Where is Buckly??

USFREEDOM911

MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN
Buckly hasn't been around now, for 3 days.

I'm concerned that he might have self-destructed over his December Surprise.

Does anyone know him personally and if so, could you contact him??
 
Sessions evil attack on black voting remembered
http://www.hickoryrecord.com/news/us...a9fb3f18e.html




WASHINGTON (AP) — A failed voting-fraud prosecution from more than 30 years ago is likely to re-emerge as a contentious issue during Sen. Jeff Sessions' confirmation hearing for attorney general.
Sessions was dogged by his handling of the case as U.S. attorney during his 1986 confirmation hearing for a federal judgeship, when he tried to fend off complaints of a wrongful prosecution. He devoted more space to that case than any other in a questionnaire he submitted this month to the Senate Judiciary Committee for the attorney general post, suggesting the matter is likely to come up again during his Jan. 10-11 confirmation hearing before the panel.
The 1985 prosecution involved three black civil rights activists, including a former adviser to Martin Luther King Jr., who were accused of illegally tampering with large numbers of absentee ballots in rural Perry County, Alabama. The defendants argued that they were assisting voters who were poor, uneducated and in many cases illiterate, and marked the ballots with the voters' permission
 
I am sure bucky, the waterhead kid and the #blacklivesmatter terrorists are mustering for the first offensive of their red and rainbows democratic revolution.
 
Sessions evil attack on black voting remembered
http://www.hickoryrecord.com/news/us...a9fb3f18e.html




WASHINGTON (AP) — A failed voting-fraud prosecution from more than 30 years ago is likely to re-emerge as a contentious issue during Sen. Jeff Sessions' confirmation hearing for attorney general.
Sessions was dogged by his handling of the case as U.S. attorney during his 1986 confirmation hearing for a federal judgeship, when he tried to fend off complaints of a wrongful prosecution. He devoted more space to that case than any other in a questionnaire he submitted this month to the Senate Judiciary Committee for the attorney general post, suggesting the matter is likely to come up again during his Jan. 10-11 confirmation hearing before the panel.
The 1985 prosecution involved three black civil rights activists, including a former adviser to Martin Luther King Jr., who were accused of illegally tampering with large numbers of absentee ballots in rural Perry County, Alabama. The defendants argued that they were assisting voters who were poor, uneducated and in many cases illiterate, and marked the ballots with the voters' permission

Uh, that's illegal. Sessions was right.
 
Poor Bukkkle, too embarrassed to show up here after his humiliation when his dumbass prediction that he flooded the entire board with,



FAILED
 
The fucker just turned up, only trouble is there are now so many DC Munkies on here that he doesn't seem quite so crazy anymore.

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