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Re: Player News bonefish 12/26/25 12:34 PM
Lamar is not getting traded.

That would be shocking.

However, he is listed as doubtful for Saturdays game against the Packers.

If the Ravens lose they are out of the playoffs.

In addition it changes the Browns game for Sunday. The Steelers will be the North's champs. They will rest their starters.

Giving the Browns an excellent chance to win Sunday. A win and the Browns chances to get a top QB in the draft are most likely shot.
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Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: Republican Right Wing Nuts - Part ???? mgh888 12/26/25 10:14 AM
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

You can not make this stuff up.

Now the party of isolationism, who doesn't want to police the world or carry out military operations the other side of the planet is conducting military strikes .... Not on some imaginary, trumped up, bogus lie where it claims to be protecting US citizens from threats that aren't real.... Now Trump is authorizing military action around the globe to "protect christians"...

Lmao.... And somewhere some stooge that drinks the sceptic, toxic Trump koolaid will be on board and defend this. Just took funny.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...ate-terrorist-scum-in-nigeria-trump-says
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Re: What Now 10YrOvernightSuccess 12/26/25 03:11 AM
There’s no reason both things with Callahan can’t be true. He’s got bent about Van Pelt and wanted to coach with his son. It’s a bummer if it’s true there’s no chance he comes back. OL and special teams are clearly coaching groups that need a major shakeup
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Re: DOJ, FBI conclude Jeffrey Epstein had no "client list," committed suicide Day of the Dawg 12/26/25 02:26 AM
Originally Posted by Damanshot
It just occurred to me that there is a thing that defense attorneys do that might explain a lot.

They dump reams of paper on the their opponents in an effort to hide the one piece of paper that is missing/hidden/not disclosed because it shows that their client is guilty as suspected.

I'm not sure what it's called but I know it has a name.

So I gotta ask again, what might they be hiding?

My hope is that those in the senate and house are smart enough to see that possibility and pursue that angle.

If there was evidence in that report that Trump had done anything wrong the Dems would have released that file ASAP during the Biden Admin. Sorry to burst your bubble.
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Re: Browns News 6.0 lampdogg 12/26/25 12:05 AM
He’s a career backup. If they have to settle for Mason I’ll do cartwheels across my living room floor
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Re: Media and Shedeur FORTBROWNFAN 12/25/25 08:55 PM
Originally Posted by Day of the Dawg
Originally Posted by 10YrOvernightSuccess
There were more than a few of us wringing hands about the fact they they didn't really address OL last off season. I've wondered if Berry didn't expect to try to solve it in the draft but then he (rightfully) couldn't resist the way certain players fell to him and it just went away from OL. I don't quibble with his 2025 draft, except maybe the two QB tango.. which would have been the perfect rounds to get guards and backup tackles. But there were plenty of people worried about our super injury prone and thin OL heading into game 1. Saw it a mile away.

We're going to need at least 5 new guys next year. Damn near the whole room. Problem is I've read how a more teams have critical need at OL than most years and there'll likely be a lot of competition for FA's, trades and draft. I expect a few early picks but I'd have half my scouts looking at small and off brand schools for big chunks of quality clay on day two, three and after.

The pick made right after the Browns selected Dillon Gabriel was Jared Wilson G/C from Georgia who has been a starter on New England's offensive line all season. Gabriel was selected 2 rounds earlier than projected and Wilson would have been a great get for the Browns. That was far and away the biggest miss in the 2025 NFL draft for the Browns.

For the 5th time, Gabriel was not selected 2 rounds earlier than he was projected, at least by most of the reputable "experts". He certainly was on a few; most had as Rd 3-4. When we drafted him I searched multiple sites and only 1 or 2 had in the 4-5 range, not even specifically round 5. Most was 3-4 and a few others round 3.
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Re: Merry Christmas! 3rd_and_20 12/25/25 06:52 PM
Merry Christmas everybody!
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Re: Genocide. mgh888 12/25/25 05:06 PM
Belgium joins South Africa's genocide case against Israel | The Times of Israel https://share.google/OSxgqckCzv6AIedIC

Countries are at least paying attention... Even if the so called Christians of Dawgtalkers are blind to the atrocities being committed
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Re: Rob Reiner PitDAWG 12/25/25 04:22 PM
It's streaming on Netflix now.
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Re: Christmas tunes PitDAWG 12/25/25 03:33 PM
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Re: CBS News pulls ’60 Minutes’ segment; correspondent blasts ‘political’ decision PitDAWG 12/25/25 03:29 PM
Here you go FATE. Just to get you to heel by the curb for a while......

The initial investigation into alleged ties between Russia and the Trump campaign, known as "Crossfire Hurricane," was launched by the FBI in July 2016 based on an intelligence tip from Australian authorities.

The key information that prompted the investigation was:

George Papadopoulos's tip: A Trump campaign foreign policy adviser, George Papadopoulos, told an Australian diplomat in London in May 2016 that Russia possessed "dirt" on Hillary Clinton in the form of thousands of emails.

WikiLeaks releases: When WikiLeaks began publicly releasing hacked emails from the Democratic National Committee (DNC) in July 2016, the Australian government informed American officials of Papadopoulos's earlier comments, which then triggered the FBI to open its investigation into the matter.

Subsequent information and events that fueled the ongoing investigation included:

Contacts with Russian nationals: Several Trump campaign officials, including Paul Manafort, Donald Trump Jr., and Jared Kushner, held a meeting in June 2016 at Trump Tower with a Russian lawyer who they believed could provide derogatory information on Hillary Clinton as "part of Russia and its government's support for Mr. Trump".

Financial ties and foreign contacts: Investigators looked into the unusual number of contacts between other campaign aides and Russian officials or individuals with Russian intelligence ties, such as Michael Flynn and Paul Manafort, and their previous work for pro-Russian interests.

Trump's public statements: Candidate Trump's public call during a July 2016 news conference for Russia to find Hillary Clinton's emails also raised concerns among counterintelligence agents.

The Steele dossier: The FBI later received information from the "Steele dossier," an opposition research report compiled by former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele. This dossier alleged a well-developed conspiracy between the campaign and Russia and was used in part to obtain a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrant for the surveillance of former campaign aide Carter Page.

While the multi-year investigation by Special Counsel Robert Mueller eventually found numerous links between the campaign and individuals with ties to the Russian government, it ultimately concluded there was insufficient evidence to establish that members of the Trump campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities. The investigation did result in charges against many individuals for various crimes, including lying to investigators and obstruction.

At least you backed off of the "Guliani worked with the trump campaign" BS after you were shown he went on a nationwide tour giving stump speeches for trump.
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Re: ICE PitDAWG 12/24/25 06:40 PM
In major loss for Trump, Supreme Court blocks National Guard deployment to Chicago

The Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected President Donald Trump’s request to allow him to deploy the National Guard to Chicago to protect ICE agents, a significant and rare loss for the administration on the conservative court’s emergency docket.

“At this preliminary stage, the government has failed to identify a source of authority that would allow the military to execute the laws in Illinois,” the court said in its unsigned order.

The decision, which came over dissents from conservative Justices Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch, was a substantial setback and appeared almost certain to jeopardize deployments of the National Guard in other cities as well.

In a statement Tuesday, a White House spokeswoman said the ruling will not stop Trump’s efforts to enforce immigration laws, protect federal personnel and “safeguard the American public.”

“He activated the National Guard to protect federal law enforcement officers, and to ensure rioters did not destroy federal buildings and property,” White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told CNN. “Nothing in today’s ruling detracts from that core agenda.”

“This is a significant repudiation of President Trump’s efforts to use federal troops to supplement immigration enforcement especially in Democratic-led jurisdictions,” said Steve Vladeck, CNN Supreme Court analyst and professor at Georgetown University Law Center. “It’s hard to see how the administration can continue to use this obscure 1908 authority to try to deploy federalized National Guard troops.”

Vladeck described the decision as “by far the most significant defeat the Supreme Court has handed Trump all year.”

Federal law allows a president to federalize the National Guard when he can no longer execute the laws of the United States with “regular forces.” A debate cropped up during the case about whether that term, “regular forces,” meant the regular military or federal agents, such as those who work for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

In its order, the court said that the term “likely” refers to the standing military. Further, the court said the ability to federalize the guard under the law Trump attempted to invoke “likely applies only where the military could legally execute the laws.” In other words, the court suggested, it does not apply to protecting agents enforcing immigration laws.

“Thus, at least in this posture, the government has not carried its burden to show that” the law at issue in the case, “permits the president to federalize the guard in the exercise of inherent authority to protect federal personnel and property in Illinois,” the court said.

The decision leaves Trump with few options if he wants to continue to deploy soldiers into cities — but not zero options. It appears likely that the president could still invoke the Insurrection Act, for instance, to deploy regular forces to Chicago and other cities. That may be a politically fraught move, however, because it challenges the longstanding prohibition on the military being used for law enforcement.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, a conservative who sided with the court’s underlying decision, said he would have done so on more narrow grounds. He agreed that the term regular forces means the US military.

“The court’s legal interpretation, as I understand it, could lead to potentially significant implications for future crises that we cannot now foresee,” Kavanaugh said.

But he said the court’s decision appeared to bind the court’s hands in potentially unforeseen ways. What if, Kavanaugh hypothesized, an angry crowd gathered outside a federal court house threatening to storm the building. If regular military forces could not deploy in time, the decision appears to bar the president from federalizing the National Guard to deal with that situation, Kavanaugh said.

“Nearly 250 years ago, the framers of our nation’s Constitution carefully divided responsibility over the country’s militia, today’s U.S. National Guard, between the federal government and the states – believing it impossible that a president would use one state’s militia against another state,” said Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, a Democrat. “The extremely limited circumstances under which the federal government can call up the militia over a state’s objection do not exist in Illinois, and I am pleased that the streets of Illinois will remain free of armed National Guard members as our litigation continues in the courts.”

Alito, joined by Thomas, wrote that he “strongly” disagreed with the way the court dealt with the case.

“The court fails to explain why the president’s inherent constitutional authority to protect federal officers and property is not sufficient to justify the use of National Guard members in the relevant area for precisely that purpose,” Alito wrote. “I am not prepared at this point to express a definite view on these questions, but I have serious doubts about the correctness of the court’s views.”

Alito argued that his colleagues had “no basis for rejecting the president’s determination that he was unable to execute the federal immigration laws using the civilian law enforcement resources at his command.”

“Whatever one may think about the current administration’s enforcement of the immigration laws or the way ICE has conducted its operations, the protection of federal officers from potentially lethal attacks should not be thwarted,” Alito wrote.

The court’s decision, which landed two months after the Trump administration filed its emergency appeal, came as tensions on the ground at an ICE facility west of Chicago appeared to have eased. The administration told a federal court in a different case weeks ago that “increased coordination” with local police had “reduced the need for federal officers” to engage with protesters at the building in suburban Broadview.

And defense officials announced in November that they were “rightsizing” planned deployments to Chicago, Los Angeles and Portland. The officials said at that time that only about 300 National Guard units from Illinois would remain ready to deploy. Lower court orders have blocked their ability to conduct operations with the Department of Homeland Security.

The court took an unusually long time to resolve the emergency dispute, which the Trump administration first brought to the court in mid-October. Given the unusual amount of back and forth between the justices in Tuesday’s order, it appears likely the court’s conservative majority wrestled with how to resolve the case.

Though the situation on the ground in Chicago quieted, the administration argued in court papers in November that the deployments were still needed.

While the case has been pending, the Justice Department told the Supreme Court, “violent assailants have fired shots at DHS agents, thrown bricks and concrete at barricaded agents, and rammed into their vehicles with trucks.”

In that sense, the emergency appeal remained a major test of the president’s power to mobilize and deploy the guard in American cities.

The court’s decision came weeks after a shooting in Washington, DC, in late November that killed one National Guard member and critically wounded another. The shooting suspect, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, is an Afghan national who previously worked with the US in Afghanistan. Lakanwal has been charged with several crimes including premeditated murder and assault with intent to kill.

Trump is using the National Guard in Washington under a different federal law that was not at issue before the Supreme Court.

Trump had argued that a lower court decision blocking that deployment in Chicago “improperly impinges on the president’s authority and needlessly endangers federal personnel and property,” effectively inserting the courts into the chain of command.

The Supreme Court was asked to take up the issue as the administration was attempting to deploy guard members to multiple cities, including Portland, Memphis and Los Angeles.

A federal district court in Chicago blocked the deployment there in October.

When the feds come to town: In cities targeted by Trump’s immigration crackdown, a shared playbook emerges

US District Judge April Perry, nominated to the bench by President Joe Biden, said the administration overstepped its authority with the deployment given the conditions on the ground. In a lengthy opinion tied to her short-term order, she questioned the administration’s justification for the troops.

Perry pointed to what she described as a “troubling trend” of the administration of “equating protests with riots.” The Chicago-based 7th Circuit largely upheld that decision — allowing the administration to federalize the guard members but not deploy them.

In the Chicago case, Trump had federalized 300 members of the Illinois National Guard to “protect officers and federal property.” Another 400 federalized members of the Texas National Guard were also set to be deployed to the state. The administration said those guard members would serve “solely in a protective capacity” and would not engage in law enforcement.

Under the new arrangement announced in November, about 200 Texas National Guard troops in Chicago were sent home and about 200 more remained on standby at Fort Bliss. Roughly 300 Illinois National Guard troops will remain in the Chicago area.

Though the case was initially speeding through the courts, the justices slowed things down considerably in late October by ordering additional briefing on a technical but important question about what the law means when it allows a president to use the guard to augment “regular forces to execute the laws of the United States.”

Illinois argued that language meant Trump could call in the guard to help the standing military, not civilian law enforcement agencies like ICE. The Department of Justice countered that reading would be counterintuitive since the standing military is generally barred from executing federal law. The state and the administration spent weeks filing briefs and counter briefs addressing that question.

To make its case for the deployments, the Justice Department has relied heavily on a Supreme Court decision from 1827 — Martin v. Mott. The case dealt with Jacob Mott, a member of the New York militia who disobeyed President James Madison’s order to mobilize during the War of 1812. The Supreme Court rejected Mott’s argument that Madison had misjudged the danger and wrote that “the authority to decide whether the exigency has arisen belongs exclusively to the president.”

The states challenging the administration have balked at the suggestion that the protests against ICE agents are akin to an invading foreign army.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/12/23/politics/supreme-court-blocks-trump-national-guard-chicago

It appears King trump is going to have to make up some other story in order to take over American cities. Even this conservative SCOTUS isn't buying into his current BS.
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Re: The. Dems. PitDAWG 12/24/25 05:36 PM
Oh look, you fond another rando.
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Trump Brings Up Taking Over Greenland......Again PitDAWG 12/24/25 04:07 PM
Trump’s revival of Greenland takeover dismays Denmark

President Trump is drawing a backlash from Greenland and Denmark with the revival of his effort to acquire the world’s largest island.

Trump, who has repeatedly expressed interest in acquiring Greenland for the U.S., angered officials by tapping Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry (R) as his envoy to Greenland.

He says Greenland is paramount to U.S. national security and that Landry’s goal will be to make the autonomous Danish territory “part of the U.S.”

This goal seems unlikely to be reached, given the irritated joint statement from Greenlandic Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen and Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen that Greenland “belongs” to Greenlandic people and that the U.S. “shall not take” the mineral-rich island that has a population of about 57,000 people.

But that’s unlikely to end Trump’s efforts, leaving analysts wondering if he’d be satisfied with some other alternative.

They also warn that the further the president pushes, the more blowback it would prompt from Europe and the international community.

“I think that this would be viewed, if it did go that direction, it would be viewed worldwide as the beginning of a new era, an era in which the United States was not just not supporting existing norms about sovereign territory, but also actively attempting to overturn those norms,” said Christopher Chivvis, a senior fellow and director of the American Statecraft Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (CEIP).

Denmark was angry enough with Trump’s appointment of Landry, who took office as governor in January 2024, that the country’s foreign minister summoned the U.S. ambassador to Denmark, Ken Howery, to elaborate on the president’s remarks.

Greenland’s foreign minister, Vivian Motzfeldt, said that Greenlandic officials recently met with Howery, but the administration’s plans to appoint Landry as envoy were not brought up.

“In Greenland nothing has changed. The future of our country is decided by the people of Greenland. We are not Danes. We are not Americans – and we do not wish to become so. We are Inuiaat Kalaallit, we are the people of Greenland,” the foreign minister said on Tuesday. “Our country belongs to us and it is not going to be controlled or owned by others.”

Trump has floated buying Greenland, which is just more than three times the size of Texas, with 80 percent of it covered in snow.

It’s also possible the U.S. could seek to gain influence through strategic investments, or by convincing Greenland’s government that Denmark is a bad partner.

Marc Jacobsen, an associate professor at the Royal Danish Defence College and an Arctic security expert, told The Hill this week that Landry’s appointment as envoy and appointment of venture capitalist Thomas Dans as head of the U.S. Arctic Research Commission “should be seen as new elements in this strategy.”

“In Greenland, however, these efforts are counterproductive as Greenlanders are seeing the U.S. as more and more antagonistic and a less desirable partner on the road to independence,” Jacobsen said.

Although some Greenlandic people are in favor of gaining full independence from Denmark, which has a say in the island’s foreign and defense policy posture, the large majority of residents are against joining the U.S.

The island, which is a part of Denmark and covered under NATO’s security guarantees, is loaded with mineral deposits, including zinc, lithium, graphite, nickel and copper — all critical minerals necessary in technology manufacturing. The president said on Monday that his interest in Greenland does not lie in the island’s mineral abundance, but rather in its strategic qualities.

“We need [Greenland’s] financial security, not for minerals. We have so many sites for minerals and oil and everything,” the president said while at Mar-a-Lago. “We have more oil than any other country in the world. We need Greenland for national security.”

“If you take a look at Greenland, you look up and down the coast, you have Russian and Chinese ships all over the place,” Trump told reporters. “We need it for national security. We have to have it.”

Chivvis, of CEIP, questioned what Trump’s endgame is and the potential benefits Washington would gain beyond what it already reaps from its relationship with Denmark, with whom it has a bilateral defense partnership, including patrols around the island.

“It’s not clear exactly what the president believes he’s going to get, maybe a slightly better deal on some of those fronts, but it would be paying an extraordinary cost for a very small benefit,” Chivvis told The Hill.

Denmark has looked to refurbish ties with Greenland in 2025 as its relationship has cooled in recent years over revelations about the past mistreatment of Inuit people by the Danes. At the same time, Denmark has looked to normalize relations with Washington, spending more on Arctic defense after criticism it had not done enough.

Vice President Vance visited the island in late March, stopping by the Pituffik Space Base, a U.S. Space Force Base located on the northwest coast of Greenland, and hammered Denmark for not prioritizing the island’s security. A week later, Frederiksen, the Danish prime minister, went to Greenland, saying the U.S. cannot annex earth’s largest island and that both Denmark and Greenland want to “strengthen security” in the Arctic.

Landry, who previously advocated for Greenland to be a part of the U.S., said Monday the new role would not affect his governorship and claimed that Trump called him to help out Secretary of State Marco Rubio. On Tuesday, he billed the administration’s push as a chance for Greenland to experience economic benefits under Washington’s guidance and retain more strategic security.

“This is an opportunity for Greenland to be invited to [the] economic table with the United States, the strongest most advanced economy in the world. And we care. We care about them, with the fastest security route to give them the security and the protection,” the governor said during an appearance on Fox News.

Some European countries, including France and Sweden, reaffirmed Greenland’s territorial sovereignty, while top congressional Democrats on foreign policy-focused committees said the president is destroying U.S. relationships with allies and that he should direct his attention to Russia.

Analysts argued that if the situation intensifies, Europe might ramp up their pushback on Washington, including by possibly deploying European Union security services to closely monitor what the U.S. is doing in Greenland and raising the frequency of military exercises and investments in the region.

Although Chivvis, a former U.S. national intelligence officer in Europe, noted that Europe’s pushback against the U.S. would come with a “high cost for Europe itself.”

“So you could also see a point at which the solidarity that we’ve seen within Europe itself, within Europe for Denmark, begins to fall apart as the cost for individual countries like … Spain or Italy rises,” he said.

Jacobsen, of the Royal Danish Defence College, said there are enough people in the “right positions” to “pull the handbrake” on Trump’s idea of taking over Greenland and, ultimately, the administration’s push might yield a new defense agreement between the U.S., Greenland and Denmark, one that the president could count as a win.

“It might not be significantly different from the one already in place, but it could provide Trump with a visible outcome, which he could present as a victory,” Jacobsen said.

https://thehill.com/policy/defense/5661855-trump-greenland-backlash-denmark/



Now, whose job is it to tell him that it would have been impossible for us to have been there with boats three hundred years ago like Denmark since we were not a country three hundred years ago?

rolleyes
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Everything Else... Jump to new posts
Re: Photography thread mac 12/24/25 04:07 PM
This is a live video feed from the "Brownville's Food Pantry For Deer "Trough View"..located near Bangor, Maine.

They just filled the feeders and some of the deer are returning to feed. They have some fantastic bucks that frequent the feeder...enjoy..!


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Re: Trump claims to pardon jailed Colorado election clerk Tina Peters, but state officials contend it's unconstitutional mgh888 12/24/25 01:00 PM
Originally Posted by mgh888
I'm great.

How about you? Are you happy with Trump trying to usurp States Rights?

I see a flurry of posts from Fate today... Seems like normally he comes in, posts something sarcastic and then runs. Since he's about, maybe we can get a Straight answer on whether there's support for Trump ignoring states rights.
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Re: More Music GMdawg 12/24/25 07:46 AM
I wrote my life story here lol


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Fantasy & Gaming Jump to new posts
Re: Dawgtalkers Pickum Pool GMdawg 12/24/25 07:30 AM
Congrats Arch good job, and Brian nice job all season thumbsup
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Re: Trump’s bulldozer view of laws hits the Kennedy Center Damanshot 12/23/25 02:09 PM
What I hope we never lose sight of is the part the GOP and SCOTUS has played in all of this. They have the power to stop him but have chosen not to exercise it.

Senators and the House of Reps alike have allowed him to make our laws a joke. They are responsible as much as the guy at the top. Supporters of Donald Trump are, IMO, Traitors to America. They are Traitors to the Constitution of the United States of America and all it stands for.


When this is all said and done, I hope we have the courage NOT to dispense "Retribution" in the manner of Donald Trump had vowed to do. I hope we have a better sense of what America was supposed to be and was until Jan 20, 2025.

They do need to pay for their crimes but they also need their day in court. Something Trump and the GOP and SCOTUS don't seem to want for everyone else that opposes them.

It's a shame, but it is what it is.
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Re: Singer Chris Rea dead at 74 Ballpeen 12/23/25 09:56 AM
Never heard of the guy, but peace to his family and friends.

RIP
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Tailgate Forum Jump to new posts
Re: OSU/ College Football jfanent 12/23/25 02:03 AM
I think they're replaced every year. They need to do away with the committee, have some play in guidelines for the lower seed teams, do away with the league championship games and come up with a set of guidelines factoring strength of schedule and a loooong list on tiebreakers like the NFL has. Also do away with that weekly CFP selection show. That does nothing but create controversy to draw ratings.
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Re: Rams Fire Soecial Teams Coordinator bugs 12/22/25 11:30 PM
I recall when many posters here advocated for Chris Tabor's firing.

Tabor is still in league. The Bills special teams looked pretty good yesterday.
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Re: Holding bugs 12/22/25 11:22 PM
In yesterday's game, I chuckled that there was no call after the OL pulled Garrett's helmet off.

If Garrett touches a QB's helmet, that's a "ruffing the passer" penalty.

I'm with Bone, who cares what Steeler fans think! Browns gave Watt plenty of gift sacks over the years defending him with a high school RT. Steeler fans whine about whining!

I hope he breaks the record and then some against the Steelers.
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Re: Political Jokes Pt. 4 PitDAWG 12/22/25 07:41 PM
I'm about to stop by and pick up my prescriptions. With my prescription rebate check after the 600% decrease in prices along with both my DOGE and tariff checks it should make for a prosperous holiday season!
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Re: Somalians PitDAWG 12/22/25 03:04 PM
Originally Posted by Ballpeen
Nine $billion in missing funds from one state impacts every state. The Feds are obligated to get involved when it appears a state can't manage it's own programs and citizens.

Currently the federal government has a former heroin addict, anti-vaxxer who had a brain worm with no medical degree running Department of Health and Human Services. Who is obligated to get involved with that? Do you have any idea how many billions of dollars the federal government has been connned out of? Do you know just how lame that sounds?

Quote
The same goes with calling up national guard troops. If a city can't control what is happening inside it's limits, the state needs to step in to restore order. If the state can't or refuses to act, the Feds need to step in to restore order.

Yet crime, especially violent crime is lower than it was during trump's first term. Just like Portland. Nobody needed to "step in" in Portland. Or any other major city for that matter. You're just buying into the BS trump has been spewing as excuses to play a strong man.

Quote
It pretty much common sense, don't you think?

It is. The problem is many who have common sense aren't using it. They are buying into a bunch of propaganda being spewed to convince them that the way America has conducted itself for over two centuries now no longer matters. In many cases turning their backs on the very things they stood for most of their life. And they can't even see it.

Common sense certainly isn't very common these days.
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