Politics Politics

Evil gator said:
Stunning

https://twitter.com/bucksexton/status/1615820333285806082?s=46&t=H9ZwtRXs_L9-zs0XPpcitg

Yikes.

I'd love for him to ask her out of the blue, "How's it feel to be considered the worst press secretary in American history and know that you only got the job because you're a black lesbian?"
 
to summarize classified documents (which Trump may or may not have declassified) were at Trumps home locked in a closet with constant SS protection requiring an FBI raid and asked about corruption and was impeached twice.

Hunter Biden, making millions as a useless "consultant" for the Chinese Communist Party and Ukraine, and under the influence of a drug addition who routinely hired random hookers, was living and paying $50K a month to live at Biden's house, where documents that VP Biden had no authority to declassify, and its all "misinfo" and NBD.
 
The beginning of the end. Two years after the New York Post broke the story, CNN runs a story on the Biden family graft.
A famous last name, business deals and a looming probe: Republicans ramp up investigation of Biden family

https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/17/politics/biden-family-name-invs/index.html
 
"my job is to answer your questions". Only you're not.

You were free to comment as negatively as you wanted during an investigation about Trump, but refuse to even acknowledge Biden did anything wrong. She knows it, they know it, we know it.

Worst PS ever.
 
I think a lot more of these kids are going to be getting a dose of reality, the free ride is over it appears. Poor Google nerds, they don’t even have Elon Musk to blame
 
Falling Wind Turbine alert....


January 23, 2023
Huge wind turbines – taller than the Statue of Liberty -- are toppling over in a ‘rash’ of incidents
By Thomas Lifson
Bloomberg Business Week, no foe of green energy, headlines: Wind Turbines Taller Than the Statue of Liberty Are Falling Over.” The article beneath the headline reports on a variety of alarming disasters involving wind turbines, including collapses of very tall sructures.

On a calm, sunny day last June, Mike Willey was feeding his cattle when he got a call from the local sheriff’s dispatcher. A motorist had reported that one of the huge turbines at a nearby wind farm had collapsed in dramatic fashion. Willey, chief of the volunteer fire department in Ames, 90 miles northwest of Oklahoma City, set out to survey the scene.

The steel tower, which once stood hundreds of feet tall, was buckled in half, and the turbine blades, whose rotation took the machine higher than the Statue of Liberty, were splayed across the wheat field below. The turbine, made by General Electric Co., had been in operation less than a year. “It fell pretty much right on top of itself,” Willey says.

Another GE turbine of the same model collapsed in Colorado a few days later. That wind farm’s owner-operator, NextEra Energy Inc., later attributed it to a blade flaw and said it and GE had taken steps to prevent future mishaps. A spokesperson for GE declined to say what went wrong in both cases in a statement to Bloomberg.

The instances are part of a rash of recent wind turbine malfunctions across the US and Europe, ranging from failures of key components to full collapses.

The article blames the “rash” of incidents on the rush to install turbine capacity, but there are also permanent factors that make engineering, building, and maintaining wind farms difficult and risky. To develop meaningful amounts of power, the blades on the turbine have to be big, and when big blades spin in heavy winds, the tips can end up hitting supersonic speeds, putting great stress of the materials used to construct them. Big blades also requite tall towers, which are then subject to stresses as winds blow and can gust during storms to velocities that test the strength of the materials and the design of the towers.

Read the rest: https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2023/01/huge_wind_turbines__taller_than_the_statue_of_liberty__are_toppling_over_in_a_rash_of_incidents.html
 
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