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Trump Has Humiliated His Foes

Well, truth is that people like @2lion70 @fbh1 and @LafayetteBear have humiliated themselves. That's what happens when an otherwise rational person allows the emotion of hate to guide them. I don't know about you, but if you used the word "hate" growing up, you were immediately corrected.

In typical fashion, these are the type of people who likely have a "Hate Has No Home Here" signs on their lawn.

https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/11/06/donald-trump-election-humiliated-his-foes-00187812

Donald Trump didn’t steal the 2024 election. He has won it — clearly and comprehensively.
Democrats warned that Trump and his supporters are prepared to hijack democracy. Now they must ruefully acknowledge another reality: The Trump movement, no matter how much this appalls opponents, is a powerful expression of democracy.

Vice President Kamala Harris may have been an imperfect candidate — the postmortems are vigorously underway on Wednesday morning — but she delivered the essential Democratic argument perfectly well: The Trump Era was something to be scraped off the national shoe.

Instead, there will be another helping placed on the national plate. His adversaries don’t have to pretend it tastes good. But, for now, they need to eat it.
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A Response to My Liberal Neighbor

Every one us should see this as disgusting. Democrats won't. They are too hateful, spiteful and vindictive. Those are their values.

https://tomklingenstein.com/a-response-to-my-liberal-neighbor/

I recently received this email from a neighbor:

I want to share the following words from Boston Globe “Fast Forward” columnist Teresa Hanafin about the upcoming election. I know it won’t make a difference to your way of thinking — which is a mystery and a deep disappointment to me — but I think it is important for you to understand how many of us who have been your friends feel. This is not just a difference in politics or ideology, it is a difference in fundamental values.
This neighbor’s children grew up with mine. We were once good friends. We socialized and traveled together. No more. But we are civil toward each other. I don’t remember ever talking with him much about politics, but I know him to be center- left — certainly no radical, let alone a revolutionary.

Curiously, my neighbor thinks I do not know what my former friends feel about me. How could I possibly not know? I regularly run across people who hate Trump as much as my former friends do. Either my neighbor doesn’t know that he lives in a bubble, or he doesn’t know that I do not. He can easily avoid conservative news. I, on the other hand, cannot avoid his sources of news because they saturate the air I breathe. I could not avoid them even if I tried. He can avoid conservatives, or turn conservative friends like me into erstwhile friends.

He says there is a difference between us in “fundamental values.” He doesn’t define “fundamental values,” but it sounds as if he is saying he has better values than I have, or even that he is a good person, and I am not. Liberals have always said this of conservatives. For the record, I doubt my values really are different from his, and his values are, by and large, good — although there is one value he might work on: humility.

He is not accusing me of a good-faith error, because my error, in his view, can only have been made on purpose, the consequence not of ignorance but of malevolence. It seems impossible for him to entertain the possibility that the error is his — a good-faith error perhaps, but an error all the same. He is as imprisoned in his liberal bubble as was the film critic Pauline Kael, who was reported to have said about the 1972 election, “I don’t know how Richard Nixon could have won. I don’t know anybody who voted for him.”
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Initial CFP rankings out tonight

They'll be very revealing as to our playoff situation going forward. I'm thinking whatever our rank -- I'm guessing in the range of 7-9 -- that will be the lowest we'll be looking at the rest of the year...IF...big if...we win out. If we don't win out, we're likely not gonna make the cut without serious help. I just don't think 10-2 works for us this year given how everything is coming together with a month or so to go.
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Anti-Trump Protests Are Being Readied In The Nation’s Capital

By: Richard Pollock
Thursday, October 31, 2024

Donald Trump’s opponents appear to be planning potentially violent demonstrations that could rock the nation’s capital if the former President should win the 2024 election.

This dark prospect emerges from current requests for a demonstration permit I obtained from the National Park Service (NPS), the federal agency which regulates legal demonstrations in Washington, D.C.

Richard’s Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support

NPS permit records show that nearly all the post-election and Inaugural Day permits have been filed by leftwing anti-Trump groups, including pro-Palestinian and “defend democracy” groups.

The applicants claim about 15,000 protesters could descend on Washington, D.C. on election night and up to 200,000 anti-Trump protests could arrive leading up to and including Inauguration Day, when the next President is sworn in.

On election night a group that calls itself “Defend Democracy Election Night Watch Party” states in its permit application that the event is an “election night watch event for advocates of democracy.” They report: “We’ll watch the election results live as they come in and speakers will talk about the importance of ensuring that every vote counts.” They will gather at Freedom Plaza in Washington, D.C., a common place for demonstrations.

About another 10,000 people are expected to descend on Washington four days after the election for an event titled, “Rally to Defend Democracy.”

It’s also revealing that some anti-Trump activists already are planning some form of “resistance” on election night – a possible code word for violence.

Lacy MacAuley, a DC activist is quoted as coyly telling the Washington Post that her planned demonstration on election night could result in “feisty resistance.”

MacAuley is a dedicated political organizer and once was part of a group called Disrupt J20 that attempted to interrupt the 2017 Trump Inauguration.

Her group’s aims at the time were described in an interview with Legba Carrefour, a DisruptJ20 organizer.

She told the website called “Interviews for Resistance” that her group was “an umbrella coalition of groups with a core of local organizers who have a lot of activist experience. Washington, D.C. organizers … most of whom are anarchists. … The idea … is we want to undermine Trump’s presidency from the get-go. There has been a lot of talk of peaceful transition of power as being a core element in a democracy and we want to reject that entirely and really undermine the peaceful transition,” she said in a website titled “Interviews for Resistance.”

MacAuley is quoted by the Post as candidly saying about the 2024 election night: “That kind of feisty resistance, I believe, is what we are going to see again if Donald Trump wins the election.” She said her demonstration would represent “anger or fear over another Trump presidency.”

This kind of rhetoric has largely been buried by legacy media outlets. Instead, they have widely predicted election-related violence engineered by angry Trump supporters.

However, the only genuine political violence so far has been two assassination attempts on the former President.

And the only election-related violence to date was when election ballot boxes were destroyed with incendiary devices in Portland, Oregon and Vancouver, Washington. And the assailants wrote “Free Gaza” and “Free Palestine” on the boxes. Not exactly a MAGA expression.

ABC News reported that the violence was being committed by an experienced metalworker who may be planning more attacks: “The man suspected of setting fires in ballot drop boxes in Oregon and Washington state is an experienced metalworker and may be planning additional attacks, authorities said Wednesday.”

Another dire warning of potential election violence comes from Hatem Abudayyeh, the national chair of the U.S. Palestinian Community Network which organized demonstrations at the Republican and Democratic Conventions.

He issued a chilling warning in an interview with the Post, predicting pro-Palestinian activists would negatively respond to a Trump Presidency on election day. “The whole world will be watching on that day, and we’re not going to allow them only to watch a celebration,” he warned. “We want to force them to be watching the mass movement.”

While some election night protests will occur in D.C., it appears anti-Trump Inauguration Day activities currently may be the major focal point for protesters.

The NPS documents suggest the city will be flooded with more than 200,000 anti-Trump protesters leading up to and including Inauguration Day, set for January 20.

On October 16, four days before the Inauguration, about 100,000 protesters are predicted to descend on Washington four days before the actual Inauguration. This demonstration is titled “Shadow Inaugural of Donald Trump.”

Rev. Mark Thompson is requesting the NPS permit. There is a website for a Rev. Mark Thompson that describes him as an MSNBC commentator for 12 years who “has spent most of his life in public ministry as a political, civil rights & human rights activist and organizer.” I have reached out the pastor, but I have not heard from him as of this posting.

On October 18, another 50,000 are planning to attend a protest titled, ”Mobilization to protect the Climate and Our Democracy,” according to NPS documents. That same day, another 10,000 people are expected to attend a demonstration “in support of Progressive Issues,” according to the Park Service.

On October 19, the leftwing, anti-American group called the ANSWER Coalition, which has sponsored numerous pro-Palestinian rallies, is planning their rally.

ANSWER was the prime sponsor of a pro-Palestinian rally last July when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was speaking before a Joint Session of Congress. That rally descended into violence, including attacks on police officers, the burning of American flags and the desecration of monuments, including one with a graffiti message on a monument warning, “Hamas Is Coming.”

Ryan Mauro, an extremism expert with the Capital Research Center told me the ANSWER Coalition “means at least 279 groups are a part of this protest and over 70% of them are pro-terrorism and/or Marxist or anarchist in ideology, as I concluded in my study of the network.”

On Inauguration Day itself a group called the “January 20 Coalition” plans to send 5,000 protesters to the Inaugural. According to their own filing with the NPS, the coalition states it was the group behind a violent pro-Palestinian demonstration at Democratic National Committee headquarters in November 2023.

At the time, six DC police officers were sent to the hospital with injuries, according to local news reports. The Capitol Police said that the protesters, which numbered at 300 according to its organizers, were “illegally and violently protesting” outside the Democratic Party’s headquarters.

The only potentially pro-Trump demonstration is scheduled for January 19. That’s the date for the annual “March for Life” demonstration that marks the date of the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision which legalized abortion. As in previous years, this anti-abortion rally is expected to attract 150,000 people.

Interestingly, the number of angry and potentially violent anti-Trump events that are currently planned does contrast with the many warnings we’ve received from the mainstream press that violence certainly will occur if Trump should prevail next week.

Examples of the shrill, pre-election warnings about Trump abound.

Just two examples.

On MSNBC Joe Scarborough exclaimed that Trump will trigger a civil war: “This is an increasingly desperate person, an increasingly desperate family, who’s preparing for civil war. They just are,” he warned his viewers.

And recently, Politico raised the ante further with an article titled, “The Very Real Scenario Where Trump Loses and Takes Power Anyway.”

Stay tuned…

Is Franklin content with being mediocre?

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Yes I know its not a new video but just rehashing. The comment ,"we haven't won as much as everyone wants" is not what I want to hear from my head coach. He's got his big contract and maybe he's just content with winning the games he should.

How many times in his career has he said that he needs to do a better job as a coach/taken resonsibility?
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Trump is super human

1. He finished his 4th rally yesterday at 2:30 AM.
2. He campaigned for 57 straight days. I am 80 years old, walk alot, and can assure you that no one else could do that.
3. He is still charismatic and a great leader. He would could sit back and live the good life. He realizes that this election is the last free one if 35 million illegals are given amnesty.

Lions just don't have the resources the Nuts have

to recruit with mostly including NIL. Now how do you expect the Lions to recruit with the Nuts with such an NIL thrice as large as you have? With most best players that $ talks. Lions overachieved vs the Nuts. If HCJF enjoyed the same available resources the Nuts already enjoy then he would beat the Nuts even @ the Shoe. Now please don't give me this laundry list of all these things Lions could have done different/better. Nuts fans can point out as many issues if they would have lost the game. Nut fans are as down on HCRD. I read their free board on 24/7. So who else can coach @ Beaver Stadium that can beat the Nuts of the world right now?
98484cb9-83d2-4b46-b379-64d98f104843.png
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Resumes Among Teams With Losses

* reflects current AP rankings only

#2 Georgia
2 ranked wins (@ #5 Texas and vs #19 Clemson)
1 loss (@ #11 Alabama 41-34)

#3 Ohio St
1 ranked win (@ #6 PSU)
1 loss (@ #1 Oregon 31-30)

#5 Texas
1 ranked win (@ 24 Vandy)
1 loss (vs #2 Georgia 30-15)

#6 PSU
No ranked wins
1 loss (vs #3 Ohio St 20-13)

#7 Tenn
1 ranked win (vs #11 Alabama)
1 loss (vs unranked Arkansas 19-14)

#10 Notre Dame
1 ranked win (@ #15 Texas A&M)
1 Loss (vs unranked NIU 16-14)

#11 Alabama
1 ranked win (vs #2 Georgia)
2 losses (@ #24 Vandy 40-35; @ #7 Tenn 24-17)

#12 Boise St
No ranked wins
1 Loss (@ #1 Oregon 37-34)

#13 SMU
2 ranked wins (@ #25 Louisville; vs #23 Pitt)
1 loss (vs #9 BYU 18-15)

#14 LSU
1 ranked win (vs #16 Ole Miss)
2 losses (vs unranked USC 27-20; @ #15 Texas A&M 35-23)

PSU might not have as good a win as some others, but it doesn’t have as bad a loss either.

Bo Nickal: The King in Chaos (article)

Since there's no content to write in the sport I normally write about, I brewed this up in twenty-ish minutes today. I can't edit for shit, but I hope you enjoy it...


Bo Nickal: The King in Chaos
They said it wouldn't happen again. After all, David Taylor was a generational talent to the degree that Penn State would be lucky to see another like him in ten lifetimes. And yet, five years later, an arena, a fan base and an entire sport watched as his legacy played out once more.

A Penn State freshman making the final was nothing new at that point. Taylor had done it, Megaludis had done it. Nolf had reached the zenith as well. But Nico never really had a chance and Nolf was staring down a megalithic predator out of the Triassic period. Among the three, Taylor alone had a shot. He could have won, maybe even should have won, but a single misstep spoiled his ascension.

If football is a game of inches fought between the lines, wrestling is one of imperceptible advantages leveraged between a knife's edge and a vat of bubbling acid. A season can come down to a single moment. A gambit that can serve as coronation or damnation. Taylor stumbled at the final hurdle, spoiling his claim at godhood. Though in a favorable position and far more skilled, he was undone in an instant.

The scenario was so eerily similar, that maybe we should have seen it coming. Because unlike Nico and Nolf, Bo Nickal had a chance. In fact he was the favorite as he and fellow freshman Myles Martin took center stage. But, like Taylor, he fell short. He interhetited Taylor’s legacy, the one who could have been a four time champion in the style of his coach and mentor, but found his path barred.

As a freshman, it had been fate that intervened. Fickle and tempestuous, it denied them entry to the promise land with callous indifference. The next enemy was far more tangible, painted red with a C emblazoned on his chest. Gabe Dean was Kyle Dake reincarnated. Hulking, brutish and deft, he was a very familiar beast. And, just as Dake had, he looked poised to serve as gatekeeper and cement Bo Nickal as David Taylor's successor.

They said David Taylor was a generational talent who could not be duplicated, but Bo Nickal proved to be his equal in every respect. Explosive, adaptable, inventive and electric, he was cut from the very same cloth. It was all of that, along with his daring fearlessness, which had doomed Bo against Myles Martin and turned bravado into hubris. Live by the sword and die by the sword, it's the nature of the sport. The same magic that brought him to that point as a freshman doomed him and very well could have defined him as a sophomore.

Another loss. Another second place. Was this how Bo Nickal would be remembered?

But it wasn’t to be because Bo Nickal had learned from his failures. He turned disappointment into growth and stormed the mat against Dean, controlling the pace from the first whistle, matching strength for strength and pitting fluidity against unyielding force. Seven minutes later and he had emerged victorious where Taylor had not. He had bested the Cornell brute and stamped his name into the history against a supposedly superior foe. For the second time that night, a Penn State wrestler had flipped the wrestling world on its head. People across the nation gasped in shock. But those in Happy Valley, those who believed in Cael and what he was building, those who had seen Bo Nickal’s magic on so many occasions, were not. This was Bo. Plain and simple. He may have won where Taylor had not, but they really were one in the same.

When one looks at Bo Nickal, it’s not immediately apparent how he snaps with such inexorable force or goes toe to toe with some of the muscle bound titans of the 184 landscape. He’s gangly, with a goofball grin that stretches all the way from one cauliflowered ear to another. He looks more at home doing flips off bales of hay than sweating in the weight room. But wrestling isn’t weightlifting and it’s not about seeing who can pick up and put down the heaviest optimally shaped object. It’s about moving people and being moved by them. And no one does that better than Bo.

To say Bo is fluid would be selling him short. He’s slick like greased lightning and his confidence in his abilities is unfailing. He’ll put it all on the line without hesitation and punish those who are not so willing. Because Bo thrives in chaos, in the pitch black labyrinths many wrestlers shy from. They want collar lies and single legs. Bo wants ankle picks, trips, spladles and throws all while being able to scramble unlike anyone else his size. But, if the moment demands it, he’ll gladly match an opponent blow for blow because his no doubts in his proficiency in that arena as well. Those wiry muscles are stronger than steel cables and Bo understands the art of applying force better than anyone in NCAA wrestling. His length and athleticism are an asset in every way. He is not the prototypical upper weight wrestler. No, that would be someone more akin to Dean. But Bo is not made from that mold. He the same brand of freestyling magician as Taylor, while still being every bit his own man.

There’s nothing wrong with being David Taylor. He’s one of the greatest college wrestlers and played a major part in Penn State’s rise to prominence. He paved the way from wrestlers like Nolf and Bo, showing that wrestling doesn’t have to look like a street fight. Settling for Taylor’s legacy is far from a punishment. It is an honor to be mentioned in the same breath. Bo still has a long way to go to reach that lofty perch, but he’s every bit a worthy aspirant. As long as wrestlers are afraid of the darkness, Bo Nickal will thrive. He has become the wrestler he is by exploiting and magnifying every advantage he holds over his opponent. He takes them where they don’t want to go and he crushes them with their own uncertainty. He is the king in chaos - the man who holds court where others dare not go.
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