no it was that cross-eyed comic book henchman from winter soldiereveryone knows Chris Pratt killed bin laden
I think he probably died from renal failure years before and was kept "alive" in name only to continue justifying military action that was unpopular with the public.
when Crenshaw called that faggot pete Davidson to make sure he hadn't offed himself, even after Davidson made fun of him on SNL and was forced to apologize, just shows you what kind of a dude he is
he'd get my vote any day of the week
well he had established ties to hydra/shield strike, and was also a hired mercenary to frame superman of genocide in Africa.That's just what they want you to believe.
no it was that cross-eyed comic book henchman from winter soldier
I wonder why after all the enraged enragement .. why the dems/left/faggots haven't gone to court to press their "easy win" using their superior congressional powers?
Meanwhile Rudy-the tard says a few words about Ukraine and the dems/left/faggots jump before they look and land in their own shit pile.
Then they have the balls to post a headline like this
Trump just succeeded in weaponizing the Justice Department
Sauce for the Goose Mr. Saavik
If you wanted to watch the herd of Democratic presidential candidates in televised town halls these past few months, CNN has been the place to go.
Week after week, the cable network has given over an hour-plus of prime time to a candidate seeking to challenge President Donald Trump. On one town-hall-happy night last month, it devoted five hours to five of the candidates. A few of the 21 hopefuls have even been featured twice.
Unfortunately for CNN, not many people seem to want to watch televised town halls starring Democratic presidential candidates.
In fact, the opposite has been true. CNN has drawn fewer viewers to its town-hall telecasts than to its usual prime-time lineup of news-discussion programs, which are themselves ratings-challenged. Only four candidates - Harris, Sanders, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg - have drawn more viewers than CNN averages on a typical weeknight, around 1.16 million people.
The rest, at least in television terms, have ranged anywhere from subpar to flaming disasters. Back-to-back town halls featuring Yang and Williamson drew about 310,000 viewers in April, far below the network's modest 907,000 average for all the candidates.
None of its town halls have surpassed regular programming on cable rivals Fox and MSNBC.
even worse, prescripted questions that cnn gives to their preferred candidatesWhy would anyone ever watch a town hall from either party? They're just filled with political insiders masquerading as "real people" asking prescripted questions.
When I was a college student, lawyers who represented Communists would be fired from academic positions. In parts of the South, lawyers who represented civil rights activists were fired. In some areas of the country lawyers who represented men accused of sodomy or women seeking abortions would be fired. Now Harvard College joins this Hall of Shame by firing Professor Ron Sullivan and his wife, Stephanie Robinson from their positions as Co-Deans of Winthrop House because Sullivan decided to represent a man accused of rape. The defendant is the highly controversial Harvey Weinstein, who is presumed innocent and has not yet been tried.
Many troubling arguments have been offered in defense of the decision not to renew Sullivan’s role as Dean of Winthrop house. The most common – and dangerous – is that students feel “unsafe” around a lawyer who is representing Weinstein.
Were Harvard a public university, this benighted decision would be subjected to a constitutional challenge. It still may be subject to challenge under Massachusetts’s law. In any event, it is subject to challenge in the court of public opinion by students, faculty, administrators, and alumni who disagree with Harvard’s decision.
The firing of Dean Sullivan may be the most severe violation of academic freedom I have witnessed in my 55 years at Harvard. It cannot be allowed to stand.