Saturday, November 02, 2024

Who Took Out The Trash?

They indoctrinate children.

While Republicans are still fuming over President Joe Biden calling former president Donald J. Trump and supporters garbage, the reality is happening.

For a guy who claims to believe in freedom, he sure doesn't like it when it doesn't suit his own agenda. He claims to be a man of the people but is doing things that seem out of touch.

While many of his strongest supporters sit in federal time out or the iron college for criminal acts, he has the privilege to travel wherever wants despite his own criminal conviction. He is the very definition of white privilege.

They are also wearing Trump merchandise. 

Have you seen the new MAGA Garbage outfits?

Goes great with the Trump sneakers, Trump watches, Trump bibles and Trump NFT platforms. A whole gift set on behalf of MAGAland. Since he licensed his name to these products all the proceeds go to E. Jean Carroll and the State of New York.

Republicans complain about children being indoctrinated by politics. Yet, here we are!

If I was Trump, I better be preparing for post election. If he does not win, he will be facing lawsuits, his criminal sentencing and a lot of angry Republicans who feel that he couldn't seal the deal. 

Why the election is so close?

1. White people.
2. Israel.
3. The junk food media holding double standards towards Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald J. Trump. 
4. Lack of college education and personal bias.

I have a strong feeling I think Vice President Kamala Harris is going to win but do not count Trump out.

He has pulled off upsets before and the election could come down to a handful of states. 


The former president struggled to get into a garbage truck in Green Bay, Wisconsin. 

Trump was in Arizona with Tucker Carlson. He made remarks about former House member Liz Cheney. He called her a "radical warhawk" and suggested she should face a firing squad.

At two rallies in Wisconsin and Michigan, he got angry over microphone issues.

He threatened to attack the people who operated his microphone.

He even stimulated oral sex when he had an issue trying to grab the microphone.

Trump also said he will be the protector of women "whether they like it or not."

A white man in Orangeburg, South Carolina assaults a poll worker after they asked him to take off his political hat. He shoved a Black woman and she slapped him. The man tried to physically assault her before poll workers stopped him and escorted him out of the facility.

WIS News 10 obtained a 1:26-minute video showing the moments leading up to the physical altercation. The video begins with what appears to show poll workers asking a man, identified by authorities as Mark Morris to remove his hat.

Morris could then be heard shouting explicitly, referring to a poll worker as a “f****** b****,” before snatching off the hat, flipping it around, and telling another poll worker it’s his “mother******* right.”

He then proceeds to yell at the poll workers telling them to “shut the hell up and let me vote.”

The video then shows, another poll worker, identified by authorities as Angela Buchannon-Glover, step in attempting to diffuse the situation and could be heard saying, “We ain’t got nothing else to say and we’re going to move on.”

As the next voter in line is called up to check in the vote, Morris could be seen turning toward Buchannon-Glover before taking his hat off and tossing it in the hall.

Mock lynching in Pennsylvania. The float depicts Harris being lynched by Trump.

Morris was wearing a hat with the phrase, “Let’s Go Brandon.” That phrase began circulating in 2021 and according to the Associated Press, is a conservative code for “F—- Joe Biden.”

South Carolina law restricts what people can wear to go vote. Voters are not allowed to wear anything that displays a political party, candidate name, or ballot issue.

The law says, "The poll manager shall use every reasonable means to keep the area within five hundred feet of any such entrance clear of political literature and displays, and the county and municipal law enforcement officers, upon request of a poll manager, shall remove or cause to be removed any material within five hundred feet of any such entrance distributed or displayed in violation of this section."

Morris is then seen turning toward Buchannon-Glover again where he appears to point in her face. It is unclear from the angle of the video if Morris made physical contact with Buchannon-Glover.

Directly after their exchange, Buchannon-Glover hits Morris. The two are then separated by the group of poll workers as Morris is seen attempting to hit Buchannon-Glover back.

Donald Trump Jr. without Kimberly Guilfoyle.

A parade float in Pennsylvania depicted Harris being lynched by Trump. The float shown in a key swing state, Mount Pleasant, in Westermoreland County, part of metro Pittsburgh.

Officials in Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania are facing backlash over a politically themed float at the town's Halloween parade that reportedly depicted former president Donald Trump leading Vice President Kamala Harris in chains, with some people calling it downright hateful.

Now, the mayor says the borough is looking into how that float was allowed in the parade.

"It's a hot political season, probably not something I’d want in a children's parade."

In a video sent to our NBC Affiliate WPXI, you can see a float that appeared during the Mount Pleasant Halloween parade that shows people dressed as Secret Service surrounding a golf cart style vehicle.

Riding in the cart is a person wearing a mask of former president Donald Trump, and on the top of the vehicle is a fake sniper.

"The worst part of it was that there was either a rope or a chain attached to the back of the vehicle, and there was a woman who was to resemble Kamala Harris in handcuffs and chained to the back of the vehicle as though they were dragging her,” says Mount Pleasant Mayor Diane Bailey.

"This is not a good look, this is simulating a lynching down Main Street in Mount Pleasant,” one parade attendee said.

Josh Huff attended the parade with his wife and said he was immediately stunned seeing the float.

"It was dark. This has been escalated way beyond what it should be. Somebody in power had to say ‘hey, yeah, that's fine; That's okay.’"

Our NBC affiliate WPXI asked the mayor how the float was approved.

“How did this get approved? How did this make it through approval to get in the line to be in the parade and then continue on through the parade route?" - reporter

"That is a legitimate question, and I cannot answer that totally,” the mayor responded.

The mayor says that she is meeting with the borough manager and council president and might get the solicitor involved.

"After it's already done, I’m not sure that there's much we can do except for going forward."

WPXI also reached out to Bill Bretz, the Westmoreland County Republican Committee Chair.

His statement, in part, says, "we certainly don't condone the simulation of political imprisonment or violence in any context no matter the party affiliation of those involved."

"This needs to stop. In this country, this needs to stop,” Mayor Bailey added.

The parade is sponsored by the local volunteer fire department.

A Clark County, Ohio Sheriff Lieutenant said in a social media post that he will not protect any citizens who back Harris.

A patrol commander for the Clark County Sheriff’s Office was reprimanded for Facebook posts in which he said he would require proof of who a person voted for before providing aid and would not help Democrats.

Lt. John Rodgers, who was hired to the sheriff’s office in 2002, received a written reprimand for his conduct, which Chief Deputy Mike Young said does not represent the views of the Clark County Sheriff’s Office.

The posts, included in Rodgers’ personnel file, include one stating “At the end of the day I will require proof of who you voted for if you ask me for help. Weapons and ammo are not cheap” and another posted on Oct. 20 that said “I am sorry. If you support the Democrat party I will not help you.”

Chief Deputy Young tied the issue to the ongoing strain in Springfield and Clark County over Haitian immigration.

“We’ve been in this battle over the last few months, with the attacks on the Haitian community and other immigrants, and we protect people’s rights and we don’t support the conduct to the contrary,” Young said. “I can’t go back in time and take that post away; the lieutenant made the post and he has received consequences for that.”

In a letter to Major Scott Cultice in Rodgers’ personnel file, Rodgers said he does not recall writing the posts and he was alerted to them when a coworker asked if he was OK. He wrote that he did not find them on his page when he searched for them and that the first time he saw them was during a meeting with Cultice.

It's almost over.

Rodgers said that he sometimes takes a prescribed sleep aid that can cause him to make “out of character” texts, phone calls or other forms of communication as a side effect.

“I was taken aback when I read those messages and do not have those, nor have I ever had feelings toward anyone like what was depicted in the posts,” Rodgers wrote. “I have served this community, this County and the State for the last 31 years serving as a firefighter, campus policy officer and a Sheriff’s Deputy. There is no other job that [I] would want to be doing than the one that [I] am currently at.”

Rodgers apologized for causing concerns and said he decided to cease taking the medication.

Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose had announced that Trump and Harris campaign attire will be allowed at polling stations. After a video went viral of a Clermont County man wearing a Make America Great Again hat being told by poll workers he couldn't enter until he took it off. The man got very agitated and it had a sheriff's deputy talk to him and he eventually took off the hat.

LaRose has released guidance to county elections officials statewide saying voters are permitted to wear clothing with slogans such as “Make America Great Again” or “We’re Not Going Back” to the polls without that being considered improper campaign attire.

Ohio law has long prohibited voters from wearing clothing or displaying material stumping for or against a candidate or issue in the “neutral zone” around a polling location marked by American flags. Voters have been asked to remove hats or turn their shirt inside out if it expressed support for a candidate on the ballot.

Guidance issued by the state this week says: “Slogans that can be associated with a political party, candidate or ballot question or issue, but do not display the name of the political party, candidate, or ballot question or issue are not prohibited.”

LaRose’s office says this guidance has been the same since LaRose took office, though some county elections officials and a document previously on the Secretary of State’s website ― which the secretary of state’s office says they didn’t create — have previously interpreted Ohio law to prohibit material that implies clear support for a candidate.

The most common example of this is the Make America Great Again, or MAGA, slogan used by supporters of former President Donald Trump and often emblazoned on bright red hats. Slogans used by the campaign of Vice President Kamala Harris include “When we fight, we win” and “We’re Not Going Back.”

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