"McCarthy says he will look at expunging Trump impeachment"

"Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said on Thursday that he would consider expunging one or both of former President Trump’s impeachments."

"In the last Congress, a group of more than 30 House Republicans led by Rep. Markwayne Mullin (Okla.) put forward a resolution to expunge Trump’s impeachment in the wake of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. The resolution was supported by the fourth-ranking Republican in the House, Republican Conference Chairwoman Elise Stefanik (N.Y.)."

https://thehill.com/homenews/house/...-he-will-look-at-expunging-trump-impeachment/

Orchestrating Trump's designs, the right has torn down many of America's leading institutions, and now they want to rewrite history, I suppose in the MAGA revision January 6th will be portrayed as some kind of Munich Beer Hall, could an "Art of the Putch" be coming next

Kevin is tossing away his legacy in hopes of a big payday from Pedo Don. He’s fucking stupid if he doesn’t realize Pedo Don habitually stiffs people he owes money.
 
I am far from being right wing, my position is centrist on most matters.

You’re a fucking foreigner living in a Third World Shithole under a pedophile King, dumbass.

You’re also a cowardly whiner about people reposting things you’ve posted on JPP. You’ll get yours. LOL
 
What a pathetic, pointless idea. Why not also make Jan. 6 "Trump Day" while they're at it, and celebrate insurrection and treason with a federal holiday?

Please don't give McCarthy any ideas.

I'm sure we will see some Post offices named in Trump's honor over the next two years.

Even though he wanted to do away with the Post office, and drive it into the ground right along with the Freedom Caucus desires to do the same thing!!
 
Please don't give McCarthy any ideas.

I'm sure we will see some Post offices named in Trump's honor over the next two years.

Even though he wanted to do away with the Post office, and drive it into the ground right along with the Freedom Caucus desires to do the same thing!!

I'd say of his very, very few accomplishments, he's done a great job of fucking up the USPS.
 
The white christian party is dead demographically

White evangelicals numbers have dwindled from 21 to 15% of the U.S. population as of 2020

They are older, and they tend to be concentrated more in the South and the Midwest. The dying demographic.

https://www.npr.org/2020/11/17/935910276/the-white-elephants-in-the-room

The Vanishing American Jew

THE GOOD NEWS is that American Jews--as individuals--have never been more secure, more accepted, more affluent, and less victimized by discrimination or anti-Semitism. The bad news is that American Jews--as a people--have never been in greater danger of disappearing through assimilation, intermarriage, and low birthrates. The even worse news is that our very success as individuals contributes to our vulnerability as a people. The even better news is that we can overcome this new threat to the continuity of American Jewish life and emerge with a more positive Judaism for the twenty-first century--a Judaism that is less dependent on our enemies for its continuity, and that rests more securely on the considerable, but largely untapped, strengths of our own heritage.
 
As more and more Americans (including many demorats) come to the realization that those impeachments were a desperate and appalling abuse of power, not to mention a pack of lies, I think you will find you are not changing any minds at all on the right. And if you're not changing any minds on the left about voting jackass, at least they might change their minds about voting for those particular jackasses.

And really? The Munich Putsch?View attachment 24194 .

If any president ever deserved impeachment...Trump did!

Only a moron would think the impeachments were the result of a "desperate and appalling abuse of power" and a "pack of lies."

Somehow, our Republic will have to find a way to survive the likes of Trump...and his continuing supporters. Trump and his supporters have done more harm to the United States of America than all of the US's foreign enemies throughout its history put together.
 
That's better- but then you're already a slave to potty-mouthed verbosity.

Haw, haw......................haw.


Our Palestinian fuckwit is losing steam fast but hanging in there.
We live in a cruel society where nobody seems willing to put him/her/it out of his/her/it's misery.

What the fuck is your pronoun, anyway, fuckwit? Not knowing for sure, I'll henceforth same time and go with 'it."
 
Then the Dems can take all records of the impeachment hearings, written, video, etc, all of which will continue to exist, and make them part of the permanent Congressional Record with provisions that they can never be removed.
Big deal. They can never say he was impeached because it would have been COMPLETELY expunged as if it had never happened. .
 
Big deal. They can never say he was impeached because it would have been COMPLETELY expunged as if it had never happened. .

Typical RWNJ-BS semantics.

History will always know forevermore, that Trump was and is a criminal traitor who committed treason and other crimes against the government. Unless the filthy, lying, underhanded scumbag propagandists and truth deniers on the right manage to get themselves into a position where they can get away with re-writing history, much the same as what happened in the USSR under Stalin.

Stalin being the guy whose brand of leadership and governing style you and your Trumpsucker ilk base your preferences on.
 
Our Palestinian fuckwit is losing steam fast but hanging in there.
We live in a cruel society where nobody seems willing to put him/her/it out of his/her/it's misery.

What the fuck is your pronoun, anyway, fuckwit? Not knowing for sure, I'll henceforth same time and go with 'it."

Hard man.


NiftyNiblick

"The towelhead savage even makes animal sounds. Fuck her/him/it with a rusty fishing knife. Useless piece of shit."

https://www.justplainpolitics.com/s...ank-to-Ukrainian-forces&p=5450828#post5450828 #33


Haw, haw..........................haw.
 
Typical RWNJ-BS semantics.

History will always know forevermore, that Trump was and is a criminal traitor who committed treason and other crimes against the government. Unless the filthy, lying, underhanded scumbag propagandists and truth deniers on the right manage to get themselves into a position where they can get away with re-writing history, much the same as what happened in the USSR under Stalin.

Stalin being the guy whose brand of leadership and governing style you and your Trumpsucker ilk base your preferences on.
Have you ever sought treatment for your TDS?
 
Chamberlain saved dear old Blighty with his fighter procurement initiatives, you Septics are woefully ill informed peasants.

Neville Chamberlain Was Right

The maligned British prime minister did what we would want any responsible leader to do.

All of this factored into what Chamberlain was hearing from his top military advisers. In March 1938 the British military chiefs of staff produced a report that concluded that Britain could not possibly stop Germany from taking Czechoslovakia. In general, British generals believed the military and the nation were not ready for war. On Sept. 20, 1938, then-Col.Hastings Ismay, secretary to the Committee of Imperial Defense, sent a note to Thomas Inskip, the minister for the coordination of defense, and Sir Horace Wilson, a civil servant. Time was on Britain’s side, Ismay argued, writing that delaying the outbreak of war would give the Royal Air Force time to acquire airplanes that could counter the Luftwaffe, which he considered the only chance for defeating Hitler. British strategists, including Ismay, believed their country could win a long war (so long as they had time to prepare for it). This was a common belief, and doubtless factored into Chamberlain’s calculations.

Historians disagree whether the British military’s position relative to Germany was objectively better in 1939 than it was in 1938. The British military systematically overestimated German strength and underestimated its own in the lead-up to the Czechoslovak crisis, then shifted to a more optimistic tone in the months between Munich and the outbreak of war. Whatever the situation on the ground, it’s clear that the British military’s confidence in its abilities was far higher in 1939 than it was during the Munich crisis, especially because of the development of radar and the deployment of new fighter planes. In 1939, the military believed it was ready. In 1938, it didn’t.

Chamberlain’s diplomatic options were narrow as well. In World War I, Britain’s declaration of war had automatically brought Canada, Australia, and New Zealand into the fight. But the constitutional status of those Commonwealth countries had changed in the interwar period. According to the British archives, it was far from clear that Chamberlain could count on the backing of these countries if war broke out with Germany over Czechoslovakia. “There was really a feeling that the odds were against the potential of Britain being able to prevail facing Germany and potentially Italy and Japan, and with very few potential allies,” Dutton says. Soviet Russia was seen as a potential enemy to be feared, not a potential ally. America’s neutrality laws made it unlikely that even a willing president could bring the United States into the fight. There is also plenty of evidence in the archives that the British government had near-total disdain for the stability and fighting abilities of France, its only likely major-power ally. The average duration of a Third Republic government in the 1930s was nine months. When war did break out, Chamberlain’s doubts about France’s staying power proved prescient.

Nor was the British public ready for war in September 1938. “It’s easy to forget that this is only 20 years after the end of the last war,” Dutton notes. British politicians knew that the electorate would never again willingly make sacrifices like the ones it had made in World War I. The Somme and Passchendaele had left scars that still stung, and few, if any, British leaders were prepared to ask their people to fight those battles again. Many people saw the work of the Luftwaffe in the Spanish Civil War and feared that aerial bombardment would ensure that a second war would be more devastating that the first. Any strategy that claimed to offer an alternative to sending large armies to Europe therefore found supporters on every level of British society. “There was a feeling that any sensible politician would explore every avenue to avoid war before accepting war was inevitable,” Dutton says.

If Britain were to go to war with Hitler’s Germany, most people didn’t want to do so over Czechoslovakia. “People spoke of Czechoslovakia as an artificial creation,” Dutton says. “The perception by the ’30s was there was a problem, it was soluble by negotiation, and we ought to try. It was not the sort of thing that would unite the country [as] an issue to go to war over.”

Nor is the modern view of Hitler reflective of how the Nazi dictator was seen in the late 1930s. Blitzkrieg and concentration camps were not yet part of the public imagination. The British had already been dealing with one fascist, Benito Mussolini, for years before Hitler took power, and top British diplomats and military thinkers saw Hitler the way they saw Mussolini—more bravado than substance. Moreover, many Europeans thought German complaints about the settlement of World War I were legitimate. We now see Hitler’s actions during the early and mid-1930s as part of an implacable march toward war. That was not the case at the time. German rearmament and the reoccupation of the Rhineland seemed inevitable, because keeping a big country like Germany disarmed for decades was unrealistic. Hitler’s merging of Austria and Germany seemed to be what many Austrians wanted. Even the demands for chunks of Czechoslovakia were seen, at the time, as not necessarily unreasonable—after all, many Germans lived in those areas.

So, when Chamberlain returned from Munich with the news that he had negotiated a peace agreement, cheering crowds filled the streets and the press rejoiced.

To Chamberlain’s credit, his views changed as Hitler’s intentions became clearer. When Hitler took Prague and the Czech heartland in March 1939—his first invasion of an area that was obviously without deep German roots—Chamberlain said he feared it might represent an “attempt to dominate the world by force.” He doubled the size of the Territorial Army (Britain’s version of the National Guard) and, on April 20, launched peacetime conscription for the first time in Britain’s history. Then, on Sept. 3, some 11 months after Munich, he took his country to war.

Historians often find themselves moving against popular opinion. In the case of Chamberlain, though, the gap between public perception and the historical record serves a political purpose. The story we’re told about Munich is one about the futility and foolishness of searching for peace. In American political debates, the words “appeasement” and “Munich” are used to bludgeon those who argue against war. But every war is not World War II, and every dictator is not Hitler. Should we really fault Chamberlain for postponing a potentially disastrous fight that his military advisers cautioned against, his allies weren’t ready for, and his people didn’t support? “People should try to put themselves into the position of the head of the British government in the 1930s,” Dutton says. “Would they have taken the apparently huge risk of a war [that] might mean Armageddon for a cause that nobody was really convinced in?” Chamberlain’s story is of a man who fought for peace as long as possible, and went to war only when it was the last available option. It’s not such a bad epitaph.

https://slate.com/news-and-politics...the-british-prime-signed-the-munich-pact.html

Time for another history lesson..
 
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