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LOL, SaviorEdwards. of that was a great poster.
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This is all about Pitt trying to put it together for a run in a brutal division with two elite QBs whose teams are also all in. They're all in, collecting stud boundary athletes like Metcalf and Ramsey so that they can a) actually play man with conviction on D and b) win regularly on the outside on offense with a near-impossible-to-cover-completely specimen. Ramsey basically forced his way out, and the Dolphins took what they could get, which wasn't much.
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Sanctuary City Crackdown: Pre-Game
BillsFanNC replied to BillsFanNC's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
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Yeah if the "Bills Kid" doesn't show, I'm asking for a refund. I mean seriously, this looks pretty awful. It would be cool to get autographs from the rookies I suppose, but half of those people I can see at Hammers lot on a Sunday and have a beer with them for free.
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Will gambling ruin the NFL and sports in general?
EasternOHBillsFan replied to ChronicAndKnuckles's topic in The Stadium Wall
Fearmongering? That's a hoot. This same atmosphere almost brought down professional sports 100 years ago but thankfully strong leadership at the commissioner level and ownership dealt with it heavy handedly and for many years we were stable until the Hornung and Karras scandals. There is a reason why sports gambling was outlawed, and eventually we will see it be outlawed again. -
Weird how many folks here think a safety (Fitzpatrick) is more valuable than an elite boundary corner. If people watch other games not involving Josh Allen, they might recognize that Ramsey is very good. Most league personnel certainly think that way. Fitzpatrick hasn't been that great the last couple of seasons, btw. Opposing QBs' passer rating against in in 2024 was 127.6. That's not a misprint. Anyway, an elite-level (talent-wise) boundary corner is more valuable than a safety, and in six of their last seven games last season including the playoffs, the Steelers D was basically shredded by Philly, Cincy x2, Baltimore x2, and KC. The lone good game they had late in the season was against the Browns, who didn't have capable quarterback.
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Who is the worst franchise QB in the NFL?
Freddie's Dead replied to FireChans's topic in The Stadium Wall
POShaun Watson, in a landslide. -
To be honest, the Steelers are known for that back in Polamalu days, and Polamalu was criticized back in his days for free ranging too much. Polamalu is a first ballot HoF. The Steelers were talking about letting Fitzpatrick to do the same to maximize his talent last few years. Well last 2 years showed that he is NOT Polamalu.
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Right Wing Terrorism Thread
Homelander replied to Trump_is_Mentally_fit's topic in Politics, Polls, and Pundits
Another win for @BillsFanNC and @B-Man -
Buffalo Sabres and the NHL: 2025 - 2026
Ridgewaycynic2013 replied to Draconator's topic in Off the Wall
It's almost a shame that Tammy Faye Bakker went on to her eternal reward a few years back. Her tearful entreaties on behalf of the good people of Atlanta might just have brought a well deserved third NHL franchise to the city. 🙄🤨 -
So free speech is sacred but only when it flatters your flag. Criticize the US? Deport them. Say something uncomfortable? Ban them. Yet when your side storms the Capitol screaming '1776' cosplay slogans, it’s patriotism. And now the UK is your model for speech laws? Cool - should we start arresting half your Twitter feed too, or does censorship only apply to people you don’t like.
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From the article - "actual information" you did not want to highlight The Senate version could add approximately $3.3–$4 trillion to the national debt over the next decade - $1 trillion more than the House plan. The House version alone is projected to increase deficits by $2.4 trillion. As much as $930 billion in Medicaid cuts over ten years; strict work requirements could slash eligibility for those with parents of older teens. SNAP (food stamp) changes: House version pushes high work mandates. CBO estimates: 11.8 million more uninsured by 2034 under the Senate plan. House bill alone could leave 10.9 million without health insurance. Extends 2017 Trump-era tax cuts, with special deductions for seniors, tips, and overtime but caps those benefits. SALT deduction remains capped at $10,000 (Senate) vs. $40,000 (House), favoring higher earners in wealthier states. Senate bill includes a staggering $5 trillion debt-limit hike, significantly more than the House’s $4 trillion proposal.