Republican's can you please send up better candidates? Democrats take note too.

hanimmal

Well-Known Member


QAnon... Check.
PTSD and blackouts in grocery store... Check.
Tweeted twice about hanging Congresswoman Ihlan Omar (D-Minn) that led to her being banned by Twitter? Check.

November 30, 2019 at 9:30 a.m. EST Twitter has shut down the accounts of Danielle Stella, a Republican challenger to Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) in Omar’s bid for reelection, after Stella twice tweeted about hanging the congresswoman.

Please take a close look at the people running for the Republican ticket and vote in someone sane. Democrats need to do the same too, Russia is going to try to screw us everywhere we are vulnerable by trying to get the shittiest politicians elected so that they can use them in future trolling.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
Winner winner chicken dinner lol. I'm pretty sure that you have to have a criminal record or a stay in a psychiatric facility now to be a republican candidate.
 

Communist Dreamer

Well-Known Member


QAnon... Check.
PTSD and blackouts in grocery store... Check.
Tweeted twice about hanging Congresswoman Ihlan Omar (D-Minn) that led to her being banned by Twitter? Check.

November 30, 2019 at 9:30 a.m. EST Twitter has shut down the accounts of Danielle Stella, a Republican challenger to Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) in Omar’s bid for reelection, after Stella twice tweeted about hanging the congresswoman.

Please take a close look at the people running for the Republican ticket and vote in someone sane. Democrats need to do the same too, Russia is going to try to screw us everywhere we are vulnerable by trying to get the shittiest politicians elected so that they can use them in future trolling.
Oh no the Russians! Don't believe and swallow everything you believe.

 

HashBucket

Well-Known Member
Think this is going to be a rough year for socialist pansies.

I would advise stock investors out there to purchase shares in pharma that caters to psych meds. Maybe Johnson & Johnson - they make Kleenex, and Midol.

Also, I have a comfort animal that may help.
I am selling one of my 'support' unicorns.
Mother and father are on sight for your inspection.

3 year old white unicorn mare, broke to ride, some trail experience. Friendly with humans and dogs, should be kept separate from horses because they get jealous. She gets along just fine with both donkeys and elephants.
International Mythical Creatures Association registration parchment scroll on hand.
It can only be read under the light of a full moon so check out the calendar and stop by.
Poops some glitter, mostly just poop though.

Easily adaptable to its masters political beliefs, no matter how crazy.
Serious inquiries only, please.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Think this is going to be a rough year for socialist pansies.

I would advise stock investors out there to purchase shares in pharma that caters to psych meds. Maybe Johnson & Johnson - they make Kleenex, and Midol.

Also, I have a comfort animal that may help.
I am selling one of my 'support' unicorns.
Mother and father are on sight for your inspection.

3 year old white unicorn mare, broke to ride, some trail experience. Friendly with humans and dogs, should be kept separate from horses because they get jealous. She gets along just fine with both donkeys and elephants.
International Mythical Creatures Association registration parchment scroll on hand.
It can only be read under the light of a full moon so check out the calendar and stop by.
Poops some glitter, mostly just poop though.

Easily adaptable to its masters political beliefs, no matter how crazy.
Serious inquiries only, please.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Looks like Republicans are sending up another Q-anon nut to go along with their Senate candidate in Oregon. And Dear Leader keeps crying about ANTIFA when Q-anon conspiracies he retweets even though the FBI has flagged Q-anon as a potential domestic terrorist threat.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/georgia-republican-and-qanon-believer-favored-to-win-us-house-seat/2020/06/11/f52bc004-ac13-11ea-a9d9-a81c1a491c52_story.html
Screen Shot 2020-06-12 at 11.10.05 AM.png
Republican candidate Marjorie Taylor Greene, a professed believer in the fringe conspiracy-theorist group known as QAnon, is probably headed to Congress after her strong finish in the Georgia primary.

House Republican leaders were silent Thursday about the likelihood that their caucus may soon include someone affiliated with a group that the FBI has flagged as a potential domestic terrorist threat.

None of the top three House Republicans, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.), Minority Whip Steve Scalise (La.) or Republican Conference Chair Liz Cheney (Wyo.), responded to questions about Greene’s candidacy and possible place within their ranks.

Greene finished first in Tuesday’s primary with 41 percent of the vote in the strongly Republican district in northwest Georgia but was shy of the majority of the vote. She will face a runoff Aug. 11 against physician John Cowan, who trailed her by 20 percentage points.

As long as Greene’s support holds and she wins that race, she should easily win the House seat in November and replace retiring Rep. Tom Graves (R-Ga.). In 2016, Georgia’s 14th Congressional District elected Donald Trump with 75 percent of the vote.

Greene would become the first member of Congress to have publicly espoused the views of QAnon, the extremist group that believes President Trump is quietly leading a revolution against the “deep state.” It maintains a baseless conspiracy theory that there is a secret pedophile operation run by the nation’s most prominent people, particularly those within the Democratic Party.

“The Chinese propagandists at the Washington Post are attacking me the same way they attack Donald Trump, and other conservatives,” Greene said in an emailed statement. “Northwest Georgians are proud, conservative America-loving patriots. ... I won’t let them be bullied by the hate America leftists at the Washington Post.”

Greene’s campaign did not answer questions about her support for QAnon, but in a lengthy response attacked Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.).
Greene has posted videos lifting QAnon conspiracy theories and praising its anonymous leader, “Q.”

“Q is a patriot. He is someone that very much loves his country, and he’s on the same page as us, and he is very pro-Trump,” she said in a 2017 video posted to YouTube. In the video, she talks about an “awakening” that will expose deep corruption and unite Americans behind Trump.
“I’m very excited about that now there’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to take this global cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles out, and I think we have the president to do it,” she said.

Trump has never specifically referenced his QAnon supporters but has over the years elevated their tweets and slogans. Supporters have attended his rallies holding signs and wearing shirts with QAnon symbols.

In Oregon last month, Republicans elected a U.S. Senate nominee who believes in QAnon. Jo Rae Perkins bested three other candidates to win the Republican nomination to face Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) in November.

In a now-deleted video posted to her Twitter account, Perkins said she supports the conspiracy theory, which revolves around “Q,” an anonymous Internet user claiming to be a government agent with top security clearance.

Believer in QAnon conspiracy theory wins Republican Senate nomination in Oregon

Greene is listed on the Southern Poverty Law Center’s “Hatewatch,” where she is described by the group as “an avid MAGA activist who frequently attends rallies or participates in protests that aim to vilify the federal government, American Muslims and transgender people.”

Greene was pictured with and endorsed by a Georgia man with longtime ties to white-supremacist groups, who called her a “friend” and “part of the Q movement,” according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Greene dismissed an Atlanta reporter’s questions about that relationship, calling them “silly and the same type of sleazy attacks the Fake News Media levels against President Trump.”

Last week, Greene posted a campaign ad in which she cocks an AR-15 rifle and warns “Antifa” protesters to “stay the hell out of northwest Georgia.”

“You won’t burn our churches, loot our businesses or destroy our homes,” Greene said in the ad that was later removed by Facebook for violating its rules against inciting violence.

A devout Trump supporter, Greene’s campaign logo is a knockoff of Trump’s, and her website includes a photo of her posed between Trump’s sons, Donald Jr. and Eric.

Chris Pack, spokesman for the National Republican Congressional Committee, did not directly respond to questions about Greene.
“The NRCC does not get involved in primaries. In general elections, we focus on districts that will deliver us the majority, not R+27 safe seats,” Pack said in an email.

But Greene, who raised $1.1 million for her primary run, has received some high-profile support from some of Trump’s closest congressional allies. Greene claims to have the endorsement of Reps. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) and Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.). She received $75,000 from the House Freedom Fund, a political action committee associated with former congressman Mark Meadows before he became Trump’s chief of staff.

Neither Jordan nor Gaetz responded to requests for comment.
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member


QAnon... Check.
PTSD and blackouts in grocery store... Check.
Tweeted twice about hanging Congresswoman Ihlan Omar (D-Minn) that led to her being banned by Twitter? Check.

November 30, 2019 at 9:30 a.m. EST Twitter has shut down the accounts of Danielle Stella, a Republican challenger to Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) in Omar’s bid for reelection, after Stella twice tweeted about hanging the congresswoman.

Please take a close look at the people running for the Republican ticket and vote in someone sane. Democrats need to do the same too, Russia is going to try to screw us everywhere we are vulnerable by trying to get the shittiest politicians elected so that they can use them in future trolling.
Yikes.

Times are tough.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Yet another example of the Republicans pulling the 'it's not racist' logic when doing racist shitty things to trick their voters.
https://apnews.com/7c80b107aeb3d381eff5d0e98e95493b
Screen Shot 2020-07-28 at 6.26.43 AM.png
ATLANTA (AP) — Republican Sen. David Perdue of Georgia has taken down a digital campaign ad featuring a manipulated picture of his Democratic opponent Jon Ossoff, who is Jewish, with an enlarged nose.

Before being removed, the Facebook ad showed grainy pictures of Ossoff and Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, who is also Jewish, above a banner reading “DEMOCRATS ARE TRYING TO BUY GEORGIA! HELP DAVID PERDUE FIGHT BACK.”

The news outlet the Forward first reported that the image was manipulated and made Ossoff’s nose appear larger than in the original photo.

A spokeswoman for Perdue said in a statement Monday that the image has been removed from Facebook, calling it an “unintentional error” by an outside vendor, without naming the vendor.

“Anybody who implies that this was anything other than an inadvertent error is intentionally misrepresenting Senator Perdue’s strong and consistent record of standing firmly against anti-Semitism and all forms of hate,” the spokeswoman said.

But Ossoff pushed back on the assertion that it was merely an error.

“Sitting U.S. Senator David Perdue’s digital attack ad distorted my face to enlarge and extend my nose. I’m Jewish. This is the oldest, most obvious, least original anti-Semitic trope in history,” Ossoff said in a statement. “Senator, literally no one believes your excuses. You can start with an unqualified apology to Georgia’s Jewish community.”

Perdue is seeking a second term in November as Republicans look to hold on to the White House and Senate majority.
https://forward.com/news/national/451581/jon-ossoff-jewish-nose-david-perdue-antisemitic/
Screen Shot 2020-07-28 at 6.29.44 AM.png
Screen Shot 2020-07-28 at 6.32.24 AM.png
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
link
Screen Shot 2020-08-17 at 7.53.12 AM.png

PALM BEACH, Fla. — In a congressional race where an acolyte of Roger Stone who’s been banned by Twitter and Facebook may not even be the most unconventional candidate, voters in the Republican primary for Florida’s 21st Congressional District have a rich array of choices.

The six people competing in the Aug. 18 primary include a former burlesque dancer and wild animal exhibitor who did business in the same circles as “Tiger King” Joe Exotic; a Palm Beach neighbor of Mar-a-Lago who is supported by QAnon believers; and Laura Loomer, a far-right commentator and anti-Islam activist who calls herself “the most banned woman on the Internet” and who once handcuffed herself to the front door of Twitter’s office in New York.

There’s also an ex-cop, a nuclear engineer-turned college professor and a retired investigator for the IRS.

Among the constituents they hope to represent: the president and first lady. The Trumps registered as Republicans in Palm Beach County in October when President Trump changed his official domicile from Manhattan to his Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach. They both voted by mail in the March presidential primary.

How the Trump campaign came to court QAnon, the online conspiracy movement identified by the FBI as a violent threat

All six candidates are political newcomers running in a heavily Democratic district that covers Palm Beach, West Palm Beach and parts of Broward County. One of them will face Lois Frankel, a Democrat who ran unopposed two years ago, or her primary opponent, Guido Weiss, a former legislative assistant for Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii).

Regardless of their long shot chances of winning the congressional seat in the fall, the GOP candidates are being scrutinized due to Trump’s decision last year to call the district home.

Loomer’s campaign manager is Karen Giorno, who was a senior political adviser to the Trump campaign in 2016. She said the president’s team wants the congressional seat — which Frankel has held since 2013 — to go red.

“I have a very cordial and very active relationship with the Trump campaign for reelection. It was a directive not from the president, but on behalf of the president, he wanted this district flipped,” Giorno said. “That’s his home district. He deserves to have someone represent him, not impeach him.”

The White House declined to comment on who the president supports in the race. But earlier this year, he retweeted a post promoting Loomer’s candidacy.

Voters here are now trying to sort through the crowded field.

“You’ve got a couple there that are a little loony tunes, at least on the surface anyway,” said voter Rhona Hayes, 71, of her choices in the Republican primary. “But I’m looking beyond that. There are some good candidates too.”

Hayes and her husband Charles, 85, retirees who live in Boynton Beach, said they’re most impressed with Aaron Scanlan, a former police officer and Air Force veteran.

“You’ve got some unusual candidates here,” said Charles Hayes, a retired firefighter.

Scanlan currently has the lowest amount of cash on hand — $1,863 out of the $91,285 he raised — and said his plans for fundraising were crimped by the pandemic. He’s trying to reach voters just like Hayes and her husband.

“This is my first time in politics, and I’m just trying to get my name out there,” said Scanlan, who is now a Realtor.
Loomer, 27, is the front-runner in fundraising. She’s raised $1,161,622 and spent $924,059. Her donors include Alex Jones, the far-right conspiracy theorist who, like Loomer, has also been banned from Twitter and other platforms.

While most of her fellow candidates address Florida-specific issues, such as clean waterways, Loomer focuses on topics such as Big Tech. She has been a no-show at most of the forums and debates sponsored by community organizations in the district where voters get to know the candidates.
She did appear at the annual Lobsterfest, sponsored by the Republican Party of Palm Beach County on Aug. 9, where she was endorsed by Roger Stone and Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), both Trump allies. She said those endorsements, along with support from Fox News host Jeanine Pirro and other marquee names in the Republican Party, help to make her the front-runner.

“It’s laughable to think that President Trump would consider, or even look, or waste his time considering any of these other candidates, because they’re just not viable,” Loomer said. “They’re not Trumpian.”

Loomer, who is from Arizona but went to college in Miami at Barry University, said she’s lived in Florida for nearly three years and considers herself a Floridian. She said she wants to replace Lois Frankel because, among other things, Frankel supports Black Lives Matter.

Candidate Reba Sherrill is part of Trump’s “bridge family,” the fans who show up at the bridge near Mar-a-Lago to wave to Trump’s motorcade when he’s in town. She’s also Trump’s neighbor on Palm Beach and a familiar sight on Ocean Drive.

“Every day I roll my wheelchair numerous times in front of Mar-a-Lago and pause and salute the flag,” Sherrill said — referring to the large American flag Trump has on his property.

Sherrill, a health and wellness consultant, is self-funding her campaign. She donated $350,102 to the effort.

Sherrill is supported by people who promote QAnon, identified by the FBI as a group with “anti-government, identity-based and fringe political conspiracy theories” that may motivate violent extremists. Sherrill’s main issue in the campaign is fighting child trafficking, which matches with QAnon theories that rampant pedophilia rings have infiltrated the United States.

Trump, House Republicans embrace candidate who has made racist statements, drawing attention to party’s tolerance of bigotry

Sherrill said she worries about a “new world order” and globalism as well as sex trafficking.

“I felt like I really didn’t have a choice,” Sherrill said about running for Congress. “It's my civic duty. The country is a mess right now.”

Elizabeth Felton said she’s running to protect property rights. She owns a business called Safari Bob’s, which offers field trips and “encounters” with wild animals such as foxes and ring tailed lemurs. She said regulations pushed by animal rights groups infringe on citizens.

“Property rights are personal rights,” Felton said. “The mainstream media treats you like a lunatic if you want to own a pet monkey.”

She worked as an exotic dancer at a club in New York for 10 years before her move to Florida because as a single mother, she needed a job with a flexible schedule.

Felton’s is running on other issues: term limits — “six years, and then you’re out,” and support of the legalization of marijuana the federal level and LGBTQ rights.

She acknowledges that the slate of candidates is an interesting one. She and four of her opponents — but not Loomer — call each other often and are cordial and agree on most issues, she said, including their support for Trump.

“Most of us get along,” Felton said. “Put us all together, we’re almost the perfect candidate.”

Felton said she and fellow candidate Michael Vilardi talk on the phone almost daily. Vilardi owns a tax business, and was a criminal investigator with the IRS. Vilardi, who has raised the lowest amount of money in the race — $56,494 — said he’s running to change the rules for Social Security recipients.

“Let’s start with Social Security,” Vilardi said. “These old people are getting robbed.”

He said he’d push for a change in tax laws that he thinks are unfair to the elderly. He also supports term limits.

While Loomer has garnered big-name endorsements from the far-right, Christian Acosta, the sixth candidate in the field, has some Trump-adjacent support as well. Acosta is a former nuclear engineer who now teaches at Palm Beach State College. Toni Holt Kramer hosted a fundraising dinner for Acosta at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach in February. Kramer is one of the founders of the Trumpettes, a group of Trump super fans that throws a gala at Mar-a-Lago every year for the president.

“It was the first one to get in the race. I got pretty crowded pretty quick,” said Acosta, whose issues are immigration reform, support for community colleges and vocational education, among others. “It’s been an interesting race.”
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
I remember this insurrectionist's rant video. I hope AOC gets to light her up.
https://www.rawstory.com/capitol-riot-tina-forte/?cx_testId=6&cx_testVariant=cx_1&cx_artPos=3#cxrecs_s
Screen Shot 2021-08-26 at 7.45.54 PM.png
The Republican running against Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) in the 2022 midterm elections has been exposed by Snopes as a participant in the January 6th riots at the United States Capitol.

Snopes tracked down social media posts that showed Forte at the Capitol building on January 6th, and she even went so far as to tell other Trump supporters to "get your asses to the Capitol" at the conclusion of the "Stop the Steal" rally.

"She took selfies with a number of attendees who considered her a 'superstar,'" writes Snopes. "In a live video, she urged people at then-U.S. President Donald Trump's rally on the Ellipse to make their way to the Capitol. We even found that she entered a restricted area after the crowd knocked down barriers that law enforcement installed."

In one clip, Forte even praises her fellow Trump supporters for "storming the Capitol" as the riots were occurring.

Forte also promoted the protests at the Capitol ahead of January 6th that were filled with QAnon references about "the storm" arriving in Washington D.C.

Additionally, Snopes has found Forte has had multiple interactions with members of the Proud Boys, including current leader Enrique Tarrio.

Read Snopes's full report here.
It is worth checking out the Snopes article to see her bullshit.
https://www.snopes.com/news/2021/08/25/tina-forte-capitol-riot/
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
3rd party scam to steal votes from the Democrats.


Hopefully people are looking out for this in the Q race in Az. God, and hopefully the incumbent Democrat is a legit non-plant of the Republican party too I guess. The last sentence of this article gave me pause.

https://apnews.com/article/donald-trump-elections-arizona-house-elections-congress-d09795931e358c1e36154171c2fcc0f8
Screen Shot 2021-10-20 at 7.20.29 AM.png
PHOENIX (AP) — Ron Watkins, a prolific promoter of false conspiracies about the 2020 election who is closely tied to the QAnon movement, says he is running for Congress as a Republican in Arizona.

Watkins has a large and fervent following among Donald Trump supporters who believe the former president’s false claims that he lost the election because of fraud. His candidacy could shake up the race in one of the GOP’s top congressional pickup targets.

Watkins filed papers with the Arizona secretary of state this week and later posted a video on Telegram repeating his claim that the election was stolen from Trump.

“We must now take this fight to Washington, D.C., and vote out all the dirty Democrats who have stolen our republic,” Watkins says in the video, taped outside the offices of Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich, whom Watkins is pressuring to indict people over the 2020 election. “We must fix our elections from inside the machine.”

It’s not clear whether Watkins currently lives in Arizona or its 1st Congressional District. In the days before his announcement, he posted photos of himself with Republicans Kari Lake, a former television anchor running for governor with Trump’s endorsement, and Tom Horne, a former attorney general and state schools superintendent running again to lead the Education Department. He endorsed both candidates.

DONALD TRUMP
Jan. 6 panel votes to hold Steve Bannon in contempt
Jan. 6 panel votes to hold Steve Bannon in contempt
Trump aims to countersue sex assault accuser who sued him
Black Democratic chair gets lynching threat over Trump essay

Watkins did not answer the phone and did not respond to text messages and emails sent to the contact information on the statement of interest he filed with Arizona election officials.

Watkins was the longtime administrator of 8kun and its predecessor, 8chan, online message boards that were known for misinformation and hate speech, and which played a crucial role in seeding the QAnon conspiracy movement. He has said he gave up the role last year.

A core belief for QAnon followers is that Trump was secretly fighting a Satan-worshipping, child sex-trafficking cabal of prominent Democrats, Hollywood elites and “deep state” enemies. An internet poster calling himself Q fueled the movement by allegedly posting clues about Trump’s effort, many on the 8kun message board.

Many believe Watkins himself is responsible for the messages purportedly posted by Q. He denies it.

Arizona’s 1st District, one spanning vast swaths of rural northern and eastern portions of the state, is a top pickup target for Republicans. The boundaries are still being drawn by the state’s independent redistricting commission, but it’s widely believed the district will be one of the state’s most competitive.

Incumbent Democrat Tom O’Halleran is a former Republican and a retired police officer serving his third term.
The thing it seemed to me like Gaetz was trying to pull. But who knows until there is a trial I guess. It seems more likely after watching this that he was just being a creep.
 
Last edited:

xtsho

Well-Known Member
If you lied on an application to work at McDonalds and they found out you'd be fired immediately. Yet a piece of bovine dung like this guy is going to be sworn in as a member of the House of Representatives and will become a member of the United States Congress.

There needs to be a mechanism put in place that would prevent him for being seated due the fraud he committed.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
If you lied on an application to work at McDonalds and they found out you'd be fired immediately. Yet a piece of bovine dung like this guy is going to be sworn in as a member of the House of Representatives and will become a member of the United States Congress.

There needs to be a mechanism put in place that would prevent him for being seated due the fraud he committed.
There is, but the Republicans won't use it it looks like. 2/3's of the house could kick him out. At least not yet.

(I had to double check to make sure I wasn't wrong)

Screen Shot 2023-01-03 at 6.11.41 PM.png
 
Top