Trump to ban people from 41 countries from travelling to US

It was more worrisome to watch Pence certify the election he lost, because trump's terrorists tried to kill him while he was doing it.
Since he wasn't a candidate for President, though he was the VP for the candidate, yeah that one was interesting. but not "fun".
 



‪ChuckCjmmn‬ ‪@chuckcjmmn.bsky.social‬
·
16h
Everyone knows who this is in reference to. What a blowout party this will be. #DemVoice1
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Cry harder bitch. I love this for you.
Notice his projection. Sybil has multiple socks, is upset with me because I've called him on it several times (not that he is able to hide it very well) and now claims others are guilty of having multiple socks too. Despite the fact you and I have very different personalities, he thinks you and I are the same person. His behavior is very emotional and very irrational.

From Grok:
Q: Why do liars think others are lying to them and thieves think others are trying to steal from them?

A:
This phenomenon often boils down to a psychological concept called projection. People tend to see the world through the lens of their own experiences, beliefs, and behaviors. Liars might assume others are lying because deception is a familiar part of their own toolkit—they know how easy it is to bend the truth, so they suspect others are doing the same. Thieves, similarly, might be hyper-aware of theft because they’ve got sticky fingers themselves; they project their own tendencies onto others, expecting everyone to operate with the same motives.

There’s also a trust factor at play. When someone’s dishonest or takes what isn’t theirs, they often lose faith in people’s integrity—why wouldn’t they, when they’re proof it’s possible to cross those lines? Studies in psychology, like those exploring attribution theory, show how individuals explain others’ actions based on their own traits. A 2010 paper from the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology found that people who cheat are more likely to suspect cheating in others, especially under stress or ambiguity.

It’s not universal, though—some liars and thieves might be too self-absorbed to care, or too good at compartmentalizing. But for many, it’s a mix of guilt, paranoia, and a warped mirror of their own nature.
 
Notice his projection. Sybil has multiple socks, is upset with me because I've called him on it several times (not that he is able to hide it very well) and now claims others are guilty of having multiple socks too. Despite the fact you and I have very different personalities, he thinks you and I are the same person. His behavior is very emotional and very irrational.

From Grok:
Q: Why do liars think others are lying to them and thieves think others are trying to steal from them?

A:
This phenomenon often boils down to a psychological concept called projection. People tend to see the world through the lens of their own experiences, beliefs, and behaviors. Liars might assume others are lying because deception is a familiar part of their own toolkit—they know how easy it is to bend the truth, so they suspect others are doing the same. Thieves, similarly, might be hyper-aware of theft because they’ve got sticky fingers themselves; they project their own tendencies onto others, expecting everyone to operate with the same motives.

There’s also a trust factor at play. When someone’s dishonest or takes what isn’t theirs, they often lose faith in people’s integrity—why wouldn’t they, when they’re proof it’s possible to cross those lines? Studies in psychology, like those exploring attribution theory, show how individuals explain others’ actions based on their own traits. A 2010 paper from the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology found that people who cheat are more likely to suspect cheating in others, especially under stress or ambiguity.

It’s not universal, though—some liars and thieves might be too self-absorbed to care, or too good at compartmentalizing. But for many, it’s a mix of guilt, paranoia, and a warped mirror of their own nature.
That one certainly rides the short bus.
 
They won't give you that nice of a coffin after you get your .30-06 lobotomy for attempting to assassinate the president, clown. They'll just throw your worthless corpse in the septic tank of the prison
^^^
If he could own a gun, I'd add Sybil to my list of Top Ten JPP members Most Likely to Commit Mass Murder.
 
Which is why it's in quotation marks, Terry. I know your automatic response is always to be a naysayer. IMO, it's part of your condition to always say no. If I say "The sky is blue", I have no doubt you'd argue that it isn't.
If you were saying it, I'd check with three reliable sources before accepting it as true.
 
Which is why it's in quotation marks, Terry. I know your automatic response is always to be a naysayer. IMO, it's part of your condition to always say no. If I say "The sky is blue", I have no doubt you'd argue that it isn't.
Naysayer. Cultist. Trumper. MAGAt. @T. A. Gardner is what it is. Yet another lonely, miserable, uneducated fool repeating the trash of the alt reich media it consumes until it believes that it's true. They seem to be everywhere while simultaneously not mattering at all.
 
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