Stronger together?
The theme has already been explored in the Supergirl episode of the same name.
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But the Clinton campaign, in a last ditch push for the White House, has also glommed onto the notion of strength in numbers … that, and some fantasy of a kick-butt Super Girl who can do more than even Superman. Of course, this must be true because she is female. Not that being female makes one any different from a man.
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Men and women are exactly the same, except when they're very different. Got it?
Sadly for Clinton, the strength in numbers by reviewers (and an increased number of voters) is fixed not on the "goals" outlined in the Sept. 6 release, "Stronger Together" by Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine (more fondly referred to in believing circles as Quisling Kaine), but on the stench of accumulated lies, money schemes, amnesiac episodes, women bashing (it's okay when a woman bashes another woman, except when it's not okay), secret servers and – heck - what-does-it matter now?
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Check out the reviews of "Stronger Together" before they're removed. Sad? Funny? You decide.
Make the galaxy great again!
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No, no one's running for galactic domination, yet, but the orange-haired magnate is striking again ... in a way.
The Huffington Post reports, "A new game called "Jrump," which just debuted in the iOS and Android app stores, has players trying to help President Donald Jrump escape a ruined America and "make the galaxy great again."
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How do you do this? As the character says in the game's trailer, you're going to help him jump as high into sky as he can by bouncing "on [Jrump's] favorite things in the world ... walls!"
Essentially you draw magically appearing walls underneath a bouncing Jrump, making him climb higher and higher away from America, "while also trying to avoid obstacles such as scientists and Hillary Clinton."
What fun!
As a Trump supporter, I look forward to playing. And I must, of course, test the claims of Bellamy who states for the record, "We think Donald's small, nimble hands would make him great at this game."
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Bye-bye beardie
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The relationship between a man and ... and his whiskers can be a very personal one. But if you have found that "breaking up" is hard to do, whether the decision to shave is free choice or one borne of pressure from outside influences, check out the video below to understand ... you're not alone!
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If meat-eaters behaved like vegans
Sick and tired of making way for hyper-inflated sensitivities? Well, you're not the only one:
Just goes to show you, one man's veg is another man's meat. And we all have feelings.
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Deal with it.
Practice makes perfect, and patience wins the crown!
Check out this hilarious Kid Snippet video on math class (basic addition and subtraction). If you homeschool, this teacher could be you. If you send your children off to school, have pity on the teacher.
If the size of the students (extra-large?) surprised you, keep in mind bonehead math is nothing new. That said, some readers may feel affinity for the student. I did!
Yet, as John Schwartz of the Courier reported some time ago, "Bonehead Math was (still is) for people who didn't know a logarithm from a logjam and didn't care to find out." The accent here is on didn't care to find out. Schwartz describes these particular students as "math insensitive." I've met the type. I've been the type. But with those pesky math requirements, even a Journalism, English Literature, or Poly-Sci major must "do" a minimum number of hours in a math class. Or rather a class titled "math."
In Schwartz's case this resulted in the professor "… correcting papers from his previous class. Students spent their time writing for the next issue of the school paper or, in the case of athletes, learning the playbook."
And yet that lesson of practicing patience and enduring those things we don't like (or stink at) to gain something in the long term is taught. Another lesson is that when someone's got you over a barrel, like our current educational system does here in the United States, more often than not they will find a way to require something of you if only to increase their profit margin … even if it means offering a "math" class for credit wherein everyone present do everything but math. It's a win/win.
But that's another lesson altogether.