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Why Are We Arguing? It’s intentional

Enough con/lib crap. We’re being robbed blind by corrupt pieces of trash I wouldn’t hit the brakes for.

DC idiots have ruined this country. Literally fell for something that dates back to the Soviet days of how to kill america. We’re dead. Our society sucks, the Fauci parade of simon says and most fell in line.

The conspiracy nuts were correct, but i’m not sticking around to find out.

Noteworthy Results & Goldfish Games: Week of 2/3 - 2/5

This week’s listings on the ESPN/ACC/BTN networks . . .

All times Eastern.
PSU bolded.
***TV in asterisks***
***TV replay italicized***

Friday
  • ***PSU vs. Ohio St***// 7:00 PM // BTN
  • Kent St vs. Ohio // 7:00 PM // ESPN+
  • VMI vs. Gardner-Webb // 7:00 PM // ESPN+
  • Columbia vs. Bucknell // 7:00 PM // ESPN+
  • ISU vs. WVU // 7:00 PM // ESPN+
  • NC St vs. UVA // 7:00 PM // ACCNX
  • VaTech vs. Duke // 7:00 PM // ACCNX
  • ***UNC vs. Pitt*** // 7:00 PM // ACCN
  • Mizzou vs. Oklahoma // 8:00 PM // ESPN+
  • Nebraska vs. Illinois // 8:00 PM // BTN+
  • ***Iowa vs. Minnesota*** // 9:00 PM // BTN

Saturday
  • Princeton vs. Cornell // 12:00 PM // ESPN+
  • American vs. UVA // 1:00 PM // ACCNX
  • ***Rutger vs. Maryland*** // 2:00 PM // BTN
  • Princeton vs. Binghamton // 5:00 PM // ESPN+
  • Nebraska vs. Purdue // 6:00 PM // BTN+
  • ISU vs. Pitt // 7:00 PM // ACCNX

Sunday
  • Replay — ***UNC vs. Pitt*** // 2:30 AM // ACCN
  • Replay — ***UNC vs. Pitt*** // 10:00 AM // ESPNU
  • Campbell vs. Duke // 11:00 AM // ACCNX
  • Penn vs. Cornell // 1:00 PM // ESPN+
  • PSU vs. Indiana // 2:00 PM // BTN+
  • ***Illinois vs. MSU*** // 2:00 PM // BTN
  • Rider vs. Oklahoma // 2:00 PM // ESPN+
  • Kent St vs. CMU // 2:00 PM // ESPN3
  • Campbell vs. Citadel // 2:00 PM // ESPN+
  • UNI vs. WVU // 2:00 PM // ESPN+
  • Mizzou vs. Okie St // 3:00 PM // ESPN+
  • Ohio St vs. Northwestern // 3:00 PM // BTN+
Stay warm Friday night!

Is the tax code really this regressive with respect to Social Security and Medicare tax?

My 21-yr-old son made a $22,000 profit last year doing film editing work part-time last year while also enrolled full-time in college. I was helping him do his estimated taxes and he made the extra effort to learn what was going on instead of just throwing a reasonable speculation in for his taxes and enclosing a check. (which is what I do).

In any event line 10 on SE provides for 12.4% tax on virtually any self-employment income and line 11 provides for 2.9% additional, I believe Medicare tax. Thus even though he only made $22,000, he is being taxed at a 15.3% rate with a small deduction provided for on Line 13 that might reduce the SE taxes to 14.9%. Since the vast majority of my income is interest and real estate rentals, I haven't paid much to these 2 taxes. I had always assumed that people not making a lot of money, got some kind of break in some manner. In filling out the form and draft 1040 with some schedules, it doesn't appear that that is the case. So the question is: Is someone making $22,000 a year, really expected to pay $3280 in SE taxes?

Evolution of Yurcich's Use of the T Formation



Interesting deep dive read (w/ clips!) on an old school formation made modern. Really shows how adaptable Yurcich is as a playcaller. At Oklahoma State he had no tight ends. At Penn State he's had 3 above-average tight ends on the roster the past two years. This year, he found a pretty creative way in the T to adjust his concepts to fit his personnel strength. Might be because the first impression in 2021 was soooo mediocre, but it feels like the fanbase never really gave Yurcich's creativity the attention/credit it deserved this past season. Thought he rebounded nicely from last year.

RIP Lloyd Morrisett, co-creator of Sesame Street

He was working as an experimental educationist when, at a dinner party when he met Joan Ganz Cooney. He asked her if she thought television could be used to teach young children? And she replied’I don’t know but would like to try’ They collaborated with Gerald Lesser and Sesame Street Street aired three years later.

Cooney said on his passing ‘Without Lloyd Morrisett there would be no Sesame Street’

He was 93.

Wrestling Penn State Dominates Indiana 35-8 For B1G Wrestling Road Win

BLOOMINGTON, Ind.; February 5, 2023 – The Penn State (13-0, 6-0 B1G) Nittany Lion wrestling team dominated homestanding Indiana (7-3, 3-3 B1G) 35-8 for another Big Ten road win. Penn State junior Carter Starocci handled Indiana’s D.J. Washington at 174 and Nittany Lions Beau Bartlett and Max Dean picked up pins in the victory. All rankings listed are InterMat/InterMat Team TPI (Jan. 31, 2023).



The dual meet began at 125 where sophomore Marco Vespa lost a 17-2 technical fall (4:48) against Jacob Moran. Baylor Shunk made his season debut at 133 for Penn State and took No. 29 Henry Porter to the limit before dropping a hard-fought 9-7 (sv) decision in extra time. Indiana took an early 8-0 lead. Beau Bartlett, ranked No. 5 at 141, quickly cut into the lead with a fast fall over Cayden Rooks. Bartlett moved in quickly, took Rooks down, moved to a cradle and pinned the Hoosier in just 0:12 seconds.



Freshman Shayne Van Ness, ranked No. 13 at 149, then put Penn State on top for good. Van Ness dominated No. 30 Graham Rooks, tallying six takedowns and a four-point turn to post the 17-5 major decision. His win put the Nittany Lions up 10-8. True freshman Levi Haines, ranked No. 9 at 157, notched the only three takedowns of the bout in his 8-2 win over IU junior Derek Gilcher. Haines’ strong performance gave the Nittany Lions a 13-8 lead at intermission.



Freshman Alex Facundo, ranked No. 8 at 165, tallied eight takedowns in a 20-9 major decision over IU’s Robert Major to start the second half. Carter Starocci, ranked No. 1 at 174, increased Penn State’s lead with a convincing 11-3 major decision over No. 15 D.J. Washington. Starocci rolled up two takedowns, two stall points and 1:33 in riding time in the convincing win to give the Lions a 21-8 lead.



Donovon Ball took the mat at 184 and continued Penn State’s winning ways. Ball worked his way to four takedowns in a strong 10-3 win to put the Nittany Lions up 24-8. Max Dean, ranked No. 4 at 197, picked up his second pin of the weekend with a first period fall (1:29) over Drayton Harris. Greg Kerkvliet, ranked No. 2 at 285, closed out the scoring portion of the dual meet with a dominant win over No. 28 Jacob Bullock. Kerkvliet turned Bullock three times for four points in a rousing 16-0 technical fall (3:59). Kerkvliet’s win set Penn State’s final margin at 35-8.



The Nittany Lions rolled up a 27-10 takedown advantage in the dual meet. Penn State, winning the dual’s final eight bouts, picked up 11 bonus points off two pins (Bartlett, Dean), a tech fall (Kerkvliet) and three majors (Van Ness, Facundo, Starocci). Two extra matches were conducted after the scoring portion of the dual (official NCAA bouts that do not count towards dual meet score). Both were wrestled at 157. Penn State 141-pounder David Evans moved up two weights to take on IU’s Luke Baughman at 157 and came away with a strong 6-2 win. Nittany Lion Terrell Barraclough then met IU 157 pounder Mason Alley and walked away with a 17-4 major decision.



The Nittany Lions are now 13-0 overall, 6-0 B1G. Indiana falls to 7-3, 3-3 B1G. Penn State will hit the road for a third straight conference dual next Friday, Feb. 10, when it visits Rutgers at 7 p.m. Two days later, the Nittany Lions return to Rec Hall to host Maryland on Sunday, Feb. 12, at 1 p.m.



The 2022-23 Penn State Wrestling season is presented by the Family Clothesline. Penn State Fans are encouraged to follow Penn State wrestling via twitter at @pennstateWREST, on Penn State Wrestling's Facebook page at www.facebook.com/pennstatewrestling and on Instagram at www.instagram.com/pennstatewrest. This is PENN STATE. WRESTLING lives here.



#1 Penn State 35, Indiana 8


February 5, 2023 – Bloomington, Ind.

125: Jacob Moran IND tech fall Marco Vespa PSU, 17-2 (TF; 4:48) 0-5

133: #29 Henry Porter IND dec. Baylor Shunk PSU, 9-7 (sv) 0-8

141: #5 Beau Bartlett PSU pinned Cayden Rooks IND, WBF (0:12) 6-8

149: #13 Shayne Van Ness PSU maj. dec. #30 Graham Rooks IND, 17-5 10-8

157: #9 Levi Haines PSU dec. Derek Gilcher IND, 8-2 13-8

165: #8 Alex Facundo PSU maj. dec. Robert Major IND, 20-9 17-8

174: #1 Carter Starocci PSU maj. dec. #15 D.J. Washington IND, 11-3 21-8

184: Donovon Ball PSU dec. Clayton Fielden IND, 10-3 24-8

197: #4 Max Dean PSU pinned Drayton Harris IND, WBF (1:29) 30-8

285: #2 Greg Kerkvliet PSU tech fall #28 Jacob Bullock IND, 16-0 (TF; 3:59) 35-8

Extra Matches (official NCAA bouts, do not count in dual meet score):

149: David Evans PSU dec. Luke Baughman IND, 6-2

157: Terrell Barraclough PSU maj. dec. Mason Alley IND, 17-4

Records: Penn State (13-0, 6-0 B1G); Indiana (7-3, 3-3 B1G)

Up Next for Penn State: at Rutgers, Friday, Feb. 10, 7 p.m.

DUAL MEET BOUT-BY-BOUT:

125: Marco Vespa met Jacob Moran at 125. Moran got in on a quick single leg and took Vespa down in the opening seconds to open up a 2-1 score after a quick Vespa escape. Vespa nearly locked up Moran’s shoulders after the escape for a throw but Moran was able to force a stalemate. Moran then took Vespa down again to lead 4-1 at the 1:50 mark. Moran worked his riding time up over 1:00 and then finished then finished the period on top to lead 4-1 with 2:15 in riding time after one. Moran chose down to start the second period and quickly escaped to a 5-1 lead. Moran took Vespa down once more and then turned him for four back points. Vespa fought off the pin but trailed 11-1 at 1:00. He reset and turned Vespa again to lead 15-2 after cutting Vespa loose. He finished off the tech fall with a takedown at the 4:48 mark, posting the 17-2 win.



133: Baylor Shunk made his season debut and met No. 29 Henry Porter at 133. Shunk got in on an early single and nearly took Porter down, but the Hoosier countered the effort for his own score and led 2-0 at 2:16. Shunk scrambled his way to an escape and trailed 2-1 at 1:44. Shunk continued to work on offense. Shunk and Porter scrambled through the 1:00 mark with neither wrestler finishing off the takedown and the bout continued in neutral. Leading 2-1, Porter chose down to start the second period. Shunk put together a strong ride, controlling the action for the first minute before a stalemate forced a reset at 1:08. Moran scrambled his way to an escape and a 3-1 lead at :48, Shunk had :47 in riding time. Shunk forced the action one more time and Porter was able to counter again for a second takedown and a 5-1 lead. Shunk made the final seconds of the period count, rolling through a reversal and adding two near fall points in the final seconds to tie the bout at 5-5 after two periods. He chose down to start the third period and quickly escaped to a 5-4 lead. Shunk then turned a high single into a scramble on the Hoosier logo. Porter notched his third counter takedown of the bout to take a 7-6 lead and then Shunk escaped to a 7-7 tie at the 1:02 mark. Shunk shot Porter out of bounds at the :35 mark, forcing a reset. Shunk took another high shot at :18 and nearly scored, but Porter fought off the move and the bout moved to sudden victory tied 7-7. Porter took a quick shot and worked his way in on the shot, scrambling his way to a takedown and a 9-7 win at the 1:2 2mark.



141: Beau Bartlett, ranked No. 5 at 141, met Cayden Rooks. Bartlett ended the match quickly. The Lion junior took Rooks down, immediately locked up a cradle and got the fall at the :12 mark. Penn State’s fastest fall of the year to date.



149: Shayne Van Ness, ranked No. 13 at 149, faced off against No. 30 Graham Rooks. Van Ness took Rooks down 1:00 into the bout, turning a single into a takedown and a 2-0 lead. Van Ness cut the Hoosier loose and went back to work on offense. Van Ness forced Rooks into a stall warning and then took him down again to lead 4-1. He cut him loose one more time, looking for more offense, and notched the third takedown in the final seconds to lead 6-2 after one. Rooks chose down to start the second period. Van Ness worked his riding time up over 1:00 and then cut the Hoosier loose. He picked up his fourth takedown and cut to lead 8-4 at the 1:00 mark, moved in on offense and tried to pull Rooks back onto the mat in the final seconds, but the Hoosier was able to slide out of bounds. Van Ness led 8-4 after two with 1:27 in time. Van Ness chose neutral to start the third period. He bulled through a high double for a fifth takedown to lead 10-4 at the 1:34 mark. Van Ness took a 12-5 lead with another takedown at :34 and then Van Ness quickly locked a cradle up and turned the Hoosier to his back. He added four near falls points at the end of the bout. Van Ness, with 2:12 in riding time, posted the 17-5 major decision.



157: No. 9 Levi Haines battled Derek Gilcher at 157. Haines controlled the action from the start. He worked a single into a near takedown on the edge of the mat that ended out of bounds at the 2:10 mark. The Penn State freshman continued to work and used another high shot to work his way to a takedown and a 2-0 lead at the 1:20 mark. Gilcher escaped to a 2-1 score but Haines continued to work on offense. Haines settled for a 2-1 lead after one period. Leading by one, Haines chose down to start the second stanza. He quickly worked his way to his feet and escaped to a 3-1 lead. Haines continued to shoot, this time using a low single and finishing off a second takedown at 1:05. Leading 5-1, Haines worked for a near fall on top. Gilcher was able to fight off the turn, but Haines finished on top and led 5-1 with 1:03 in riding time after two. Gilcher chose down to start the third period. Haines worked his riding time up to 2:00 while looking for another turn. Gilcher was able to scramble his way to an escape at the :47 mark, cutting the lead to 5-2. Haines shot his way into a final takedown and, with 2:19 in riding time, rolled to the 8-2 win.



165: No. 8 Alex Facundo took on Robert Major at 165. Facundo forced a scramble at the 2:10 mark but Major countered the move and ended up with control of Facundo’s leg. He turned the scramble into a takedown and a 2-0 lead. Facundo worked his way to his legs and picked up a point on locked hands with Major on top. Facundo quickly escaped on the reset and the bout was tied 2-2. Facundo then turned a low shot into a takedown on the edge of the mat to take a 4-2 lead with :16 on the clock. The Penn State freshman finished the period on top and carried that lead into the second period. Major chose down to start the second period. Facundo controlled the action on top until cutting Major loose at the 1:40 mark. Leading 4-3, Facundo muscled his way through a high double for another takedown and a 6-3 lead. He cut the Hoosier loose after a short ride and went back to work on offense. Facundo forced Major into a stall warning, took him down and cut him and then took him down once again at :34 to lead 10-5. Facundo added one more takedown at :19 and, with a rideout, led 12-6 with :51 in riding time after two. Facundo chose down to start the third period and quickly escaped to a 13-6 lead. Facundo turned mat action into another takedown and led 15-6. After working his riding time up over 1:00, he cut Major loose. Facundo added one more takedown and, with 1:44 in time, rolled to the 20-9 major.



174: Carter Starocci, ranked No. 1 at 174, faced off against No. 15 D.J. Washington. Starocci took early shots, forcing Washington into defense in the middle of the mat. Washington worked his way in on shot and turned it into a takedown and a 2-0 lead at 1:44. Starocci worked his way to his feet and an escape shortly after the takedown to cut the lead to 2-1. Starocci continued to shoot Washington backwards as the clock moved below 1:00. He turned a high single into a scramble at :20 but could not finish off the takedown and trailed 2-1 after one. Starocci chose down to start the second period and quickly escaped to a 2-2 tie. He pushed Washington backwards and turned a high shot into a takedown and a 4-2 lead at 1:10, nearly turning the Hoosier for back points before action moved out of bounds. Starocci went to work on top, breaking Washington down on the IU logo. He forced Washington flat, forced a stall warning at :30, and finished the period on top to lead 4-2 with :51 in riding time after two. Washington chose neutral to start the third period. Starocci forced the Hoosier into a stall point and led 5-2. Starocci continued to forced the Hoosier backwards as the clock moved to 1:20. He picked up another stall point, took Washington down to lead 8-2, and cut him loose to an 8-3 score. Starocci countered a slight Washington shot to take a 10-3 lead at :30 (with 1:07 in riding time). Starocci spent the final seconds on top, looking for a turn. He settled for 1:33 in riding time and rolled to the dominant 11-3 major decision.



184: Donovon Ball took on Clayton Fielden at 184. The duo worked the center of the mat for the first minute plus. Fielden began to press Ball backwards in the middle of the period to force the Lion into a stall warning but Ball then moved in on a single leg for a takedown and a 2-0 lead with :40 on the clock. Ball controlled the action on top for the rest of the period, finished with a rideout, and led 2-0 after one. Ball chose down to star the second period. He worked his way to his feet and escaped to a 3-0 lead at 1:35. Ball continued to work hard on offense, turning a high single into a second takedown and a 5-0 lead. He maintained control of the action on top but gave up a stall point during the ride. Fielden escaped to a 5-2 score at the :20 mark. Ball counterdeed a late IU shot and picked up a last second takedown to lead 7-2 after two. Fielden chose down to start the third and quickly escaped to a 7-3 score. Ball finished off the bout with a late takedown and, with 1:03 in riding time, rolled to the 10-3 win.



197: No. 4 Max Dean met Drayton Harris at 197. Dean took a 2-0 lead at the 2:18 mark and then went to work on top. The Nittany Lion steadily worked Harris’ shoulders to the mat and, after securing the four point turn, settled in for the pin at the 1:29 mark.



285: No. 2 Greg Kerkvliet took on No. 28 Jacob Bullock at 285. Kerkvliet got in on a high single and, after a bit of maneuvering, lifted Bullock off the mat for a takedown and a 2-0 lead. After a reset, he turned Bullock for four back points and upped his lead to 6-0. Kerkvliet reset, turned him again for four and led 10-0 at the 1:22 mark. Kerkvliet picked up a late stall point and led 11-0 with 2:34 in riding time after one. Bullock chose down to start the second period and Kerkvliet went back to work, looking for near fall points. The Penn State big man picked up another stall point and then turned him one last time for four back points and a 16-0 technical fall at the 3:59 mark.

Indiana PBP ONLY THREAD

I got your back, Roar.

JB on, though still can't get LionVision on any of my devices.

Donovan Ball going at 184.

Vespa going at 125.

Willham didn't weigh in today, Dean going against a 184 pounder, didn't catch his name.

Barraclough and Evans going in the two "extra" bouts.

VESPA vs Moran up now!

1st Period
Moran up 1-4.
Sorry, just now got my "casting" to work.
Period ends.

2nd Period
Moran takes down, gets the quick escape, now 1-5.
Moran gets the takedown, then 4 NF. It's now 1-9.
Two more turns and it's a 2-17 tech fall for the Hoosier.

Shunk vs Porter NOW UP!

1st Period
Porter gets the first score, it's 0-2 on Shunk's shot.
Shunk escape, 1-2.
Shunk still the aggressor, can't score.
Period ends.

2nd Period
Porter takes down. Gets the escape, now 1-3.
Porter takedown late, now 1-5.
EXCITING!! Shunk reversal and takes him to his back as the period ends. It's 5-5

3rd Period
Shunk down. Gets the ESCAPE, followed by a Porter reversal and Shunk ESCAPE, tied 7-7.
1 minute to go.
30 seconds.
Period ends! Heading to SV.

SV
Dang, Porter gets the win, 7-9.

Bartlet vs Showalter up NOW!

1st Period
BARTLETT WITH THE PIN IN 12 SECONDS!!!

Van Ness vs Rooks NOW UP!

1st Period
Double leg TAKEDO.WN, Van Ness up 2-0.
Escape makes it 2-1.
Stall against Rooks, followed by a TAKEDOWN, Van Ness leads 4-2 after a Rooks escape.
Period ends after a Van Ness TAKEDOWN, leading 6-2.

2nd Period
Rooks down, gets the escape.
Van Ness with 1 minute RT.
Van Ness TAKEDOWN, up 8-3.
Escape Rooks, now 8-4.
Period ends

3rd Period
Van Ness neutral.
TAKEDOWN!! Van Ness up 10-4.
1:30 left. He has 1 good bit of RT.
Gives the escape, 10-5.
TAKEDOWN Van Ness, leads 12-5.
Locks up the cradle, but runs out of time. WINS 17-5!!

Florida Democrat agrees with DeSantis on AP African American history course: ‘I think it’s trash’

And he is an African American too......

https://www.fox8tv.com/florida-demo...an-american-history-course-i-think-its-trash/

Bill Proctor, a Democrat politician from Florida who is African American, agreed with Gov. Ron DeSantis that a proposed AP African American history course was not good.
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Reactions: jjw165 and bison13

Biden anti-America stance helps out China again


On Sunday, the U.S. Department of the Interior and the U.S. Department of Agriculture under President Biden announced the 20-year withdrawal of more than 225,000 acres of northern Minnesota forest land, which is home to some of the largest domestic mineral reserves.

Larry Correia On Mass Shooters

In Defense of the Second Amendment https://a.co/d/2eUhrvZ
Here’s an excerpt in mass milers :
Note, I’ve gone through this entire book and never once used the names of any of these killers. If I need to talk about a specific example, I use the place they terrorized. Not them. Remember the victims. Let the killers rot in prison or hell, their names forgotten. Members of the media don’t just enable these killers to reach their goals, they provide a road map for how to maximize their fame. All the killers have to do is watch what they fixate on, and then give them more of that. If the media likes to report on a certain kind of target getting hit, hit that kind of target. And if you really want to get coverage, make sure you use whatever specific kind of gun they really want to ban this year.
A We’ve had killers write in their manifestos how their target and weapon selection was designed to garner maximum media attention. The racist trash who went on a rampage in Buffalo wrote in his manifesto about how he loved New York’s gun laws because it was doubtful anybody would be able to shoot back.
Some killers have recorded their crimes because they know the media will air the footage, as some vapid announcer warns the audience beforehand about the shocking scenes of carnage not suitable for young viewers. On the off chance there’s an honest reporter reading this (I won’t get my hopes up), stop and examine what you’re doing. Ask your people why are we giving these evil bastards exactly what they desire? Why are we motivating the next killer? Clicks? Ratings? To help your team get elected? Then when you see the next manifesto saying he killed a bunch of people exactly how you wanted him to, you should ask yourself if it was worth it.
Trust in American media companies has collapsed, and for good reason. They’re scum. They deserve to fail. Let’s help them fail faster. This isn’t a First Amendment issue either. I’m not asking for any legislation telling journalists what they can and can’t say. They have a right to be opportunistic trash, but we’ve got the right to mock them. Don’t be afraid to be honest. We’re way past the point of politeness. Make sure all your low-information friends understand what they’re doing. Stop watching news that gives the killers what they want. Don’t give in to clickbait. You don’t need to see the killer’s glossy headshots and hear about their stupid philosophies to know about their crimes. As long as the media is rewarding mass killers, we need to stop rewarding the media.

Former Michigan great and PA native Chad Henne is poised to win his second Super Bowl

Philadelphia had very little challenge reaching the Super Bowl for the fourth time in franchise history, as it rolled past the NY Giants and San Francisco by a combined 69-14 score, albeit even you have to admit the Eagles beat a crippled 49ers team after Purdy got injured. I know the Eagles are favored to beat KC in the upcoming SB, but as long as Mahomes is playing, you can never count the Chiefs out. And should Mahomes get injured and can't play in the SB, no worries, because KC have a great backup QB named Chad Henne. He is a Michigan legend and a PA native, who can realistically claim his second Super Bowl ring.

Go Blue

The state of our union under Biden: A weaker, less secure, more divided America

Sounds about right.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...den-a-weaker-less-secure-more-divided-america

Next week, President Joe Biden will address Congress on the state of the union , as the Constitution dictates. He ought to take an honest look at the country and the many problems it faces — problems his administration has either created or worsened.

Over the next week, the Washington Examiner will report on a few of the important problems plaguing the country and how they are affecting the public every day.

The most glaring crisis our country faces today is at the southern border , where hundreds of thousands of immigrants are crossing into the country illegally every month, overwhelming immigration officials and border towns. Just last week, border agents confirmed that more than 1.2 million immigrants evaded immigration enforcement completely. Who knows how many of these immigrants were on the terror watch list, as at least 70,000 apprehended immigrants have been, or were part of the drug cartels flooding our cities with fentanyl.
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