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aubiefifty

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  1. Auburn offers veteran linebacker transfer Larry Nixon III JD McCarthy ~2 minutes The Auburn Tigers are continuing to try and upgrade their roster through the transfer portal and a new target has emerged at linebacker. The Tigers extended an offer to former North Texas linebacker Larry Nixon III Saturday, he announced the news on Twitter. Nixon III spent the past five seasons with the Mean Green and is a graduate transfer with one season of eligibility remaining. Auburn’s offer was the first he reported after entering the portal earlier Saturday afternoon. RELATED: Live updates of Auburn Tigers in the portal He redshirted in 2018 and improved each season before breaking out in 2022. The 6-foot-2, 236-pounder made 105 tackles, 2.5 tackles for loss, and one sack in 14 games last season. His efforts were good enough to be named first-team All-Conference USA. Nixon III finished his career at North Texas with 246 tackles, 11.5 tackles for loss, 5.5 sacks, and two forced fumbles. The Tigers added two transfers in the first window in Austin Keys (Ole Miss) and DeMario Tolan (LSU) but are working to add to a room that saw reserve linebackers Desmond Tisdol, Powell Gordon, and Kameron Brown enter the transfer portal during the spring window. More Football! Jack linebacker Dylan Brooks has reportedly entered the transfer portal Arizona Cardinals select Owen Pappoe in round five Nebraska QB Casey Thompson expected to visit Auburn on Sunday Former Colorado WR Montana Lemonious-Craig visiting Auburn this weekend Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion
  2. on3.com Auburn football transfer portal tracker: Running list of transfers in and out, real-time thoughts Justin Hokanson 7–8 minutes AUBURN — The spring transfer portal window is open from April 15-30. Auburn Live expects a number of current football players to enter into the portal following the completion of spring camp. The Tigers also plan to add another quality haul of transfers coming into the program in the next two weeks. Bookmark this page as we’ll link relevant stories, provide thoughts and track Auburn’s transfer situation during this spring window. RELATED The portal is open: 3 important needs for Auburn football Who should Auburn pursue? Here’s 5 entires to consider Spring transfers out Landen King Colby Smith Dylan Brooks Craig McDonald Tobechi Okoli Powell Gordon Tar’Varish Dawson Jeffrey M’Ba Kameron Brown Desmond Tisdol Running thoughts on Auburn’s spring transfers out — Smith didn’t play in two years and will find a new home elsewhere. Smith was competing for playing time at a backup position this spring and clearly got the signal that more playing time would likely be found elsewhere. — King’s entry into the portal seemed like just a matter of time. Sources do tell Auburn Live that as of just over one week ago, King wasn’t planning on transferring, but he changed his mind within the last week. The former tight end moved to receiver never really found his footing at the position. King entered the portal in the past, but removed his name and remained at Auburn. — The Brooks news was disappointing only because Brooks was Auburn’s highest rated player in the 2021 class and at the time, a crown jewel of Bryan Harsin’s first full class. However, Brooks never developed to get anywhere close to his potential, and exiting spring, hadn’t made up any more ground on earning more playing time at the edge/jack position. In fact, Auburn’s targeting of jack players in the transfer portal speaks volumes, and certainly impacted Brooks’ decision to transfer. — Like the Okoli news, the news of McDonald leaving isn’t all that surprising. McDonald has already transferred once, so unless he receives a waiver by the NCAA, he’ll have to sit out one year. But with the prospects of playing at Auburn slim, McDonald decided that was his best option. Auburn needs more depth at safety and cornerback. Two freshmen will arrive this summer. — The news of Okoli entering the draft, respectfully, is likely of little concern to Auburn’s coaching staff. Okoli played in one game during his freshman season in 2021 and didn’t play in 2022. He committed in August of 2020 and remained a part of Bryan Harsin’s first class in 2021. — The decision for Gordon to leave the program isn’t a shocker. He was a Bryan Harsin recruit, a local kid, and his addition made sense at the time, both adding a player for depth and adding a local player to make inroads. Gordon told Auburn Live he’s leaving the door open for a return to the program, although that seems unlikely. Gordon hasn’t found his true position yet, bouncing between linebacker and jack, remaining undersized for either position exiting the spring. — Dawson, like M’Ba, had thought about entering the portal in the past. Following a spring where he wasn’t able to make a push into the starting rotation, Dawson entering the portal wasn’t a shocker. Auburn has Ja’Varrius Johnson and Jay Fair in the slot, both players who Hugh Freeze singled out for consistent spring efforts. — M’Ba thought about entering the portal after last season, but stayed. He seemed to be happy about how things were going and his position change to defensive end when he spoke to the media during spring camp. Then again, M’Ba is a generally happy person. M’Ba was poised to play significant snaps this fall and provided important depth to the defensive line. — Tisdol and Brown both announced their departures in the middle of spring camp. Neither contributed much and don’t really impact Auburn’s roster in a meaningful way. How many transfers might Auburn target this spring? Auburn is looking at 6-8 spring transfer portal additions, plus or minus some on either side. Of course, this number is fluid based on two things: Auburn actually finding the right fits at the right positions (meaning not taking a player just to take a player), and current players leaving the program matching up with what Hugh Freeze and Co. expect. Quarterback, safety, cornerback, jack/defensive end/rush end, and a “few” offensive linemen are all positions Freeze has specifically mentioned as positions of need during the spring window. Spring transfers in Players and links will be provided as Auburn adds players in the spring transfer window. Running thoughts on Auburn’s spring transfers in Thoughts will be provided as Auburn adds players in the spring transfer window. Transfer portal background information The NCAA Transfer Portal, which covers every NCAA sport at the Division I, II and III levels, is a private database with names of student-athletes who wish to transfer. It is not accessible to the public. The process of entering the portal is done through a school’s compliance office. Once a player provides written notification of an intent to transfer, the office enters the player’s name in the database and everything is off and running. The compliance office has 48 hours to comply with the player’s request and that request cannot be refused. Once a player’s name shows up in the portal, other schools can contact the player. Players can change their minds at any point and withdraw from the portal. However, once a player enters the portal, the current scholarship no longer has to be honored. In other words, if a player enters the portal but decides to stay, the school is not obligated to provide a scholarship anymore. The database is a normal database, sortable by a variety of topics, including (of course) sport and name. A player’s individual entry includes basic details such as contact info, whether the player was on scholarship and whether the player is transferring as a graduate student. A player can ask that a “do not contact” tag be placed on the report. In those instances, the players don’t want to be contacted by schools unless they’ve initiated the communication. The portal has been around since Oct. 15, 2018 and the new calendar cycle within the portal begins each August. For example, the 2021-22 cycle started Aug. 1. During the 2020-21 cycle, 2,626 FBS football players entered the transfer portal (including walk-ons). That comes after 1,681 entered during the 2019-20 cycle and 1,709 during the abbreviated 2018-19 cycle. In comparison, 1,833 Division I basketball players entered the portal during the 2020-21 cycle after totals of 1,020 in 2019-20 and 1,063 in 2018-19.
  3. Auburn Football Auburn reserve offensive lineman is 10th player to enter transfer portal Published: Apr. 30, 2023, 7:05 p.m. Colby Smith (right) holds a blocking pad during a drill with Brenden Coffey (55) during the first day of spring practice on Monday, March 14, 2022 in Auburn, Ala. (Todd Van Emst/AU Athletics)Todd Van Emst/AU Athletics NEW! By Tom Green | tgreen@al.com As the post-spring transfer portal deadline approached Sunday, a 10th Auburn player opted to depart the program. Colby Smith, a reserve offensive lineman who signed with Auburn’s 2021 class, entered the transfer portal on Sunday, according to multiple reports. He was one of two Tigers to hit the portal on the final day of the transfer window, joining tight end-turned-wide receiver Landen King. Read more Auburn football: Where did undrafted Auburn players sign as free agents after 2023 NFL Draft? Auburn still in search of “no-brainer” quarterback target in transfer portal Auburn’s recruiting under Hugh Freeze is “100 to 1″ change from previous coaching staff A 6-foot-8, 340-pounder out of Reidsville, N.C., Smith was a three-star offensive tackle prospect who signed with Auburn two years ago. He redshirted during his first season on the Plains while not seeing the field in any of the Tigers’ games, and he made his first career appearance during the team’s penultimate game last fall, making his debut in Auburn’s win against Western Kentucky. Smith spent his first two seasons with Auburn working at offensive tackle but shifted inside to guard this spring. He was working as the third-team left guard during the final week of spring and found himself down the depth chart of Auburn’s retooled offensive line. Smith is the 15th member of Auburn’s 18-deep 2021 signing class to leave the program in the last two years. Each of Auburn’s top-10 signees from that class are now gone: edge rusher Dylan Brooks (who hit the portal Saturday), defensive tackle Lee Hunter (UCF), safety Ahmari Harvey (Georgia Tech), quarterback Dematrius Davis (Alabama State), wide receiver Tar’Varish Dawson Jr. (Cincinnati), defensive lineman Marquis Robinson, wide receiver Hal Presley (Baylor), defensive end Tobechi Okoli, King and Smith. The other Auburn players to enter the portal since the start of spring practice are linebackers Kameron Brown, Desmond Tisdol and Powell Gordon, defensive ends Jeffrey M’ba and Okoli, wide receivers Dawson and King, edge rusher Brooks and safety Craig McDonald. Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde.
  4. Auburn football WR signed by AFC North champions adds ‘stunning’ athleticism Andrew Hughes 2–3 minutes Former Auburn football wideout Shedrick Jackson, who was signed by the AFC North champion Cincinnati Bengals, could be 'stunning' in their WR room Mandatory Credit: The Montgomery Advertiser Former Auburn football wideout Shedrick Jackson, who was recently signed by the Cincinnati Bengals as an undrafted free agent, could add “stunning” athleticism to the defending AFC North champions should he make the team — this, at least, according to Bengals Wire’s Chris Roling. “The Cincinnati Bengals spent much of the 2023 NFL draft adding stunning athletes at key positions such as wide receiver,” Roling prefaced before saying, “Then the personnel department did it some more in undrafted free agency. The Bengals agreed to sign Auburn wideout Shedrick Jackson, per AL.com, a 6’2″ wideout with some of the best athletic testing numbers in the draft, including a 4.31-second time in the 40-yard dash.” Roling believes Jackson will contribute to a competition in Cincinnati that will be an “all-out fight on the back end of the depth chart.” “There’s about to be an all-out fight on the back end of the depth chart after the Bengals added Charlie Jones and Andrei Iosivas in the draft to a depth chart that also has Stanley Morgran, Trent Taylor, Trenton Irwin and Kawmie Lassiter behind the big three,” Roling wrote. Former Auburn football wideout Shedrick Jackson faces uphill climb to make Cincinnati Bengals It’s possible that Jackson makes his NFL debut for a different team, with Cincy Jungle’s Patrick Judis calling Jackson’s (and Houston TE Christian Trahan’s) road to make the Bengals an uphill climb. “Both of these players have uphill battles to make the final roster, but they will have a great chance to compete to find their way onto a practice squad with some great position coaches and or talent around them to help develop them into roster-worthy players either in Cincinnati or somewhere else in the NFL,” Judis wrote. The nephew of Auburn football legend Bo Jackson, Shedrick has the chance to play with one of the all-time SEC QB greats, Joe Burrow, should he make Cincinnati’s roster.
  5. flywareagle.com Career of recently drafted Auburn RB ‘far from smooth’ Andrew Hughes ~3 minutes Jaguars Wire's Adam Stites called the collegiate career of recently-drafted Auburn football running back Tank Bigsby "far from smooth" (Photo by Michael Chang/Getty Images) Recently-drafted Auburn football running back Tank Bigsby, who was taken with the No. 88 overall selection in the third round of the NFL draft by the Jacksonville Jaguars, had a collegiate career on the Plains that was “far from smooth” — this, at least, according to Jaguars Wire’s Adam Stites. The reason? A brutal transition from Gus Malzahn to Bryan Harsin during the COVID-19 pandemic that limited Bigsby until Cadillac Williams, the coach who recruited No. 4 to the Plains, elevated his stock with more unpredictable schemes for defenses to contend with to mask the Tigers’ subpar offensive line. Stites highlighted Bigsby’s flirtation with the transfer portal following the 2021 season in his bearish assessment of the road Bigsby had to go down in Auburn. “The collegiate career of Bigsby was far from smooth,” Stites wrote. “After joining Auburn when Gus Malzahn was head coach, the running back opted to stay when the team fired Malzahn and hired Bryan Harsin at the end of the 2020 season. Then when several coaches and players left the program after the 2021 season — including starting quarterback Bo Nix — Bigsby entered the transfer portal. Eventually, he changed his mind and finished his college career where he started.” Former Auburn football RB Tank Bigsby landing with Jacksonville Jaguars a shocker As Stites pointed out, Bigsby had no prior visits with the Jaguars — making the decision by Jacksonville to draft the former Auburn football RB1 a shocker considering that other NFL teams had him on their radar. “Like Brenton Strange earlier on Friday, Bigsby was pretty shocked that it was the Jaguars who decided to pick him,” Stites wrote. “While Bigsby said he spoke to the Jaguars at the combine and at his pro day, it was radio silent in the weeks leading up to the draft. Other NFL teams like the Denver Broncos and Arizona Cardinals brought Bigsby in for a visit, but the Jaguars steered clear.” Bigsby landed in a state bordering Alabama on a team that just had one of the all-time NFL postseason comebacks. All things considered, the road should be easier for Bigsby behind a formidable Jaguars offensive line.
  6. flywareagle.com Analyst sends brutal message on 2021 Auburn football recruiting class Andrew Hughes 2–3 minutes On3's Justin Hokanson sent a strong, but extremely harrowing, message about the Auburn football recruiting Class of 2021 Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-USA TODAY Sports On3’s Justin Hokanson had nothing nice to say about the Auburn football recruiting Class of 2021 — one that was between the Gus Malzahn and Bryan Harsin eras, with a COVID-19 pandemic changing the way procedures took place on the recruiting trail. “There’s lost signing classes, and there’s however one would describe Auburn football‘s 2021 signing class,” Hokanson prefaced before sharing, “Only five of the 22 combined high school and transfer portal signees from the class are on campus just two years later.” As Hokanson would later reveal, the Auburn recruiting Class of 2021 has become barebones in every sense. Of those remaining from both the high school and transfer classes, three are expected to have roles in 2023. “Jarquez Hunter, Garner Langlo and Cayden Bridges are the only prospects remaining from Auburn’s high school signing class that consisted of 19 players,” Hokanson wrote. “LSU transfer T.J. Finley and Vanderbilt transfer Donovan Kaufman are the only two remaining transfer portal players from the class.” Auburn football Class of 2021 QB could leave after underwhelming showing on the Plains Finley, a transfer from Ed Orgeron’s penultimate LSU squad in 2020, could leave Auburn football upon graduation from AU in order to take to the transfer portal once more. If he does, he’ll have had an underwhelming showing having been tabbed as QB1 competition for Bo Nix ahead of the 2021 season. “Finley may transfer following his graduation in June,” Hokanson wrote. “If so, Finley will depart with wins over only Mercer and San Jose State as a starting quarterback. And if Finley does transfer, that’ll be 18 of 22 signees gone within two years and after producing very little, if anything of substance.” Following a less-than-stellar A-Day performance in which Tigers head coach Hugh Freeze criticized Finley in live time, the Ponchatoula native seems destined to find a third college football home in the next few months.
  7. si.com Michigan State QB Payton Thorne has entered the transfer portal Lance Dawe ~2 minutes A big time quarterback has hit the transfer portal. Payton Thorne, a two-year starter at Michigan State, has entered the transfer portal, per On3. Thorne, a three-star quarterback in the 2019 class, has led the charge for the Spartans for the past two years. In 2021, Thorne completed 60.4% of his passes for 3,232 yards and 27 touchdowns. He has 49 total passing touchdowns to 24 interceptions over the course of 29 games at Sparty. He has two seasons of college eligibility remaining. The Tigers have had nine players depart from the program within the last few weeks, including three backup linebackers: 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. You can check out our transfer portal tracker here. Stay up to date on all of the Tigers' commitments, departures, and prospects for key positions at auburndaily.com.
  8. Transfer target Isaac Ukwu visiting Auburn JD McCarthy ~2 minutes Auburn is looking to land its first transfer of the spring window and one of the top players available is visiting. Former JMU edge rusher Isaac Ukwu has arrived on the Plains, he announced. The graduate transfer entered the portal on Tuesday and already has over 10 offers. The 6-foot-3, 260-pound has had a winding journey since signing with JMU in 2017. He appeared in three games in 2018, missed the next two seasons with injury, and broke out in 2021 and 2022. Buy Tigers Tickets He racked up 83 tackles, 27.0 tackles for loss, 16.5 sacks, three forced fumbles, and one fumble recovery over the past two seasons. RELATED: Live updates of Auburn Tigers in the portal The Tigers are recruiting him at the jack linebacker spot, where they have just four scholarship players. They added Vanderbilt transfer Elijah McAllister in the earlier portal window but he is backed up by an inexperienced and unproven trio of Dylan Brooks, Keldric Faulk, and Brenton Williams. Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion
  9. si.com Nebraska QB transfer Casey Thompson sets visit with Auburn football Lance Dawe ~2 minutes Casey Thompson, a transfer quarterback from Nebraska, has set a visit with Auburn, per Auburn Live. In 2022, Thompson threw for 2,407 yards, 17 touchdowns, and 10 interceptions. His completion percentage was 63.1%. He will transfer as a graduate and will be able to play right away wherever he decides to go. According to a source, there are six schools that Thompson is interested in as his final destination during his college career. The source then added that Auburn is in the top three. The Tigers have now had six players depart from the program within the last couple of weeks, including three backup linebackers: Wide Receiver Tar'Varish Dawson Defensive lineman Jeffrey M'ba Defensive lineman Tobechi Okoli 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.
  10. Auburn WR Landen King enters portal for second time Published: Apr. 30, 2023, 12:52 p.m. 2–3 minutes Auburn's Hugh Freeze talks quarterbacks and more after A-Day spring scrimmage By Nubyjas Wilborn | nwilborn@al.com Auburn wide receiver Landen King sent a message via Twitter on Sunday to confirm that he’s entering the transfer portal for the second time. King came to the Plains as a member 2021 signing class. The 6-foot-5, 209-pound converted tight end is the ninth player to enter the portal since the start of spring football under new head coach Hugh Freeze. He entered the portal in November, toward the end of former head coach Bryan Harsin’s tenure, and returned to Auburn for spring after Freeze got hired. King scored one touchdown and played in 11 games over two seasons with 83 yards on six receptions. The Tigers signed 18 players in the 2021 class under Harsin, and four players remain with King seeking other opportunities. “I am officially in the transfer portal with 3 years of eligibility remaining!” King said via Twitter. “Thank you, Auburn, for everything!” Safety Ahmari Harvey (Georgia Tech), quarterback Dematrius Davis (Alabama State), wide receiver Tar’Varish Dawson Jr. (Cincinnati), wide receiver Hal Presley (Baylor), defensive end Tobechi Okoli, and defensive lineman Marquis Robinson are some of the players who’ve departed Auburn over the last two seasons. Defensive end Jeffrey M’ba (Purdue), safety Craig McDonald, linebacker Powell Gordon, Okoli, edge rusher Dylan Brooks, Kameron Brown (UT-Chattanooga), Desmond Tisdol (Florida Atlantic), and Dawson are the other players to enter the portal from Auburn since the window opened that closes on Sunday evening. 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.
  11. show me where he said ONLY by teaching gender identity? you are wrong dude. wrong and then insulting when ichy has been straight up lol. wow dude you suck. you and mikey both just make crap up...................
  12. why do people lie like that knowing people will know they are lying? we ought to make him post links of minors getting to do what they want. my friends daugheter who is now a son went through a batter of tests with professionals in this field. iam just wants to smear biden because he was let down and embarrassed by his guy. in fact i am beginning to believe iam does not care for libs period. and i think some hate as well.
  13. you can lead a man to water but you cannot make him drink. they are not being taught to be confused. they are trying to help the sort of people your kind spits on. those people have caught hell over the years as well as being murdered. and i am sorry if you think a minor gets to decide this. you have to have docs and councelors as well as family backing you up. so again you throw out something that is not true. kids do not just walk in and say cut my wanger off and it is done. it is way more involved than that. i told you i had a close friend had a child that had it done. your problem is do you not believe anything. you have pretty much insinuated there are creepy people running around trying to convince kids they need a sex change when they do not. you have turned all of this into a boogey man thing and your hate has clouded your mind. you should know at your age government tells you what you can or cannot do with certain guide lines. you have no idea who is legit and who is not so quit acting like you do. some of these people are desperate. they are made fun of and picked on and hated when all they want is to feel normal.
  14. what about cruz iam? they hate him as well. they call him richardless for the most part.
  15. 1am is part of the problem. he has an excuse for everything. but at the end of the day .....WAIT FOR IT........he was "smart" enough to vote for trump.grins
  16. i just like it because they reflect a few of my leanings.
  17. Answer: I can give you the answer for the USA specifically. First, we need a baseline of why the left and right wing became the way that they are now. The short answer is that prior to the 1960s, the two parties were actually both a mess of liberals and conservatives, with the Republican party actually starting more progressive and the Democrat party being pro establishment and oozing together over roughly 100 years. Then the 60s happened, and the first Catholic President was elected (Kennedy), and that's when the party lines start to solidify into Republican = conservative and Democrat = liberal. The Republican party started taking shape under the influence of Barry Goldwater, who campaigned for President on a platform that included a lot of anti-Civil Rights Movement sentiment. The evangelical churches in the "Bible Belt" region opposed Brown v. Board of Education by starting religious private schools. They could claim religious freedom instead of racial discrimination as an excuse to maintain segregation. Several schools became known as "segregation academies" until the IRS threatened to take away their tax-exempt status. 1965 saw the passage of the Voting Rights Act and the beginning of the "southern strategy." I know this all sounds like I'm focused on racial tensions, but this is where the religious identity starts to tie in. Jerry Falwell was a preacher at a megachurchin Virginia that argued that the government had turned its back on whites in favor of African Americans and Latinos. Nizxon The number of African Americans becoming voters and joining with the Democrats that were not directly campaigning against them alarmed the Republican leaders. So they branded themselves as the party of good old-fashioned family values and promised that they wouldn't leave the white voter behind. The seeds planted in the 60s grew into vines that tied American Christianity to the right wing in the 70s. Race had been the dividing factor, and now a new target showed up: feminism. Sex Ed? What good Christian would be in favor of teaching young people about sex? Birth Control? That's a big no-no. Abortion? How dare you! All issues that had support among the progressive Democrat party were easy to establish as anti-Christian and used to garner more support for right-wing politicians. Nixon even had "America's Pastor" Billy Graham give a prayer at his inauguration, lending credibility that the Republicans were the party of the good Christian folk. Other challenges in this era that supported this claim were removing Bible readings and prayers from schools and the war on drugs. By the end of the 1970s the narrative started to switch from "the Republican platform supports Christianity" to "Christianity supports the Republican platform." And given that there was a political cartoon called "This Godless Communist" and coalitions of religious leaders that had spoken out against communism in the 20th century, it was easy to associate the anti-Reaganomics sentiments towards bolstering healthcare and welfare funding as "communist" and by association, "godless." Taking the last two elections in the United States as a sample, the average age of a Donald Trump voter was between 56-60. That means their formative years were during the rise of the Christian Right, and their first presidential election would be 1980. Meaning a lot of them probably voted for Ronald Reagan in their first or second election. TL;DR: racism and anti-feminism made Republicans appeal to voters by claiming pro-family values, and they had some famous pastors help cement that image. I would add in the rise of Jerry Fallwell's The Moral Majority as a major influence on the Christian right in the 70s and 80s. https://open.spotify.com/episode/6kOStRkQkLLosYoVLEKppy?si=eSBPLUr2SVqxk7cPj8UmhA Jesus would be very disappointed in modern American Christians. He would speak out against mega-churches and these “pastors” wearing Rolex watches and fancy life styles. just some thoughts on christianity by some of our young folks on reddit. they are pretty angry..................
  18. GOP: "These snowflake young kids are ruining this country with their pronouns, rights for everyone, and participation trophies! We need to prevent them from voting to keep them from turning our country into a socialist hell hole!" Also GOP: "Why doesn't Gen Z like us?!? ******* indoctrination is what it is!" i love reddit
  19. it does meet my conviction. the problem is people love their guns and will never voluntarily give thier guns up. and i should have stated assault rifles and that sort of thing. not a six shooter.
  20. do you think trump is less of a crook than he was? yes or no? no need to post anything but the answer. you get on me about trump but you sure stay on biden. can you answer a simple yes or no?
  21. i am all for tougher gun laws. i would gladly give up my pea shooter if it would save a childs life. there are very few if any on the right that will say this. probably a few on the left. the whole issue is people do not care as long as they have their weapons. the choice has always been simple to me........children or guns. and you see how we have resolved all the issues.
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