Go ![]() | New ![]() | Find ![]() | Notify ![]() | Tools ![]() | Reply ![]() | |
| The Main Thing Is Not To Get Excited |
my state senator is a prior felon whom had her voting and office rights restored because she worked so hard in law school which she got into when my state reps said, even though it was a firearm related felony that sent her to prison she's much better now & its okydoke. My state representative is a nebish follow-the-parade-and-don't-forget-to-send-me-money-because Trump dim, my entire city council is leftie pro tax goofs who need the tax money to spend on little houses so people that don't live here can move here, my governor is J Inslee who is seriously left of Mao and probably Che (though I don't know for sure but I wouldn't be surprised) so MTG seems like a pretty stable option to me. In my essentially crime free Island Paradise we just (this month) had two forced entry home invasions by a 20 year old a 17 YEAR OLD AND AN 18 YEAR OLD, with the two younger entrepreneurs armed with AR's. I don't suppose there is a connection to the above though. Crime historically has been extraordinarily low here. 4 murders in 45 years. A carjack a couple of months ago and here we are. _______________________ | |||
|
| Member |
Just wait until the Furgburger gets elected by same Washington State Democrats. Mao with glasses and a poindexter haircut as Governor. | |||
|
| Peace through superior firepower |
Are we supposed to know who you're talking about? | |||
|
| Member |
Current Washington State AG, Bob Ferguson. Now running for Washington State Governor to replace Jay Inslee who is not seeking reelection. | |||
|
Oriental Redneck![]() |
*** RESURRECTING OLD THREAD *** To show more kookiness from MTG. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene Drops Chilling Warning: ‘I’m Not Suicidal — If Something Happens to Me, Find Out Which Foreign Government or Powerful People Would Take Heinous Actions to Stop the Information from Coming Out’ Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) issued a stunning and ominous warning on Saturday, saying that she is “not suicidal” and calling on Americans to demand answers if “foreign governments or powerful people” try to stop her from exposing the truth about the Jeffrey Epstein pedophile network and the political establishment that protected it. Earlier this month, Representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and Thomas Massie (R-KY) vowed to publicly expose the names of the pedophiles, enablers, and conspirators involved in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking ring after victims deliver a list to lawmakers. A group of victims, hosted by Greene, Massie, and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), broke decades of silence at a press conference, stepping forward to demand justice, transparency, and accountability from the government. Rep. Massie filed a discharge petition to force a full House vote on the Epstein Transparency Act. This would force the Department of Justice to release almost all documents related to the Epstein investigation, with certain information redacted, including victims’ personal identifying information. Greene took to X to make her position crystal clear on her support for the Massie–Epstein discharge petition, which calls for a full release of Epstein-related documents. Greene’s most alarming remarks came in a follow-up statement on her personal X account, where she openly suggested that powerful interests, even foreign governments, could attempt to silence her. “I am not suicidal and one of the happiest healthiest people you will meet. I have full faith in God and Jesus Christ is my Lord and Savior. As a sinner, I am only saved through His grace and mercy. With that said, if something happens to me, I ask you all to find out which foreign government or powerful people would take heinous actions to stop the information from coming out. Not only about this issue, but because of the truth that I have been speaking. The People understand what I’m saying.” Although she did not specify which foreign government she was referring to, Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene has been criticizing Israel. She labeled the ongoing conflict in Gaza a “genocide” and accused pro-Israel lobbying groups of undue influence over American politics. Q | |||
|
Member![]() |
[sarcasm]She's crazy, ignorant or both.[/sarcasm] This is the USA. We haven't had any assassination attempts since President Lincoln was shot at Pearl Harbor.This message has been edited. Last edited by: RichardC, | |||
|
| Short. Fat. Bald. Costanzaesque. |
Forget it, she's rolling. ___________________________ He looked like an accountant or a serial-killer type. Definitely one of the service industries. | |||
|
| Staring back from the abyss |
She's worried about the Jooz whacking her like they did Charlie. Cuckoo for CoCo Puffs. As Paul Simon once said, "Still crazy after all these years". ________________________________________________________ It is long past time for a Convention of States. The Founding Fathers gave us this tool to fix an out of control government and we need to use it. | |||
|
| Member |
I’m sorry but I love her. She may be a bit wacky but says whatever she feels. | |||
|
Member![]() |
Apparently, she is a good conservative Representative https://libertyscore.conservat...com/marjorie-greene/ ______& https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/conservative-review/ <----- Conservative biased website | |||
|
| Member |
Yes, she is slightly wacky but she does not hold anything back. What you see is what you get with MTG. She cares deeply about our country, and would never take a bribe of any sort. -c1steve | |||
|
Oriental Redneck![]() |
MTG resigns from Congress Published November 21, 2025 8:29pm EST Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., announced late Friday she will resign her seat in Congress, one week after former President Donald Trump publicly pulled his endorsement of the outspoken Georgia lawmaker. In a lengthy statement posted to X, Greene cited her growing disillusionment with Washington politics, blasting what she called a corrupt "Political Industrial Complex" that she said uses Americans as "pawns in an endless game of division." "Americans are used by the Political Industrial Complex of both political parties, election cycle after election cycle, in order to elect whichever side can convince Americans to hate the other side more," Greene wrote. "And the results are always the same — nothing ever gets better for the common American man or woman." Greene said she had "never fit in" in Washington and was leaving Congress to "fight for the people of this country in a different way." Her announcement comes amid political fallout following Trump’s decision last week to withdraw his endorsement, calling Greene "Wacky" and "a ranting lunatic." In her statement, Greene announced her last day of office would be Jan. 5, 2026. The Office of Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. This is a developing story, check back later for updates. Q | |||
|
| probably a good thing I don't have a cut |
It's a 2 year term and it's still too long for her to just see it thru? | |||
|
Drill Here, Drill Now![]() |
The timing has me betting there will be an announcement soon where she's starting a media gig in January making more than $174k per year. Probably why she was butt kissing with the demonrats recently. Ego is the anesthesia that deadens the pain of stupidity DISCLAIMER: These are the author's own personal views and do not represent the views of the author's employer. | |||
|
Oriental Redneck![]() |
Probably will get a gig on The Puke. Q | |||
|
| Member |
She may be a bit nuts but her full resignation letter was pretty cogent. She also thinks that the Dems will win the midterms and impeach Trump. One way to get back at him is to have one less person to vote for him. She wrote loyalty should be a two way street. Trump has gone after her pretty hard because She was pushing for the total Epstein docs to be released. If the Dems don't win, I am wondering if she doesn't change her mind and stay. If she can. | |||
|
| Peace through superior firepower |
Cuddy say he can't hang | |||
|
| I kneel for my God, and I stand for my flag |
November 18, 2025 Donald Trump Disavows The Self-Serving ‘Populist’ Marjorie Taylor Greene By Joseph Ford Cotto Donald Trump’s decision to disavow Marjorie Taylor Greene marks one of the most consequential moments within the populist right in years. It’s productive, overdue, and welcome because it cuts through the illusion that Greene ever represented a disciplined, service-driven version of the America First cause. Her story, once dressed as a crusade against elite corruption, has steadily revealed itself as the ascent of a self-serving charlatan whose loyalties shifted the moment her ambitions stalled. Greene’s early rise emerged from loud devotion to Trump and fierce rhetoric against the Washingtonian establishment. She used that energy to propel herself from obscurity to national prominence, cultivating the image of a fearless outsider unwilling to bend under pressure. But the moment she failed to receive what she wanted, the veneer cracked. What followed was not principled dissent. It was a strategic rebellion from someone who realized that Trump’s second term would not revolve around her. The break began on January 15, when Trump announced his cabinet selections and passed over her for Secretary of Homeland Security. She had openly campaigned for that role, presenting herself as the natural emissary of the populist base. Instead, Trump chose a more credible nominee to ensure a smoother confirmation. The decision was grounded in political reality, yet Greene interpreted it as personal betrayal. Some grassroots voices questioned the move, but Greene’s reaction was rooted in resentment rather than strategy. By February, she began promoting herself as a potential U.S. Senate candidate in Georgia, positioning her run as the ultimate enforcement of Trump’s agenda. Trump’s advisers were polite but noncommittal. They viewed her chances in a battleground state as weak and her escalating theatrics as political liabilities. Instead of recognizing the legitimate electoral calculus, she took her distancing from Trump’s team as further insult. On March 10, she sought Trump’s endorsement for that Senate seat, insisting she alone could defeat Democrat Jon Ossoff. The President declined. He needed winnable races, not spectacle. Her ambitions were blocked not by enemies, but by the man she claimed to champion. By May, under pressure from the White House, she withdrew from the race and lashed out at Senate Republicans, accusing them of suffocating America First priorities. It was a pivotal moment. When denied the power she sought, she retreated into grievance. Not policy. Not substance. Hurt pride. From there, the unraveling accelerated. In June, she attacked Trump’s strike on Iran as a betrayal of anti-intervention principles. Weeks later, she condemned his expedited support for Ukraine, claiming he had abandoned working-class concerns. By July 24, she criticized his executive order accelerating AI-related data centers as elitist favoritism. Each statement followed the same playbook. After losing influence, she reinvented herself as the Donald’s purer-than-Trump critic. Then she crossed a line that stunned even her allies. On July 29, she became the first Republican in Congress to smear Israel’s operations in Gaza a “genocide,” using language embraced by the far left. She doubled down days later, drawing condemnation from AIPAC, which maintains strong working ties with pro-Israel Republicans, including many Trump loyalists. In September, she repeated the accusation in a New York Times interview, acknowledging that it strained her relationship with Trump. This was not some awakening of conscience. It was another shift in her brand the moment her prior identity no longer benefited her. Her media choices mirrored that opportunism. She vented to The Guardian in August. By October, she appeared on MSNBC, even as the network faced existential pressure from internal ideological fragmentation, echoing Democrat talking points about Obamacare subsidies. For someone who once raged against the “fake news” establishment, the pivot was telling. Beneath all of it lay a fact more revealing than any speech: Greene’s wealth exploded. Her net worth grew from about $700,000 in 2021 to roughly $22 million by mid-2025. Her portfolio beat most of Congress. She made timed investments in Apple and NVIDIA ahead of major rallies. She acquired Palantir shares days before the company secured a government contract overseen by a committee she influenced.......... https://www.americanthinker.co...e_taylor_greene.html | |||
|
| Member |
While I think she’s still a little off in general, I think there’s a lot of truth in what she said. I’m tired of having my concerns being used as talking points during elections and then quickly forgotten about. I’m also tired of the 2nd Amendment community generally being told to just shut up and accept whatever crumbs we are able to scrape up when we get a “victory” that turns out to be in name only. Take for example the hearing protection act and short act. They could have been pushed through during reconciliation but no, take your crumbs and be happy peasant. Then this week, after we were promised that the courts could deliver us the full removal of the majority of NFA items from the NFA registry because the spineless GOP establishment screwed us over in July, the supposedly “most pro 2A DOJ in history” takes a strong position against NFA removal. We need term limits in place for every office in these United States. From the mayor of Podunk Village, population 37, to Senator of the most populated states, we need to eliminate the political class and politics as a profession. I know that would take time, and I hope that it happens in my lifetime, but I feel, now more than ever, that it’s something to work towards. As for MTG, I don’t always agree with her. Moreover, I’m sure this move is a calculated one to benefit her in some meaningful way. But that doesn’t take away the fact that I agree with what she said that I quoted above. I just feel more and more like George Carlin was spot on years ago with his take about politics and the average man - “It’s a Big Club and You Ain’t in it!” “It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.” | |||
|
| Peace through superior firepower |
| |||
|
| Powered by Social Strata | Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 |
| Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
|

