Jump to content

All Activity

This stream auto-updates

  1. Past hour
  2. Have no idea if this is true. That is my point. Tracy? He has read it? Right! Politicians, reporters, bureaucrats, publishers...the stories are so far apart they cannot be believed. Since Bush's WMD stories, to Clintons I never had sex with that woman, to trump, to Biden, from Fox to CNN, nothing is ever just true, it is always just a version to influence.
  3. He was hurt largely because he was being beaten like a drum from the get go
  4. Gotta hang onto those picks so you can draft a boogie basham or Cody Ford or Keon Coleman dontcha know
  5. You thought we were generating pressure on Mills😂😂 no he just sucks and missed throws Our defense did not meaningfully impact that game, and against a bad offense led by a backup QB that is not a tall task
  6. My Spidey senses tingled when I saw this post
  7. Your Sunday morning Clarice: FTA: The best, most detailed description of the 28-point peace plan, what it contains, and how it was presented to Zelensky is in Jeff Childer’s substack. I summarize it, but urge you to read it all. After four years of sending a tsunami of U.S. money to Zelensky’s Ukraine, Trump, who ran on a promise to end this war, cut off the funds and reduced the weapons flow there. He tried working with Zelensky and Putin, but the U.S. team's best efforts were going nowhere. The U.S.-controlled anti-corruption agency NABU exposed what had long been of concern -- enormous government corruption. Zelensky's best friend and business partner, Timur Mindich, fled the country, leaving behind stacks of dollars and a gold-plated toilet. Politico said, “The agency has charged 71 current and former MPs with corruption, 42 of them during the period between 2022 and 2025. 31 of the charged MPs still sit in the Ukrainian parliament.” Andriy Yermak, his top aide, is under attack from Ukrainian lawmakers who demand he be fired. (Yermak appears to have found urgent affairs to attend to in Istanbul, to which he’s decamped.) Other ministers have also resigned or skedaddled out of the country, including the former defense minister, who reportedly came to the U.S., sought asylum, and offered his cooperation in the corruption scandal. The U.S. is demanding that Ukraine give up some land and arms. Apparently, because we required his presence there, Zelensky was forced to come to Istanbul, where he was presented with the plan, a plan that had no input from European leaders and was not leaked before it was handed over to Zelensky. While Zelensky and Yermak are considering the plan in Istanbul, top U.S. generals arrived back in Kyiv, also to ‘discuss peace.’ The Russians seem to like it, and Zelensky has not complained. In fact, he tweeted, 'only President Trump and the U.S. can make this war come to an end.' How many times before have we thought this is it? And then, somehow, Zelensky and his European buddies manage to scurry away through a crack nobody noticed? But this time, President Trump obviously orchestrated a massive strategy that the Z-man and the Euroweenies never saw coming. The carefully coordinated corruption scandal -- which nobody doubts happened -- is the political equivalent of a decapitation strike. This is ugly political hardball; the Mafia-like offer that can’t be refused, the horse head in the bedsheets. The only reason Zelensky wasn’t himself implicated in the corruption scandal -- a scandal that includes all his best buddies -- is that they need him to sign the paper. But if he won’t sign the paper, he’s useless. And what happens to useless people? It appears that Trump may be poised to resolve the most intractable, contentious, and difficult war on the planet since the last intractable, contentious, and difficult war that he resolved. Everyone keeps telling Trump to force Putin to take a deal. But how? Isn’t it much easier to negotiate a deal the Russians can live with, and then force Zelensky to take it? Maybe this time, we are finally in the endgame. https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2025/11/carrots_and_sticks.html https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/slava-polycrisis-thursday-november?
  8. I have one son who is in college and the other is working his first post-college job. They both had to deal with Libnut professors in college. I don't recall saying I was "scared" they were going to be "turned gay/trans" -- I don't know how you got that impression. A more notable issue was the professor who declared in class that if you weren't actively supporting BLM then you were a racist.
  9. We may be saying that about the Waddle trade FWIW.
  10. I cant put enough thank you's amd even amens on this post.
  11. Lmao. No he is not. He had a few great years with Allen and Diggs. Literally every other season he's been an OC he was bottom end. If you don't realize that, then you aren't watching enough football of other teams
  12. The problem with this approach is that when the Bills kept a 6th and 7th man in Houston just rushed 1 or two more players, they didn’t drop them into coverage. There was no need because the coverage was already lights out. Houston got sacks when the Bills had 7 man protections in this game, like when trying play action.
  13. I am convinced that we have a Lombardi right now if Beane traded for Von when the Rams did. All it took was a 2nd round pick, but Beane apparently thought that was too much. All we needed was ONE stop in the 13 second game and Von (who was in his prime then), likely would have netted us that. Instead Beane did not want to part with his precious draft pick, so the Rams did and they won the Super Bowl.
  14. It's not Daboll or bust, of course. For example, I'd look at Thomas Brown, passing-game coordinator of the Patriots, who (google tells me) is drawing a lot of interest. Would be great to stick it to the Pats, too. Your choice, Sean: change OC's now or after the season. One brings a chance to go all the way this year, the other gives us a higher draft pick.
  15. This is the real issue at hand … don’t blow the ATL/MIA games and this loss is already an afterthought #excuses
  16. They had 35 net yards in the 2nd half and never led by more than a score. There is zero percent chance they were no longer trying to move the ball. I would consider that a rock-solid outing were it not for the two interceptions, especially considering the amount of pressure being generated.
  17. i’m sorry, but the only thing I’m keeping an eye on today are AFC injuries. That’s what the NFL has become. Which good teams have the least injuries which helps them to make it to the big dance.
  18. Darnell Washington is too large to tackle. DK Metcalf is a generational player, TJ Watt dominates everyone. Their secondary is elite. Cam Heyward is an immovable object
  19. This! Let him be Josh. Embrace crazy plays. Embrace turnovers.
  20. Statistically speaking, Thursday night games feature LESS injuries than Sunday games … I know that crushes a lot of fan’s narratives
  21. I’m just looking forward to watching football without being stressed the way it is when we’re playing
  1. Load more activity
×
×
  • Create New...