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aubiefifty

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  1. si.com Auburn football has two of the best running backs in the nation Lance Dawe 2–3 minutes Auburn football may have one of the deepest running back rooms in the SEC heading in to the 2023 season. Auburn football may have one of the deepest running back rooms in the SEC heading in to the 2023 season. According to Big Game Boomer, a social media influencer and big time name in the college football media sphere, the Tigers have two of the top 35 running backs in the nation. Boomer recently released his list of the top 50 running backs in all of college football, with a Auburn Jarquez Hunter, coming in at No. 7 overall. Fellow Tiger Brian Battie came in at No. 32 respectively. The six running backs that made the list over hunter include Quidshon Judkins (Ole Miss), Raheim Sanders (Arkansas), Blake Corum (Michigan), Will Shipley (Clemson), Braelon Allen (Wisconsin), and Donovan Edwards (Michigan). The Tigers picked up Battie from the transfer portal (South Florida) alongside several offensive linemen to give Auburn a boost upfront. The rushing attack should be the strength of the team in 2023. The Auburn Tigers had ten players depart from the program during the spring transfer portal window, including three backup linebackers: Quarterback TJ Finley Wide receiver Tar'Varish Dawson Wide receiver Landen King Offensive lineman Colby Smith Defensive lineman Jeffrey M'ba Defensive lineman Tobechi Okoli Defensive end Dylan Brooks Linebacker Kameron Brown Linebacker Desmond Tisdol Linebacker Powell Gordon Auburn has pulled in an impressive haul thus far during Hugh Freeze's first season on the Plains, currently sitting at No. 3 nationally in 247Sports' transfer portal class rankings. Stay up to date on all of the Tigers' commitments, departures, and prospects for key positions at auburndaily.com. Michigan State QB transfer Payton Thorne commits to Auburn TJ Finley has entered the transfer portal as a graduate student Auburn football's projected 2023 depth chart Auburn football lands App State OLB Jalen McLeod Will Casey Thompson or Payton Thorne lead the Auburn Tigers? Auburn basketball releases 2023-24 roster Engage with Auburn Daily on Socials! Join the Discord Follow Auburn Daily on Twitter Like Auburn Daily on Facebook Subscribe to Locked On Auburn on YouTube
  2. al.com Revisting Auburn’s offensive line after A-Day Published: May. 10, 2023, 5:35 a.m. ~4 minutes By Nubyjas Wilborn | nwilborn@al.com Since arriving in November as Auburn head coach, Hugh Freeze has been a man of his word. He inherited a team that was in need of starters at four of the five offensive line positions. Jeremiah Wright, Jalil Irwin, Kam Stutts, and Tate Johnson carried the most experience of the unit. Most observers expected Wright to be a starter at one of the guard positions, but losing Nick Brahms, Austin Troxell, Brandon Council, and Alec Jackson to graduation left Freeze and new offensive line coach Jake Thornton in for a rebuild. Johnson was starting center after Brahms got hurt during fall camp and will likely be the starting right guard with Wright at left. Freeze knew he had to work quickly to get close to having the 16 offensive linemen he prefers to carry on his roster in the spring. “We need the most help on O-line; we’re continuing to develop that. We still need a few more o-line, Freeze said after December’s National Signing Day. “We tried to focus on big men. I think this is a big man league. If you don’t have guys on both sides up front, then it’s very difficult for these athletic receivers, running backs, and quarterbacks.” Picking up former Tulsa lineman Jaden Muskrat this past Monday marked the fourth player to join the Tigers from the transfer portal. Muskrat played right tackle for Tulsa, where Auburn offensive coordinator Philip Montgomery was the head coach last season. Muskrat also played at Tulsa with left tackle Dillion Wade. Getting two linemen with intimate knowledge of Montgomery’s system hopes to breed continuity. Gunnar Britton (Western Kentucky) and Avery Jones (Western Kentucky) also showed themselves as promising starters in the spring. Britton started at left tackle and was second team All-Conference USA player for the Hilltoppers. Jones veteran experience at center excites Montgomery. “He’s not being surprised by a lot of the different looks that we’re getting from our defense right now, which has been great,” Montgomery told reporters during spring football. “A guy that can handle those duties, can make a lot of calls. As a quarterback getting good snaps and knowing where those things are going to be, especially in the game that we want to play in the RPO system. You know, you start spraying snaps all over the place, and then that’s going to affect the way you run your offense.” Izavion Miller was one of the most coveted junior college transfers and should be in the Tigers rotation at either tackle spot. Connor Lew, Clay Wedin, and Bradyn Joiner enrolled early as freshmen and gained a head start on reps in the spring. Freeze and offensive line coach Jake Thornton’s quick work took Auburn from wondering if they’d have enough linemen for spring practice to entering fall camp a bit more at ease. Freeze won’t be satisfied with the rebuild until he sees how the group plays together in games. However, he did acknowledge she unit’s growth since he became the head coach. “I’m cautiously optimistic that we’re going to have a decent offensive line. In this league, you can have a decent one and still look bad at times because the defensive lines are so talented. But there’s no question in my mind we’ve made improvements from last year to this year. Nubyjas Wilborn covers Auburn for Alabama Media Group. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.
  3. Greg McElroy gives insight on what Auburn's offense will look like with QB Payton Thorne Spenser Davis | 19 hours ago Greg McElroy is a big fan of the potential fit between Auburn and new quarterback Payton Thorne. Thorne didn’t have a great season in 2022 with Michigan State, but McElroy believes Auburn’s offensive system under new OC Phillip Montgomery could play to his strengths. “By all accounts, [Hugh Freeze] is delegating responsibility to Phillip Montgomery, the new offensive coordinator for the Auburn Tigers. And if you look at Phillip Montgomery’s tenure as the head coach at Tulsa, they’re a team that wants to pound the football. “Granted, not necessarily always great when it comes to wins and losses in his time as a head coach, but you knew what their identity was. They wanted to pound the football, they wanted to run the football. They wanted to compliment the run game with the play-action pass. And that’s what Payton Thorne has excelled with in the past. I expect him to have a really nice year.” During his 3 seasons at Michigan State — 2 as a starter — Thorne completed 61% of his passes for 6,493 yards, 49 touchdowns and 24 interceptions. He averaged 7.5 yards per attempt with the Spartans. i posted the video of his remarks yesterday in the football thread.
  4. gadsdentimes.com 'I know it can win': Why Hugh Freeze leads recruiting strategy with Auburn football Richard Silva 4–5 minutes AUBURN — Auburn football coach Hugh Freeze couldn't even fully answer the question before getting interrupted. Asked how recruiting has changed and if he has ever experienced anything like it in his career before, his phone buzzed in his back pocket. "It's never felt quite like it feels now," Freeze said at an AMBUSH event in Huntsville last month. "You obviously have to recruit your players while you're trying to recruit others and trying to manage − my phone, both phones are ringing right now and I guarantee you it has something to do with recruiting." RECRUITING:How Auburn football's Hugh Freeze has done in building relationships with in-state coaches FINISHING TOUCHES:Final 3 positions of need for Auburn football as summer approaches He was right. "Yup, this is a good one," Freeze said. The call could've been about any number of things. Perhaps it was about one of the incoming transfers Auburn added this month. Or maybe it was about a recruit in the Class of 2024, a cycle in which the Tigers have already landed five commitments, including four-star QB Walker White, who chose Auburn in February over Baylor and Clemson. The Tigers have added 37 new players since Freeze arrived to the Plains in November: 19 high school recruits, 16 transfers and two from junior college. Of that bunch, nine are offensive linemen. Auburn added nine offensive linemen in the previous three recruiting cycles combined. "It's just different," Freeze said after putting his phone back in his pocket. "But it's the same for everybody. I'm kind of getting to the point where you just kind of take it in stride and know, 'You know what, it is what it is and we're going to do what is best for Auburn and hopefully get a group of young men that believe in that vision and that culture.' "It's going to have to be a mixture of high school kids and portal kids. It's just the world we're in now." Freeze has been open about his approach to recruiting at Auburn. He hired assistants he's confident in to run the majority of the football side of things. That way he gets to focus on being a recruiter. That was seen at various spring practices, as he was often off to the side talking to a recruit and his family while coordinators Philip Montgomery and Ron Roberts, along with the other assistants, ran the show. "As much as I love calling plays, and I'm certain I still will do that at some (points), but I can't sit in that room all day and manage that entire roster, plus recruiting," Freeze said. "It's definitely different." Freeze also pointed to his personnel staff, who sift through information and filter what is brought to his attention. "I've kind of just gotten to where I don't look too much and I wait for the text from them that says, 'This one here, you need to look at, coach.' That helps me a lot," Freeze said. "But truthfully, I don't get stressed too much anymore in life. ... I think you get to a point that (you say), 'You know what, I know what we do is good.' "I know it can win. Now, let me just drive that train and get a group of guys and coaches together. That's the challenge: Getting the locker room to buy into that. At the end of the day, if it's not good enough, it's not good enough. Me stressing over it is not going to add any value whatsoever to Auburn, to my family (or) to my life. So, I really don't stress too much over that." Richard Silva is the Auburn athletics beat writer for the Montgomery Advertiser. He can be reached via email at rsilva@gannett.com or on Twitter @rich_silva18.
  5. he is a die hard maga cat from way back. i swear i think trump could molest a child and get away with it with his followers. little jesus my ass. those cats are mostly cray as hell. and they call me crazy...............
  6. you are a lowlife to take up for anything trump. if your mom was the victim you would not be blabbing all this crap all over the board. it is a bad look. the man FORCED himself on here.period. he has at last count 26 women coming forward with assault and rape allegations and you people think it is money grabbers.
  7. so you have the trump tat as well? i believe everything she said.apparently the joror did the same. but you cannot live with your boy getting tagged huh? buckle up buttercup there is lots mor coming.
  8. golf should be out there repping AUFAM just saying............
  9. Tee times for Wednesday’s Regions Tradition Pro-Am Published: May. 09, 2023, 10:56 a.m. ~4 minutes Sports Check out tee times for Wednesday’s Regions Tradition Celebrity Pro-Am at Greystone Bo Jackson waves to fans on the first tee at the 2022 NCR Pro-Am at Greystone Golf and Country Club in Birmingham. The annual event is held in conjunction with the Regions Tradition PGA Champions Tour tournament. (Photo by Tracy Wilcox/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)PGA TOUR By Creg Stephenson | cstephenson@al.com The annual Drummond Company Celebrity Pro-Am takes place Wednesday at Greystone Golf & Country Club, as part of Regions Tradition week in Birmingham. Among those set to play in this year’s Pro-Am are Auburn head football coach Hugh Freeze, Tigers legends Bo Jackson and Charles Barkley, U.S. Senator and former Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville, former Alabama quarterback Greg McElroy, Crimson Tide basketball coach Nate Oats, Georgia football coach Kirby Smart, UAB football coach Trent Dilfer and Atlanta Braves legend Dale Murphy. Alabama football coach Nick Saban will not play in the event, as he has in years past. Gates open for the Pro-Am at 7 a.m. Here is the full list of tee times, by group: The annual Drummond Company Celebrity Pro-Am takes place Wednesday at Greystone Golf & Country Club, as part of Regions Tradition week in Birmingham. Among those set to play in this year’s Pro-Am are Auburn head football coach Hugh Freeze, Tigers legends Bo Jackson and Charles Barkley, U.S. Senator and former Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville, former Alabama quarterback Greg McElroy, Crimson Tide basketball coach Nate Oats, Georgia football coach Kirby Smart, UAB football coach Trent Dilfer and Atlanta Braves legend Dale Murphy. Alabama football coach Nick Saban will not play in the event, as he has in years past. Gates open for the Pro-Am at 7 a.m. Here is the full list of celebrity tee times, by group: 7:40 a.m. — Notah Begay (Champions Tour pro), Peter Burns (SEC Network), Eddie Robinson Jr. (Alabama State football coach) 7:50 a.m. — David Toms (Champions Tour), Greg Sankey (SEC commissioner) 8 a.m. — Scott McCarron (Champions Tour), Bo Jackson (Auburn legend), Taylor Hicks (American Idol winner), Mike Mills (musician/founder of R.E.M.) 8:10 a.m. — Justin Leonard (Champions Tour), Greg McElroy (former Alabama quarterback/SEC Network), Daryl “Moose” Johnston (Dallas Cowboys Super Bowl champion) 8:20 a.m. — Ernie Els (Champions Tour), Hugh Freeze (Auburn football coach) 8:30 a.m. — Steve Stricker (Champions Tour), Nate Oats (Alabama basketball coach), Greg Byrne (Alabama athletics director) 8:40 a.m. — Jim Furyk (Champions Tour), Kirby Smart (Georgia football coach) 8:5 a.m. — Retief Goosen (Champions tour), Charles Barkley (Auburn legend), Dale Murphy (Atlanta Braves legend), Trent Dilfer (UAB football coach) 9 a.m. — John Daly (Champions Tour), Riley Green (country music star), Randy Owen (country music star), Sen. Tommy Tuberville (former Auburn football coach) 9 a.m. (10th tee) — Tom Lehman (Champions Tour), Noah Galloway (Dancing With the Stars contestant/Army veteran) 12:40 p.m. (10th tee) — Robert Carlsson (Champions Tour), Connell Maynor (Alabama A&M football coach) The Regions Tradition Champions Tour tournament begins Thursday. For more information, visit regionstradition.com. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.
  10. news.yahoo.com AP sources: US Rep. George Santos facing federal charges MICHAEL BALSAMO, FARNOUSH AMIRI and JAKE OFFENHARTZ 5–6 minutes WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. Rep. George Santos, who faced outrage and mockery over a litany of fabrications about his heritage, education and professional pedigree, has been charged with federal criminal offenses, two people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press. The charges against Santos, filed in the Eastern District of New York, remain under seal. The people could not publicly discuss specific details of the case while it remains under seal and spoke to The AP on condition of anonymity. Reached on Tuesday, Santos said, “This is news to me.” “You’re the first to call me about this,” he said in a brief phone interview. - ADVERTISEMENT - The charges were first reported by CNN. The New York Republican has admitted to lying about having Jewish ancestry, a Wall Street background, college degrees and a history as a star volleyball player. Serious questions about his finances also surfaced — including the source of what he claimed was a quickly amassed fortune despite recent financial problems, including evictions and owing thousands of dollars in back rent. Santos has resisted calls to resign and recently announced he was running for reelection. He said his lies about his life story, which included telling people he had jobs at several global financial firms and a lavish real estate portfolio, were harmless embellishments of his resume. Pressure on him to quit, though, has been intense. Reporters and members of the public hounded him. He was mocked on social media and late-night television. Fellow New York Republicans demanded he resign, saying he had betrayed voters and his own party with his lies. Nassau County prosecutors and the New York attorney general’s office had previously said they were looking into possible violations of the law. Besides questions about his life story, Santos’ campaign spending stoked scrutiny because of unusual payments for travel, lodging and other items. The nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center lodged a complaint with the Federal Election Commission and urged regulators to investigate Santos. The “mountain of lies” Santos propagated during the campaign about his life story and qualifications, the center said, should prompt the commission to “thoroughly investigate what appear to be equally brazen lies about how his campaign raised and spent money.” In his filings with the FEC, Santos initially said he loaned his campaign and related political action committees more than $750,000 — money he claimed came from a family company. Yet, the wealth necessary to make those loans seems to have emerged from nowhere. In a financial disclosure statement filed with the clerk of the U.S. House in 2020, Santos said he had no assets and an annual income of $55,000. His company, the Devolder Organization, wasn’t incorporated until spring 2021. Yet last September, Santos filed another financial disclosure form reporting that this new company, incorporated in Florida, had paid him a $750,000 salary in each of the last two years, plus another $1 million to $5 million in dividends. In one interview, Santos described the Devolder Organization as a business that helped rich people buy things like yachts and aircraft. Court records indicate Santos was the subject of three eviction proceedings in Queens between 2014 and 2017 because of unpaid rent. Some Republicans, including those in his district, have sharply castigated Santos for his dishonesty. The Nassau County Republican Committee, which had supported his candidacy, said it would not support Santos for reelection. Santos lost his first race for Congress in 2020 but ran again in 2022 and won in a district that is in the suburbs of Long Island and a sliver of Queens. A local newspaper, the North Shore Leader, had raised issues about Santos’ background before the election but it was not until a few weeks after the election that the depth of his duplicity became public. The New York Times reported that companies where Santos claimed to have worked, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs, had no record of him having been an employee. Baruch College, where Santos claimed to have gotten a degree in finance and economics, said he hadn’t been a student. Beyond his resume, Santos invented a life story that has also come under question, including claims that his grandparents “fled Jewish persecution in Ukraine, settled in Belgium, and again fled persecution during WWII.” During his campaign, he referred to himself as “a proud American Jew.” Confronted with questions about that story, Santos, a Roman Catholic, said he never intended to claim Jewish heritage. The Times also uncovered records in Brazil that show Santos, when he was 19, was the subject of a criminal investigation there in 2008 over allegations he used stolen checks to buy items at a clothing shop in the city of Niteroi, which is near Rio de Janeiro. Brazilian authorities said they have reopened the case. ___ Associated Press writers Michael R. Sisak in New York and Lindsay Whitehurst in Washington contributed to this report.
  11. Hill reactions: Several Republicans are unfazed by Trump's sex abuse verdict Kelly Garrity and Nancy Vu 4–5 minutes A New York jury found former President Donald Trump liable for sexually abusing E. Jean Carroll in 1996, awarding the advice columnist close to $5 million in damages on Tuesday. The verdict, which was announced in a federal courtroom in New York City on the first day of jury deliberations, sparked quick reactions from the former president — who continued to deny the allegations — and from multiple members of Congress, including Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.). “You never like to hear that a former president has been found in a civil court guilty of those types of actions,” the South Dakota senator told reporters Tuesday. When asked if he could support somebody who’s been found liable for sexual battery, he said: “I would have a difficult time doing so.” The verdict "creates concern," Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) said, but whether or not it disqualifies the former president from his current presidential bid will be up to the voters. But not all Republicans had the same hesitation. Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), who served as ambassador to Japan under Trump, said the verdict was the latest act in the "legal circus" surrounding Trump. "I think we've seen President Trump under attack since before he became president," Hagerty said during an interview on Fox News. "This has been going on for years. He's been amazing in his ability to weather these sorts of attacks and the American public has been amazing in their support through it." “This won’t be the last,” Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.), who has endorsed Trump this election cycle, said of the case. “I mean, people are gonna come at him from all angles... People are gonna try and convict him on the papers in Mar-a-Lago. [They] Can’t have him win.” The case and the jury were both "a joke," Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy dodged a question about the verdict during a stakeout with reporters following his meeting with President Joe Biden over the debt limit. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, Trump's foe in the chamber, declined to comment, as did Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), an ardent supporter of Trump. The ruling comes weeks after the former president was charged with 34 felonies related to the alleged role he played in a scheme to bury accusations of extramarital affairs ahead of the 2016 presidential election. Despite his legal battles, the former president remains the frontrunner for the GOP presidential nomination. On Tuesday, Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.) said the former president was “unfit to hold office.” “The *front runner* for the Republican nomination for President of the United States has just been found liable for sexual abuse,” Moulton said in a tweet. “The more these lawsuits pile up, the more of an aggrieved version of Trump we'll get. He is unfit to hold office.” Moulton wasn’t alone in noting Trump’s mounting legal battles. “Donald Trump — the leader of the Republican Party — has now been impeached twice, indicted, and found liable of sexual abuse and defamation,” Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) tweeted. “You’ve hitched your wagon to a real stand-up guy, @HouseGOP.” First-term Rep. Summer Lee (D-Pa.) also turned the verdict on Republicans, criticizing support for Trump. “The Republican party will STILL eagerly stand by him to prop him up while they offer their unwavering support. Their subservience is a slap in the face to survivors and all women,” Lee said on Twitter. The former president has been accused of sexual misconduct by more than two dozen women, and in the now infamous “Access Hollywood” tape, he was caught saying that when it comes to women, if you’re a star you can “grab them by the *****.” Tuesday's verdict was the first time he has faced legal repercussions for sexual assault. Trump defended himself on social media Tuesday afternoon, calling the verdict “a disgrace" and “a continuation of the greatest witch hunt of all time!” In a statement, Trump's campaign called the case "bogus" and said Trump was being targeted because of his position as a frontrunner in the presidential race. Daniella Diaz and contributed to this report.
  12. trump refused to testify so he is lying about a fair trial. he finally found someone he could not bully. i must say i am enjoying his butthurtedness.
  13. rollingstone.com Trump Rages After E. Jean Carroll Sexual Assault Verdict Ryan Bort 7–8 minutes Skip to main content Trump Rages After Sexual Assault Verdict: ‘A DISGRACE’ The former president was none too pleased that he'll have to pay E. Jean Carroll $5 million for battery and defamation Former US president Donald Trump playing golf at his Trump Turnberry course in South Ayrshire during his visit to the UK. Picture date: Wednesday May 3, 2023. Andrew Milligan/PA Images/Getty Images Donald Trump is not happy that a jury determined he sexually abused and defamed E. Jean Carroll. “I HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO IDEA WHO THIS WOMAN IS,” the former president ranted on Truth Social minutes after the jury handed down the verdict. “THIS VERDICT IS A DISGRACE – A CONTINUATION OF THE GREATEST WITCH HUNT OF ALL TIME!” Trump added to Fox News that he plans to appeal the ruling. “We’ll appeal. We got treated very badly by the Clinton-appointed judge,” Trump said. “And [Carroll] is a Clinton person too.” Trump’s team released a more fleshed-out response, calling the case part of a political ploy perpetrated by Democrats to keep the former president from winning back the White House. Trump wasn’t done on Truth Social, either. “VERY UNFAIR TRIAL!” he added later. “WHAT ELSE CAN YOU EXPECT FROM A TRUMP HATING, CLINTON APPOINTED JUDGE, WHO WENT OUT OF HIS WAY TO MAKE SURE THAT THE RESULT WAS AS NEGATIVE AS IT COULD POSSIBLY BE, SPEAKING TO, AND IN CONTROL OF, A JURY FROM AN ANTI-TRUMP AREA WHICH IS PROBABLY THE WORST PLACE IN THE U.S. FOR ME TO GET A FAIR ‘TRIAL,'” he wrote after that. The jury of six men and three woman only needed a few hours to find Trump liable of battery and defamation, ruling that he pay Carroll a total of $5 million. The jury did not, however, find that Carroll was able to prove Trump raped her. Carroll first accused Trump of doing so in 2019, claiming the assault took place in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room in the mid-1990s. Carroll sued Trump for defamation later in 2019, and for battery late last year under New York’s new Adult Survivors Act. Trump railed about the case ahead of the jury commencing its deliberation earlier on Tuesday. “Waiting for a jury decision on a False Accusation where I, despite being a current political candidate and leading all others in both parties, am not allowed to speak or defend myself, even as hard nosed reporters scream questions about this case at me,” the former president wrote on Truth Social. “In the meantime, the other side has a book falsely accusing me of Rape, & is working with the press. I will therefore not speak until after the trial, but will appeal the Unconstitutional silencing of me, as a candidate, no matter the outcome!” In reality, Trump declined the opportunity to defend himself in court on multiple occasions, first when his legal team informed Judge Lewis Kaplan last week that they would not be presenting a defense, and again after Kaplan allowed Trump until Sunday evening to request to defend himself. Kaplan had already warned Trump’s team about the former president’s social media activity, telling Trump lawyer Joe Tacopina that his client was “tampering with a new source of potential liability” by bashing Carroll on social media. The warning came the same day Trump called the allegations against him a “made up SCAM” and accused Carroll’s lawyer of being a “political operative.” Trump’s claim on Tuesday that he has “ABSOLUTELY NO IDEA WHO THIS WOMAN IS” is dubious. He’s been photographed with Carroll, and during his deposition he confused her for his second wife.
  14. joe won because people were tired of trump and his mouth. i find it funny they screwed ms cheney because she stood up for what was right. but they whisper they are done with trump behind his back so that makes what they did to liz even worse...................
  15. so how smart do you feel after voting for him? was it twice? grins. and if i HAD to have a trump tat it would have to be on my behind so he could kiss it all day long. yall kissed his behind so i find it pretty funny you think his haters would. guess that is repuke thinking. HEY AMERICA no matter what you say at the end of the day i never voted for him. who all on here can say that? not you strike out because i remember you from way back.
  16. that is rich. the bottom line is you do not care if children die because you want your assault rifle. you got a bump stock with it? it makes it easier to shoot a little girls face off.
  17. you are splitting hairs on the rape versus assault thing. mr trump grabbed that lady by the *****. he bragged about it on tv and got caught. the jury said he did the same exact thing he bragged about on that show. he forced several fingers in her and that is penetration. i just want that to be clear here..........just in case
  18. says the cat with the trump tattoo. i know it hurts buddy. i know you feel like slime for voting for the old boy but ALL of you were warned. show me where it hurts sugar..........
  19. i got nothing for him over the rape crap. i am surprised titan did not get involved in that one.....
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