Author Topic: Trump is putting on a show, he is stepping aside. There is no voter fraud.  (Read 1664 times)

Methyl m1ke

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Read the copy and paste in its entirety and it will (or should) all make sense. Think critically. Put petty emotions aside and read and grasp the bigger picture.
Yes socialism is coming and I dont see any way around it. Covid did not create this situation but it has drastically accelerated it. Biden is the right man for the job in so many ways. I will try to explain after. This is the great reset explained. Its not tin foil hat bullshit this is real.


"Recession and Automation Changes Our Future of Work, But There are Jobs Coming, Report Says
Amanda Russo, Public Engagement, World Economic Forum, +41 79 392 6898, arus@weforum.org

Espańol I Français I Deutsch I عربي I Japanese

The workforce is automating faster than expected, displacing 85 million jobs in next five years
The robot revolution will create 97 million new jobs, but communities most at risk from disruption will need support from businesses and governments
In 2025, analytical thinking, creativity and flexibility are among the top skills needed; with data and artificial intelligence, content creation and cloud computing the top emerging professions
The most competitive businesses will be those that choose to reskill and upskill current employees
Read the Future of Jobs Report, watch a video overview and watch livestreamed sessions from the Jobs Reset Summit.
Geneva, Switzerland, 21 October 2020 – The Future of Jobs 2020 report has found that COVID-19 has caused the labour market to change faster than expected. The research released today by the World Economic Forum indicates that what used to be considered the “future of work” has already arrived.

By 2025, automation and a new division of labour between humans and machines will disrupt 85 million jobs globally in medium and large businesses across 15 industries and 26 economies. Roles in areas such as data entry, accounting and administrative support are decreasing in demand as automation and digitization in the workplace increases. More than 80% of business executives are accelerating plans to digitize work processes and deploy new technologies; and 50% of employers are expecting to accelerate the automation of some roles in their companies. In contrast to previous years, job creation is now slowing while job destruction is accelerating.

“COVID-19 has accelerated the arrival of the future of work,” said Saadia Zahidi, Manging Director, World Economic Forum. “Accelerating automation and the fallout from the COVID-19 recession has deepened existing inequalities across labour markets and reversed gains in employment made since the global financial crisis in 2007-2008. It’s a double disruption scenario that presents another hurdle for workers in this difficult time. The window of opportunity for proactive management of this change is closing fast. Businesses, governments and workers must plan to urgently work together to implement a new vision for the global workforce.”

Some 43% of businesses surveyed indicate that they are set to reduce their workforce due to technology integration, 41% plan to expand their use of contractors for task-specialized work, and 34% plan to expand their workforce due to technology integration.

By 2025, employers will divide work between human and machines equally. Roles that leverage human skills will rise in demand. Machines will be primarily focused on information and data processing, administrative tasks and routine manual jobs for white- and blue-collar positions.

New sense of urgency for the reskilling revolution

As the economy and job markets evolve, 97 million new roles will emerge across the care economy, in fourth industrial revolution technology industries like artificial intelligence, and in content creation fields. The tasks where humans are set to retain their comparative advantage include managing, advising, decision-making, reasoning, communicating and interacting. There will be a surge in demand for workers who can fill green economy jobs, roles at the forefront of the data and artificial intelligence economy, as well as new roles in engineering, cloud computing and product development.

For those workers set to remain in their roles in the next five years, nearly 50% will need reskilling for their core skills.

Despite the current economic downturn, most employers recognize the value of reskilling their workforce. An average of 66% of employers surveyed expect to see a return on investment in upskilling and reskilling of current employees within one year. They also expect to successfully redeploy 46% of workers within their own organization. “In the future, we will see the most competitive businesses are the ones that have invested heavily in their human capital – the skills and competencies of their employees,” Zahidi said.

Building a more inclusive future of work

The individuals and communities most negatively affected by the unprecedented changes brought about by COVID-19 are likely to be those that are already most disadvantaged. In the absence of proactive efforts, inequality is likely to be exacerbated by the dual impact of technology and the pandemic recession.

The Future of Jobs 2020 report partner ADP Research Institute tracked the impact of COVID-19 on the United States labour market. Between February and May 2020, data showed that displaced workers were, on average, mostly female, younger and had a lower wage. Comparing the impact of the global financial crisis of 2008 on individuals with lower education levels to the impact of the COVID-19 crisis, the impact today is far more significant and more likely to deepen existing inequalities.

"In the wake of COVID-19, the US workforce experienced immense change, and we were able to track this impact on the labour market in near real time," said Ahu Yildirmaz, Head of ADP Research Institute Labour Market Research. "While the swift and staggering job loss in the initial months was significant, it is only one anomaly of this 'recession.' Industry distribution, business size and worker demographics were all disrupted due to labour market changes brought about by COVID-19, signalling that this downturn is unlike any other in modern US history."

“The pandemic has disproportionately impacted millions of low-skilled workers,” said Jeff Maggioncalda, Chief Executive Officer of Coursera, another report partner. “The recovery must include a coordinated reskilling effort by institutions to provide accessible and job-relevant learning that individuals can take from anywhere in order to return to the workforce.”

Currently, only 21% of businesses worldwide are able to make use of public funds for reskilling and upskilling programmes. The public sector will need a three-tiered approach to help workers. This includes providing stronger safety nets for displaced workers, improving the education and training systems and creating incentives for investments in markets and the jobs of tomorrow.

Companies can measure and disclose their treatment of employees by adopting environmental, social and governance (ESG) metrics. This will help benchmark success, provide support where it is needed and ensure new gaps that arise are quickly identified and closed.

Remote working is here to stay but requires adaptation

Some 84% of employers are set to rapidly digitalize working processes, including a significant expansion of remote working. Employers say there is the potential to move 44% of their workforce to operate remotely.

According to the report, 78% of business leaders expect some negative impact on worker productivity. This suggests that some industries and companies are struggling to adapt quickly enough to the shift to remote working caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

To address concerns about productivity and well-being, about one-third of all employers said they will take steps to create a sense of community, connection and belonging among their employees.

Career pivots become the “new normal”

The research also indicated that a growing number of people are making career changes to entirely new occupations. According to LinkedIn data gathered over the past five years, some 50% of career shifts into data and artificial intelligence are from different fields. That figure is much higher for sales roles (75%), content creation and production positions, such as social media managers and content writers (72%), and engineering roles (67%).

"As we think about ways to upskill or transition large populations of the workforce who are out of work as a result of COVID-19 into new, more future-proofed jobs, these new insights into career transitions and the skills required to make them have huge potential for leaders in the public and the private sector alike,” said Karin Kimbrough, Chief Economist at LinkedIn.

“Our research reveals the majority of transitions into jobs of tomorrow come from non-emerging jobs, proving that many of these jobs are more accessible than workers might think, Kimbrough continued. “If we can help individuals, and the leaders who are directing workforce funding and investment, identify the small clusters of skills that would have an outsized impact on opening up more sustainable career paths, we can make a real difference in addressing the unprecedented levels of unemployment that we're seeing globally.”

Data shows how long to reskill

According to The Future of Jobs Survey, core skills such as critical thinking, analysis and problem-solving are consistently top of the reskilling and upskilling priorities for educators and businesses. Newly emerging in 2020 are skills in self-management such as resilience, stress tolerance and flexibility.

Data from Coursera suggests that individuals could start gaining the top 10 skills for each emerging profession in people and culture, content writing, sales and marketing in one to two months. Those wishing to expand their skills in product development and data and artificial intelligence could do so in two to three months, and those switching into cloud computing and engineering could make headway in the new skillset through a four to five-month learning programme.

There has been a fourfold increase in the number of people seeking opportunities for online learning under their own initiative, a fivefold increase in employers offering their workers online learning opportunities and a ninefold enrolment increase in people accessing online learning through government programmes.

Those in employment are placing larger emphasis on personal development courses; those unemployed have placed greater emphasis on learning digital skills such as data analysis, computer science and information technology.

"The pandemic has accelerated many of the trends around the future of work, dramatically shrinking the window of opportunity to reskill and transition workers into future-fit jobs,” said Hamoon Ekhtiari, CEO of FutureFit AI. “No matter what prediction you believe about jobs and skills, what is bound to be true is heightened intensity and higher frequency of career transitions especially for those already most vulnerable and marginalized.”

“The Future of Jobs Report is a critical source of insights in supporting companies and government through these workforce transitions, and FutureFit AI is honoured to share our data and insights in the Report, Ekhtiari continued. “We look forward to continuing to contribute to a just, worker-first, and data-powered recovery as a partner of the World Economic Forum's New Economy & Society community and its Reskilling Revolutions Platform."

The Future of Jobs

Now in its third edition, The Future of Jobs report maps the jobs and skills of the future, tracking the pace of change. It aims to shed light on the pandemic-related disruptions in 2020, contextualized within a longer history of economic cycles and the expected outlook for technology adoption, jobs and skills in the next five years. The Future of Jobs survey informs the report. It is based on the projections of senior business leaders (typically Chief Human Resource Officers and Chief Strategy Officers) representing nearly 300 global companies, which collectively employ 8 million workers.

It presents the workforce planning and quantitative projections of chief human resource and strategy officers through to 2025, while also drawing on the expertise of a wide range of World Economic Forum executive and expert communities. The report features data from LinkedIn, Coursera, ADP and FutureFit.AI, which have provided innovative new metrics to shed light on one of the most important challenges of our time."


https://www.weforum.org/press/2020/10/recession-and-automation-changes-our-future-of-work-but-there-are-jobs-coming-report-says-52c5162fce/


Coach I voted for Trump and he was the right man for the job until covid hit. I do think China hid the seriousness of Covid precisely to force what should have happened gradually into a compressed time frame.

 I realize Trump supporters are banking on some kind of legal triumph but it is NOT happening and would be catastrophic if it did.

We as a country need to defeat covid ASAP. The longer it drags on the more socialism it creates. As entry level jobs vanish they leave displaced workers who have to be kept afloat one way or another. The process of automation taking over jobs that were done by unskilled workers has been greatly accelerated. Our economy is going to tank for the foreseeable future and Trump would never be able to keep the peace. Biden has a shot.

The vaccines we have coming are our saving grace to be. There is no conspiracy no cabal of shadowy figures plotting mankinds destruction. However this country needs a leader that it likes one who reaches out to all demographics so there can be some element of TRUST. I cannot imagine the 80 million or so that voted for Biden rushing out to get Trumps vaccine can anyone else?

Trump could have been that guy but he was limited and the direction he wanted to go became toxic due to covid. This is what it is. We need people to do whatever the heck it takes to get past covid and we need to do it RIGHT NOW.

Trumps wall was a great idea but imagine if he was re elected now what would happen? The fucking wall would literally trap the people who came here to work and want to go home when the jobs dry up.

Covid totally changed the dynamic of our society and Trump knew it hence all his weird reactions about it for the past year. Trump was the best president we ever had and China fucked us real good and I am pissed enough to boycott chinese goods for the foreseeable future.

We as a nation need to unite under Biden and get past Covid and focus our energies on massive chinese boycotts. We can do it if we work together.




Marty Champions

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People getting disability checks will coast through
A

LurkerNoMore

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A biographer of Donald Trump turned one of the president’s favorite insults — “loser” — against him and described Trump’s refusal to accept defeat in the 2020 election as “buffoonery.”

“He is a profoundly incompetent person, a loser, if you might say,” Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael D’Antonio, a contributor for CNN, told the network’s “Newsroom” show on Friday.

“He’s so incompetent that he cannot even succeed at being a loser,” he said.

Dave D

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Who are these automated jobs replacing?

Ive heard older people talk about atm's replacing bank tellers. Self checkouts replacing cashiers...... 

Automation may be the future but there will still be jobs that suck.

Hypertrophy

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A biographer of Donald Trump turned one of the president’s favorite insults — “loser” — against him and described Trump’s refusal to accept defeat in the 2020 election as “buffoonery.”

“He is a profoundly incompetent person, a loser, if you might say,” Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael D’Antonio, a contributor for CNN, told the network’s “Newsroom” show on Friday.

“He’s so incompetent that he cannot even succeed at being a loser,” he said.

and here you are posting on an internet bulletin board as the pinnacle of your life’s achievements, lol Pot calling kettle...

obsidian

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Trumps wall was a great idea but imagine if he was re elected now what would happen? The fucking wall would literally trap the people who came here to work and want to go home when the jobs dry up.

You're not supposed to jump over the wall dum dum!

That's why there are border checkpoints. Why would people be trapped? Unless they are illegally here and want to hide their status.

LurkerNoMore

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and here you are posting on an internet bulletin board as the pinnacle of your life’s achievements, lol Pot calling kettle...

Yeah.  Someone has to point conservative stupidity and laugh about it.

obsidian

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We as a nation need to unite under Biden and get past Covid and focus our energies on massive chinese boycotts. We can do it if we work together.

The left did not want to unite behind Trump when he was working on Making America Great Again. Now they have the audacity to claim we should all unite. Fuck them! They don't deserve unity. They have only themselves to blame.

Biden is an arrogant cockroach. Have you seen his old videos where he insults people questioning him.

He said YOU don't deserve to know his position on packing the supreme court. So you want to get behind an asshole that thinks you don't deserve to know shit?! Are you fucking kidding me?!

Biden has dementia buddy. COVID has been used as a weapon by the globalists (who are pro-China) to destroy what's left of nationalistic USA. Not going to happen. The globalists should be taken out by force. US military should cancel their contracts. It is time to go medieval on them.

Mr Anabolic

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I stopped reading at:  "Biden is the right man for the job in so many ways"

Board_SHERIF

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Read the copy and paste in its entirety and it will (or should) all make sense. Think critically. Put petty emotions aside and read and grasp the bigger picture.
Yes socialism is coming and I dont see any way around it. Covid did not create this situation but it has drastically accelerated it. Biden is the right man for the job in so many ways. I will try to explain after. This is the great reset explained. Its not tin foil hat bullshit this is real.


"Recession and Automation Changes Our Future of Work, But There are Jobs Coming, Report Says
Amanda Russo, Public Engagement, World Economic Forum, +41 79 392 6898, arus@weforum.org

Espańol I Français I Deutsch I عربي I Japanese

The workforce is automating faster than expected, displacing 85 million jobs in next five years
The robot revolution will create 97 million new jobs, but communities most at risk from disruption will need support from businesses and governments
In 2025, analytical thinking, creativity and flexibility are among the top skills needed; with data and artificial intelligence, content creation and cloud computing the top emerging professions
The most competitive businesses will be those that choose to reskill and upskill current employees
Read the Future of Jobs Report, watch a video overview and watch livestreamed sessions from the Jobs Reset Summit.
Geneva, Switzerland, 21 October 2020 – The Future of Jobs 2020 report has found that COVID-19 has caused the labour market to change faster than expected. The research released today by the World Economic Forum indicates that what used to be considered the “future of work” has already arrived.

By 2025, automation and a new division of labour between humans and machines will disrupt 85 million jobs globally in medium and large businesses across 15 industries and 26 economies. Roles in areas such as data entry, accounting and administrative support are decreasing in demand as automation and digitization in the workplace increases. More than 80% of business executives are accelerating plans to digitize work processes and deploy new technologies; and 50% of employers are expecting to accelerate the automation of some roles in their companies. In contrast to previous years, job creation is now slowing while job destruction is accelerating.

“COVID-19 has accelerated the arrival of the future of work,” said Saadia Zahidi, Manging Director, World Economic Forum. “Accelerating automation and the fallout from the COVID-19 recession has deepened existing inequalities across labour markets and reversed gains in employment made since the global financial crisis in 2007-2008. It’s a double disruption scenario that presents another hurdle for workers in this difficult time. The window of opportunity for proactive management of this change is closing fast. Businesses, governments and workers must plan to urgently work together to implement a new vision for the global workforce.”

Some 43% of businesses surveyed indicate that they are set to reduce their workforce due to technology integration, 41% plan to expand their use of contractors for task-specialized work, and 34% plan to expand their workforce due to technology integration.

By 2025, employers will divide work between human and machines equally. Roles that leverage human skills will rise in demand. Machines will be primarily focused on information and data processing, administrative tasks and routine manual jobs for white- and blue-collar positions.

New sense of urgency for the reskilling revolution

As the economy and job markets evolve, 97 million new roles will emerge across the care economy, in fourth industrial revolution technology industries like artificial intelligence, and in content creation fields. The tasks where humans are set to retain their comparative advantage include managing, advising, decision-making, reasoning, communicating and interacting. There will be a surge in demand for workers who can fill green economy jobs, roles at the forefront of the data and artificial intelligence economy, as well as new roles in engineering, cloud computing and product development.

For those workers set to remain in their roles in the next five years, nearly 50% will need reskilling for their core skills.

Despite the current economic downturn, most employers recognize the value of reskilling their workforce. An average of 66% of employers surveyed expect to see a return on investment in upskilling and reskilling of current employees within one year. They also expect to successfully redeploy 46% of workers within their own organization. “In the future, we will see the most competitive businesses are the ones that have invested heavily in their human capital – the skills and competencies of their employees,” Zahidi said.

Building a more inclusive future of work

The individuals and communities most negatively affected by the unprecedented changes brought about by COVID-19 are likely to be those that are already most disadvantaged. In the absence of proactive efforts, inequality is likely to be exacerbated by the dual impact of technology and the pandemic recession.

The Future of Jobs 2020 report partner ADP Research Institute tracked the impact of COVID-19 on the United States labour market. Between February and May 2020, data showed that displaced workers were, on average, mostly female, younger and had a lower wage. Comparing the impact of the global financial crisis of 2008 on individuals with lower education levels to the impact of the COVID-19 crisis, the impact today is far more significant and more likely to deepen existing inequalities.

"In the wake of COVID-19, the US workforce experienced immense change, and we were able to track this impact on the labour market in near real time," said Ahu Yildirmaz, Head of ADP Research Institute Labour Market Research. "While the swift and staggering job loss in the initial months was significant, it is only one anomaly of this 'recession.' Industry distribution, business size and worker demographics were all disrupted due to labour market changes brought about by COVID-19, signalling that this downturn is unlike any other in modern US history."

“The pandemic has disproportionately impacted millions of low-skilled workers,” said Jeff Maggioncalda, Chief Executive Officer of Coursera, another report partner. “The recovery must include a coordinated reskilling effort by institutions to provide accessible and job-relevant learning that individuals can take from anywhere in order to return to the workforce.”

Currently, only 21% of businesses worldwide are able to make use of public funds for reskilling and upskilling programmes. The public sector will need a three-tiered approach to help workers. This includes providing stronger safety nets for displaced workers, improving the education and training systems and creating incentives for investments in markets and the jobs of tomorrow.

Companies can measure and disclose their treatment of employees by adopting environmental, social and governance (ESG) metrics. This will help benchmark success, provide support where it is needed and ensure new gaps that arise are quickly identified and closed.

Remote working is here to stay but requires adaptation

Some 84% of employers are set to rapidly digitalize working processes, including a significant expansion of remote working. Employers say there is the potential to move 44% of their workforce to operate remotely.

According to the report, 78% of business leaders expect some negative impact on worker productivity. This suggests that some industries and companies are struggling to adapt quickly enough to the shift to remote working caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

To address concerns about productivity and well-being, about one-third of all employers said they will take steps to create a sense of community, connection and belonging among their employees.

Career pivots become the “new normal”

The research also indicated that a growing number of people are making career changes to entirely new occupations. According to LinkedIn data gathered over the past five years, some 50% of career shifts into data and artificial intelligence are from different fields. That figure is much higher for sales roles (75%), content creation and production positions, such as social media managers and content writers (72%), and engineering roles (67%).

"As we think about ways to upskill or transition large populations of the workforce who are out of work as a result of COVID-19 into new, more future-proofed jobs, these new insights into career transitions and the skills required to make them have huge potential for leaders in the public and the private sector alike,” said Karin Kimbrough, Chief Economist at LinkedIn.

“Our research reveals the majority of transitions into jobs of tomorrow come from non-emerging jobs, proving that many of these jobs are more accessible than workers might think, Kimbrough continued. “If we can help individuals, and the leaders who are directing workforce funding and investment, identify the small clusters of skills that would have an outsized impact on opening up more sustainable career paths, we can make a real difference in addressing the unprecedented levels of unemployment that we're seeing globally.”

Data shows how long to reskill

According to The Future of Jobs Survey, core skills such as critical thinking, analysis and problem-solving are consistently top of the reskilling and upskilling priorities for educators and businesses. Newly emerging in 2020 are skills in self-management such as resilience, stress tolerance and flexibility.

Data from Coursera suggests that individuals could start gaining the top 10 skills for each emerging profession in people and culture, content writing, sales and marketing in one to two months. Those wishing to expand their skills in product development and data and artificial intelligence could do so in two to three months, and those switching into cloud computing and engineering could make headway in the new skillset through a four to five-month learning programme.

There has been a fourfold increase in the number of people seeking opportunities for online learning under their own initiative, a fivefold increase in employers offering their workers online learning opportunities and a ninefold enrolment increase in people accessing online learning through government programmes.

Those in employment are placing larger emphasis on personal development courses; those unemployed have placed greater emphasis on learning digital skills such as data analysis, computer science and information technology.

"The pandemic has accelerated many of the trends around the future of work, dramatically shrinking the window of opportunity to reskill and transition workers into future-fit jobs,” said Hamoon Ekhtiari, CEO of FutureFit AI. “No matter what prediction you believe about jobs and skills, what is bound to be true is heightened intensity and higher frequency of career transitions especially for those already most vulnerable and marginalized.”

“The Future of Jobs Report is a critical source of insights in supporting companies and government through these workforce transitions, and FutureFit AI is honoured to share our data and insights in the Report, Ekhtiari continued. “We look forward to continuing to contribute to a just, worker-first, and data-powered recovery as a partner of the World Economic Forum's New Economy & Society community and its Reskilling Revolutions Platform."

The Future of Jobs

Now in its third edition, The Future of Jobs report maps the jobs and skills of the future, tracking the pace of change. It aims to shed light on the pandemic-related disruptions in 2020, contextualized within a longer history of economic cycles and the expected outlook for technology adoption, jobs and skills in the next five years. The Future of Jobs survey informs the report. It is based on the projections of senior business leaders (typically Chief Human Resource Officers and Chief Strategy Officers) representing nearly 300 global companies, which collectively employ 8 million workers.

It presents the workforce planning and quantitative projections of chief human resource and strategy officers through to 2025, while also drawing on the expertise of a wide range of World Economic Forum executive and expert communities. The report features data from LinkedIn, Coursera, ADP and FutureFit.AI, which have provided innovative new metrics to shed light on one of the most important challenges of our time."


https://www.weforum.org/press/2020/10/recession-and-automation-changes-our-future-of-work-but-there-are-jobs-coming-report-says-52c5162fce/


Coach I voted for Trump and he was the right man for the job until covid hit. I do think China hid the seriousness of Covid precisely to force what should have happened gradually into a compressed time frame.

 I realize Trump supporters are banking on some kind of legal triumph but it is NOT happening and would be catastrophic if it did.

We as a country need to defeat covid ASAP. The longer it drags on the more socialism it creates. As entry level jobs vanish they leave displaced workers who have to be kept afloat one way or another. The process of automation taking over jobs that were done by unskilled workers has been greatly accelerated. Our economy is going to tank for the foreseeable future and Trump would never be able to keep the peace. Biden has a shot.

The vaccines we have coming are our saving grace to be. There is no conspiracy no cabal of shadowy figures plotting mankinds destruction. However this country needs a leader that it likes one who reaches out to all demographics so there can be some element of TRUST. I cannot imagine the 80 million or so that voted for Biden rushing out to get Trumps vaccine can anyone else?

Trump could have been that guy but he was limited and the direction he wanted to go became toxic due to covid. This is what it is. We need people to do whatever the heck it takes to get past covid and we need to do it RIGHT NOW.

Trumps wall was a great idea but imagine if he was re elected now what would happen? The fucking wall would literally trap the people who came here to work and want to go home when the jobs dry up.

Covid totally changed the dynamic of our society and Trump knew it hence all his weird reactions about it for the past year. Trump was the best president we ever had and China fucked us real good and I am pissed enough to boycott chinese goods for the foreseeable future.

We as a nation need to unite under Biden and get past Covid and focus our energies on massive chinese boycotts. We can do it if we work together.

that is your problem, you have no idea what you copied and pasted. Biden does not know what day it is, he will be told what to do by the corrupted gang that has been installed for years.
K

epic is back

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Mike the meth head

Is a bum
His “roommate “is the person who hired him as live in help

But meth he’d won’t leave

Mike is a drug addict bum

With no conviction

I’d like to throw him down a flight of stairs

Lots of stairs in San Fran area yeah ?

I wanted to help my friend find  her loser brother

I had thought said loser was mike but turned out not I guess

Either way your a complete bum meth head mike

Don’t talk about politics or financial matters

Your not qualified

You can go wash my car though


Walter Sobchak

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A biographer of Donald Trump turned one of the president’s favorite insults — “loser” — against him and described Trump’s refusal to accept defeat in the 2020 election as “buffoonery.”

“He is a profoundly incompetent person, a loser, if you might say,” Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael D’Antonio, a contributor for CNN, told the network’s “Newsroom” show on Friday.

“He’s so incompetent that he cannot even succeed at being a loser,” he said.

“a contributor for CNN”

All credibility lost with that one statement.

The two main tenets of liberalism are lying and hypocrisy.

nzgs

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Voter fraud isn't a matter of opinion, it's a fact that there are millions more ballots than voters, turnouts way above 100%. It's the sort of thing the UN has to sort out in 3rd world countries. The question is whether you think the millions of fake votes are inconsequential or if they overturned the election result. Most sane people would not believe that a deeply unpopular guy who could barely get 100 people to his rallies got better turnout than Kim Jong Un.

LurkerNoMore

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“a contributor for CNN”

All credibility lost with that one statement.

The two main tenets of liberalism are lying and hypocrisy.

Boo-fucking-hoo.  Says the meltdown baby who ignores the lying and hypocrisy of the orange turd and his administration that just lost in a..










wait for it.....














LANDSLIDE!!!  Choke on those conservative tears.

IroNat

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Mike the meth head

Is a bum
His “roommate “is the person who hired him as live in help

But meth he’d won’t leave

Mike is a drug addict bum

With no conviction

I’d like to throw him down a flight of stairs

Lots of stairs in San Fran area yeah ?

I wanted to help my friend find  her loser brother

I had thought said loser was mike but turned out not I guess

Either way your a complete bum meth head mike

Don’t talk about politics or financial matters

Your not qualified

You can go wash my car though



Isn't it supposed to rhyme?


epic is back

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Looking for a reason

Any reason to be offended ?

You don’t like how I write ?

Don’t read it ?

So brave

Walter Sobchak

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Boo-fucking-hoo.  Says the meltdown baby who ignores the lying and hypocrisy of the orange turd and his administration that just lost in a..










wait for it.....














LANDSLIDE!!!  Choke on those conservative tears.

You’re a liberal.

So by political affiliation alone that makes you inferior to me in every way.

I remember back in 1993 when “meltdown” was considered cute and edgy on the internet.

Attaboy cupcake!

LurkerNoMore

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You’re a liberal.

So by political affiliation alone that makes you inferior to me in every way.

I remember back in 1993 when “meltdown” was considered cute and edgy on the internet.

Attaboy cupcake!

You're a self loathing idiot.  By mental acumen alone that makes you inferior to everyone else whose IQ is above room temp.  The only thing I can see you are superior in is infantile crying.  Attaboy salt block. 

Humble Narcissist

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Did anyone actually read that shit?

epic is back

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  • It is only in darkness that light is brightest
No

Neither did meth head mike

Megalodon

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