little time off now and then to enjoy time with one another.

But it’s not enough. The $20,000 cap for Pell Grant recipients, for instance, leaves millions of those most severely impacted by predatory lending still saddled with debt. To experience the full benefit of Jubilee, we need to wipe the slate clean for those who are carrying the heaviest burdens of debt.

As Christian pastors, we know that the false promise of a “Christian nation” has persuaded millions of Americans to support policies that hurt God’s people. In a multi-faith democracy, we don’t need our faith to be privileged by state power. But every faith can and should inform our vision for our common life. The tradition of debt forgiveness, which is shared by Christians, Jews, and Muslims alike, offers a powerful vision for a way forward from the historic inequality that currently harms our economy. It’s no surprise that defenders of the wealthy elite are crying “socialism.” Their forebearers attacked New Deal and Great Society programs along the same lines. But moral movements throughout our nation’s history have made the case that moral policies that lift from the bottom are good for all of us.

Biden’s student-loan forgiveness plan won’t bring the Jubilee we pray for every day, but it’s a step in the right direction. Some of us would love to hear the President and other Democrats talk more about how policies like this help poor and low-income people, not just the “working class.” Such public commitments to the common good can go a long way toward motivating voters who don’t believe politicians from any party care about them. If a moral movement of people committed to the common good can rally for the midterms, this week’s action shows that the Biden Administration is ready and willing to push further toward an economy that works for all of us in 2023. That’s a vision we pray more Americans can get behind.
Wow... that is quite an epistle. I am reminded that people wiser than me, incuding our founders, have said you shall not mix church and state. This seems about right to me, although I would add sports to the things you shouldn't mix with politics. I have only heard J. Whitlock speak a few times but every time I have noted him express thanks for his Christian upbringing. I have also noted Burgess Owens express the same spiritual inspiration. Finally, to have poor people pay for the college loans of people who have far more wealth than them is just wrong.
 
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Reactions: nail1988
Pissed off? 😅 I think it's hilarious every time you attempt to mock him. So does he fwiw.

The irony of you and your white knight complaining about me white knight-ing wasn't lost on me btw. 😂
I think we all do. Bsuck is dumber than a red brick...trying to call someone out that has more brains in his fingernail clippings than he does between his dorky ears!
 
Ever since I was a youth, I have tried to follow a path whereby I do not participate in this "race" business because I am convinced it does not involve any of the good things in life. When it comes to the human race,
we should consider everyone our brothers and sisters and place their well-being above that of our own. I got this from the teachings of the bible.
It is clear to me that the black race has been treated badly in the past in our country. A lot of this has been led by and imposed by Democrats. I would like to see us end this hurt and hate created by racism. Acting in a racial manner because of past or present wrongs is not going to end racism or make it right.
you made a wonderful post. Lefties do not feel this way AT ALL. They are racists to the bone. Race is EVERYTHING to them
 
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