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... eenie meanie mienie moe ...
There was no testosterone in the chamber, either. just a bunch of emasculated cucksSlim Cognito wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 1:41 pm Wow, that was close! I thought I'd pass out from all the estrogen in the chamber.
Slim Cognito wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 1:41 pm Wow, that was close! I thought I'd pass out from all the estrogen in the chamber.
See, Trump prefers men only use one knee, like this, when gobbling his
Let's face it. You know Fetterman was *waiting* for someone to ask. He had this one in his hip pocket.
"Okay, so you're saying that under Secret Amendment 1/2, I'm not *really* Speaker until I find the one deliberate mistake in this carpet pattern?"
Dave from down under wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:17 pm “Anyone found my integrity yet?”
“Nup! But we would have trouble recognising it even if we found it..”
Anyone here still think Johnson is going to shift towards more moderate stances on policy now that he is speaker?Two years before going from a relatively unknown congressman to speaker of the House, Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana spoke at a national gathering of Christian lawmakers in North Texas and shared his deep admiration for the man behind the conference: the evangelical activist and self-styled historian David Barton.
“I was introduced to David and his ministry a quarter-century ago,” Johnson said at the ProFamily Legislators Conference, which was being hosted by Barton’s nonprofit WallBuilders, a Texas group dedicated to promoting the idea that America was founded as a Christian nation whose laws should be based on a conservative reading of the Bible.
Johnson told the audience at the December 2021 gathering that Barton’s teachings — which are disputed by many historians — have had “a profound influence on me, and my work, and my life and everything I do.”
Johnson’s effusive praise for Barton, an influential background figure in the conservative evangelical political movement, sends an unmistakable signal about how the devout Christian Republican lawmaker — now second in the line to the presidency — views the role of religion in government and public life, said John Fea, a professor of American history at Messiah University in Pennsylvania.
“David Barton is a political propagandist, he’s a Christian-right activist who cherry picks from the past to promote political agendas in the present, to paint a picture of America’s history as evangelicals would like it to be,” said Fea, who’s also an evangelical. “Mike Johnson comes straight out of that Christian-right world, where Barton’s ideas are highly influential. It’s the air they breathe.”![]()