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kallend

Quiz of the Day

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42 minutes ago, Phil1111 said:

You're not calculating for his ego and sense of self entitlement.

True. 

Apparently he went completely off script, rambled nearly incoherently, attacked anyone and everyone who he thinks is 'against him', repeated the claims that he won the election, and on and on.

You know, the same shit he always does.

And the R donors are not super happy about it.

 

 

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2 hours ago, wolfriverjoe said:

True. 

Apparently he went completely off script, rambled nearly incoherently, attacked anyone and everyone who he thinks is 'against him', repeated the claims that he won the election, and on and on.

You know, the same shit he always does.

And the R donors are not super happy about it.

 

 

Hi Joe,

To me, that says delusional.

Jerry Baumchen

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21 minutes ago, kallend said:

What do the 45th, 42nd, 36th, 35th, 34th, 32nd, 29th, 24th,  22nd, 20th, 15th, and 3rd presidents of the United States have in common (besides being president and male)?

not sure but it can't be anything good with 45 on the list.

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(edited)
4 hours ago, kallend said:

What do the 45th, 42nd, 36th, 35th, 34th, 32nd, 29th, 24th,  22nd, 20th, 15th, and 3rd presidents of the United States have in common (besides being president and male)?

Hi John,

I'm going out on a limb with this guess:  Notorious womanizers.

Jerry Baumchen

PS)  IMO Ike would not be on the list.

Edited by JerryBaumchen

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5 minutes ago, wmw999 said:

Well, Buchanan may have been gay; he certainly never married. So maybe it’s just people who pretty reliably were reported to have had affairs. 
Wendy P. 

We need to stop calling them affairs. It's like saying you need to go #2.

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3 minutes ago, JoeWeber said:

We need to stop calling them affairs. It's like saying you need to go #2.

Hi Joe,

And you would recommend?

History and Etymology for affair. Middle English aferes "activities," affaire "enterprise," borrowed from Anglo-French afaire, affere "business, activity, enterprise, matter, topic, situation," from the phrase a faire "to do," from a "to" (going back to Latin ad) + faire "to do," going back to Latin facere.

Jerry Baumchen

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8 minutes ago, JerryBaumchen said:

Hi Joe,

And you would recommend?

History and Etymology for affair. Middle English aferes "activities," affaire "enterprise," borrowed from Anglo-French afaire, affere "business, activity, enterprise, matter, topic, situation," from the phrase a faire "to do," from a "to" (going back to Latin ad) + faire "to do," going back to Latin facere.

Jerry Baumchen

I would think that banging the secretary is more immediately understandable but then I'm no engineer.

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