Powerline...
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"Old Joe" - wow, was he a glutton for punishment!
Know what it's called if you suffer from Trump Acceptance Resistance Disorder (TARD) and you think you have gotten over it, then all of a sudden you have a re-occurrence?
That's right.
RE-TARD.
http://iotwreport.com/the-most-unintentional-hilarious-drivel-ever-written-by-any-person-ever/ (http://iotwreport.com/the-most-unintentional-hilarious-drivel-ever-written-by-any-person-ever/)
100001287931908
1:07 PM MST
Haha, I love this section: "My ability to multitask and keep everyone’s schedules on track would sit next to his ability to fix cars, cook or read books in silly voices. Then we’d feast."
Great, so this woman can order a man around like he's on the clock and "multitask", which is code for "I can nag and scold at the same time", while she expects her man to be a mechanic and a chef, and probably most of the other useful traits a household can have too! Fantastic. Lady, there's this thing called a calendar that, surprisingly, men are perfectly capable of using, and using well. As for multitasking, doesn't your "perfect man" already have that covered if his left hand is wrenching bolts off a fan shroud to remove a cracked radiator while his right hand is stirring a pot of lobster bisque? Why then, does the man need YOU, not to mention your spawn and your spastic "companion animal". My God, get real with yourself and stop spreading fear to your daughter like you do!
Quotetruthlemonade
4:14 PM MST
Yeah, I noticed that too. That "potluck" analogy seemed really one-sided to her benefit. Her "multi-tasking and schedule making" seems to primarily benefit her and her children, as does his car fixing, cooking, and entertaining.
If that is a "potluck," it seems that he brought the main course, and she brought a bottle of pepsi.
““I cried for three days,” the Atlanta native, 45, recalls. “I felt like it was the worst thing, politically, that ever happened in my lifetime. It was catastrophic.” By Friday she noticed grays growing in, so she put on her big-girl panties and dragged herself to the drugstore. “Literally without thinking, I grabbed the Natural Black box by Garnier,” she says. “I was like, f** it! The election deadened my soul. I think I wanted to do something defiant to feel stronger.”....
Usually stuff like this is planned for weeks and put on the books after several consultations, but this was very spontaneous,” Butler says. “It was like a mass declaration of independence.” Clients, especially those over 40, expressed a feeling of loss and uncertainty, says Butler. “Maybe this is some kind of compensation for not getting what we wanted in the election. By changing our hair, we can control the outcome.”....
You have to live here to understand that we are immersed in politics every day,” the mother of two explains. “For many of us, with this election, it’s like your boyfriend dumped you in a really shocking way with no explanation and then moved in next door.” She is resigned to fighting against what she sees as a mandate for sexism through her own style choices. “Now, I feel like my hair says you can’t bring me down. This misogyny will not persevere. The bumper sticker for me is, ‘I am woman, hear me roar.’” (http://nymag.com/thecut/2016/12/women-make-dramatic-beauty-moves-after-trumps-victory.html)
“One of my clients said, ‘Think of Melania Trump and go in the opposite direction,’” she says. “She said, ‘I don’t want to be that person people see as sexual, I want to be seen as strong.’” Another professional woman cut her hair into a flattop. One client got rid of the blonde highlights she maintained forever, “because she said she never wants to be seen as cheap. I don’t know where that idea came from, but maybe that’s what she’s hearing.” A move away from the look of political parrot Kellyanne Conway, perhaps. In the comfort of Moore’s salon chair, D.C. women are expressing their anger and frustration, and taking a stand with their hair: Many have gone dark and lopped off length. “I don’t know if it’s that their right to choose could be in jeopardy, or that the glass ceiling is still there, but [since the election], I’m seeing more professional women, from all walks of life, changing the way they look.
stupidmodel
11 hours ago
My daughter and I headed for the salon the day after Thanksgiving and had it all chopped off. I predicted this trend as soon as I saw all those Trump women, both on the podium surrounding him and behind him in the audience. Suddenly long hair was a sexist symbol again, and, like in the seventies and eighties, short hair is the symbol of autonomy over our bodies and looks. My twenty year old daughter had this reaction instinctively, I've been there before and I feel more like myself now, short and brunette, than with long blond hair. Fashion too will change over the next few months and magazines will start featuring models with short hair. For other women here to judge this as superficial is awkward because it is a protest cut, how else can we outwardly show the world that we do not identify with Trump? A tee? A hat? A bumpersticker? This works for me because it IS me... and yes I march too, and write and speak out in every way possible.
Idiots. Cutting off their hair in protest -- equivalent to castrating themselves.
The chart tells the tale...
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Do you suppose Schultzie is telling himself, "They'll be back..."?