D.O.G.E. maga thread

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I wonder how much got in?

Wouldn't know. Know next to nothing about the cocaine market now days.

They now calculate 1.2 grams as a lethal dose? LOL! Back in the 70s and 80s, a gram was the starting point for a good time.

Guys nextdoor, when I first went to college, every week, had a Columbian visit, open up a duffle bag, get out a decent size scale and a scoop. Weigh several ounces. Wild watching this.

About three in the morning, I was asked if I wanted to try a line. Ok, why not?

Six in the morning, playing doubles on a tennis court. Told my partner, Sandy, to stand over at one side, I got the rest of the court. LOL!
 

Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow and new messiah of MAGA Christianity​

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The wife of the slain Trump activist has emerged as a rising public figure at the crossroads of politics and religion in US conservatism


Her words, especially when contrasted with those spoken shortly afterward by Trump — “I hate my opponents, and I don’t want the best for them. I am sorry Erika” — won praise from both sides of the political spectrum. They even drew approval from Jimmy Kimmel, the comedian who had been briefly suspended from his show after a remark about Robinson — a move that sparked criticism of the government attacks on free expression. “If you believe in the teachings of Jesus as I do,” Kimmel said, his voice breaking, during the monologue marking his return to the air, “there it was, that’s it. A selfless act of grace, forgiveness from a grieving widow.”

“Of course, the rhetoric of forgiveness is preferable to that of holy war, but we mustn’t forget that she has also used that rhetoric,” explains Jeff Sharlet, an expert on the relationship between religion and political power in the United States and author of The Family in a telephone interview. Sharlet is referring to the speech Erika Kirk gave a couple of days after her husband’s murder, in which she said: “You have no idea the fire that you ignited within this wife, the cries of this widow will echo around the world like a battle cry.”

“We also shouldn’t forget that her forgiveness came after other speakers [in particular Stephen Miller, deputy to the White House chief of staff] compared her to a ‘storm,’ a ‘sword,’ and a ‘dragon,’ and before Trump spoke openly of hatred, only to then embrace her in a hug — almost like a representation of the male and female archetypes of Christian nationalism,” says Sharlet, referring to one of the core tenets of a certain strand of the American right: the blind faith that American identity can only be Christian.

According to Sharlet, “few did more for that idea than Charlie Kirk. He told his followers to go to church, yes, but above all, he brought the church into the MAGA world, because now MAGA is the true faith: that is Christian nationalism.”

Trump and the widow have known each other since 2012, when the Republican owned the Miss USA pageant and Erika Kirk was the contestant representing Arizona. As a teenager, she set up a foundation. She studied political science and law. She worked on Trump’s first campaign. She met her future husband when he interviewed her for a job at Turning Point USA (TPUSA), the nonprofit he had founded at age 18 alongside a powerful Tea Party activist. During that meeting, he told her: “I don’t want to hire you, I want to date you.” They married in 2021.

Although always in her husband’s shadow, Erika, now 36, already had a public profile before the assassination. It included a weekly religious podcast (one of its episodes, featuring both of them, was titled “Submission Is Not a Bad Word”), a line of “faith-based clothing,” and an annual TPUSA women’s event that brings together leading female voices in the United States against feminism. In an interview earlier this year, when asked which of the two was more conservative, Charlie Kirk replied: “She is. Next to her, I’m a moderate.”
 

Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow and new messiah of MAGA Christianity​

View attachment 150625

The wife of the slain Trump activist has emerged as a rising public figure at the crossroads of politics and religion in US conservatism


Her words, especially when contrasted with those spoken shortly afterward by Trump — “I hate my opponents, and I don’t want the best for them. I am sorry Erika” — won praise from both sides of the political spectrum. They even drew approval from Jimmy Kimmel, the comedian who had been briefly suspended from his show after a remark about Robinson — a move that sparked criticism of the government attacks on free expression. “If you believe in the teachings of Jesus as I do,” Kimmel said, his voice breaking, during the monologue marking his return to the air, “there it was, that’s it. A selfless act of grace, forgiveness from a grieving widow.”
“Of course, the rhetoric of forgiveness is preferable to that of holy war, but we mustn’t forget that she has also used that rhetoric,” explains Jeff Sharlet, an expert on the relationship between religion and political power in the United States and author of The Family in a telephone interview. Sharlet is referring to the speech Erika Kirk gave a couple of days after her husband’s murder, in which she said: “You have no idea the fire that you ignited within this wife, the cries of this widow will echo around the world like a battle cry.”
“We also shouldn’t forget that her forgiveness came after other speakers [in particular Stephen Miller, deputy to the White House chief of staff] compared her to a ‘storm,’ a ‘sword,’ and a ‘dragon,’ and before Trump spoke openly of hatred, only to then embrace her in a hug — almost like a representation of the male and female archetypes of Christian nationalism,” says Sharlet, referring to one of the core tenets of a certain strand of the American right: the blind faith that American identity can only be Christian.
According to Sharlet, “few did more for that idea than Charlie Kirk. He told his followers to go to church, yes, but above all, he brought the church into the MAGA world, because now MAGA is the true faith: that is Christian nationalism.”

Christianity will be used as Islam is used by their respective followers.
 

Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow and new messiah of MAGA Christianity​

View attachment 150625

The wife of the slain Trump activist has emerged as a rising public figure at the crossroads of politics and religion in US conservatism


Her words, especially when contrasted with those spoken shortly afterward by Trump — “I hate my opponents, and I don’t want the best for them. I am sorry Erika” — won praise from both sides of the political spectrum. They even drew approval from Jimmy Kimmel, the comedian who had been briefly suspended from his show after a remark about Robinson — a move that sparked criticism of the government attacks on free expression. “If you believe in the teachings of Jesus as I do,” Kimmel said, his voice breaking, during the monologue marking his return to the air, “there it was, that’s it. A selfless act of grace, forgiveness from a grieving widow.”

“Of course, the rhetoric of forgiveness is preferable to that of holy war, but we mustn’t forget that she has also used that rhetoric,” explains Jeff Sharlet, an expert on the relationship between religion and political power in the United States and author of The Family in a telephone interview. Sharlet is referring to the speech Erika Kirk gave a couple of days after her husband’s murder, in which she said: “You have no idea the fire that you ignited within this wife, the cries of this widow will echo around the world like a battle cry.”

“We also shouldn’t forget that her forgiveness came after other speakers [in particular Stephen Miller, deputy to the White House chief of staff] compared her to a ‘storm,’ a ‘sword,’ and a ‘dragon,’ and before Trump spoke openly of hatred, only to then embrace her in a hug — almost like a representation of the male and female archetypes of Christian nationalism,” says Sharlet, referring to one of the core tenets of a certain strand of the American right: the blind faith that American identity can only be Christian.

According to Sharlet, “few did more for that idea than Charlie Kirk. He told his followers to go to church, yes, but above all, he brought the church into the MAGA world, because now MAGA is the true faith: that is Christian nationalism.”

Trump and the widow have known each other since 2012, when the Republican owned the Miss USA pageant and Erika Kirk was the contestant representing Arizona. As a teenager, she set up a foundation. She studied political science and law. She worked on Trump’s first campaign. She met her future husband when he interviewed her for a job at Turning Point USA (TPUSA), the nonprofit he had founded at age 18 alongside a powerful Tea Party activist. During that meeting, he told her: “I don’t want to hire you, I want to date you.” They married in 2021.

Although always in her husband’s shadow, Erika, now 36, already had a public profile before the assassination. It included a weekly religious podcast (one of its episodes, featuring both of them, was titled “Submission Is Not a Bad Word”), a line of “faith-based clothing,” and an annual TPUSA women’s event that brings together leading female voices in the United States against feminism. In an interview earlier this year, when asked which of the two was more conservative, Charlie Kirk replied: “She is. Next to her, I’m a moderate.”
Americans are being played by the Zionists.
 
@Waz

I am going to be charged with a felony now. May as well get my story out before I am railroaded into prison in Oklahoma.

Basically, at a hearing this morning, everything I have reported to the police being done to me by the town's druggy is now being leveled at me.

Surreal. Really is. To top it off, before the charade was over, as I was about to ask the judge a question, the druggy cut me off and asked the judge if he can get his guns back.

By the way, the druggy has never been charged for shooting me on September 10th.

I remained calm and declined the judge's request to have a hearing on the possible charges at spur of the moment (he really thinks I am that stupid?)

I am nearly deaf. State of Oklahoma has a law requiring the court to provide me with a qualified interpreter. The judge knows this because the last snow job these Masons did on me is still being appealed for that very reason.

At every hearing, the judge sees me holding the Koran. It's what's keeping me calm, but it enrages him.

Left messages at the Tulsa Islamic Center for over a year now, and no one ever gets back to me.

Perhaps someone here can do me a favor and find someone who will actually talk with me?

But if no one cares, that's alright. I am prepared to go through another trial alone, trusting God has a plan for me.
 
@Waz

I am going to be charged with a felony now. May as well get my story out before I am railroaded into prison in Oklahoma.

Basically, at a hearing this morning, everything I have reported to the police being done to me by the town's druggy is now being leveled at me.

Surreal. Really is. To top it off, before the charade was over, as I was about to ask the judge a question, the druggy cut me off and asked the judge if he can get his guns back.

By the way, the druggy has never been charged for shooting me on September 10th.

I remained calm and declined the judge's request to have a hearing on the possible charges at spur of the moment (he really thinks I am that stupid?)

I am nearly deaf. State of Oklahoma has a law requiring the court to provide me with a qualified interpreter. The judge knows this because the last snow job these Masons did on me is still being appealed for that very reason.

At every hearing, the judge sees me holding the Koran. It's what's keeping me calm, but it enrages him.

Left messages at the Tulsa Islamic Center for over a year now, and no one ever gets back to me.

Perhaps someone here can do me a favor and find someone who will actually talk with me?

But if no one cares, that's alright. I am prepared to go through another trial alone, trusting God has a plan for me.
Are you a Muslim or trying to become one?
 
Are you a Muslim or trying to become one?
Like Thomas Jefferson, I will always be a church of one.

You can call me a believer.

I was born deaf on the streets of Detroit to a homeless 12 year old girl back in 1965. Four foster homes, and even my adopted family didn't know I was nearly deaf until the age of six.

Began learning how to hear and speak at the age of seven at a special school eleven months a year. By fifth grade, was back to regular school. Mostly stayed to myself.

I was told by a doctor very early in life, as I get older, hearing will become more difficult - at the age of sixty, I now understand - I prefer silence.

Maybe you can appreciate my reluctance to being around any groups of people.

(Yes, I occasionally listen to music. But with 105dB headphones, volume all the way up, with the cushions ripped off, so I can hear. But no longer watch TV or go to the movies.)

And have to now defend myself in court, on made up charges, barely hearing anything.

I need an advocate.

The State of Oklahoma has a statue that says I must have a qualified hearing interpreter at all hearings. The judge says I can hear good enough.

Don't even know what the charges will be. The prosecutor was several rows behind me. Asked the judge what she said, he told me nevermind and proceeded.
 
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Like Thomas Jefferson, I will always be a church of one.

You can call me a believer.

I was born deaf on the streets of Detroit to a homeless 12 year old girl back in 1965. Four foster homes, and even my adopted family didn't know I was nearly deaf until the age of six.

Began learning how to hear and speak at the age of seven at a special school eleven months a year. By fifth grade, was back to regular school. Mostly stayed to myself.

Maybe you can appreciate my reluctance to being around any groups of people.
I am sorry, but that is one hard life bro... coming out of all that is achievement in itself, Good luck with your court cases man...
 
@Waz

I am going to be charged with a felony now. May as well get my story out before I am railroaded into prison in Oklahoma.

Basically, at a hearing this morning, everything I have reported to the police being done to me by the town's druggy is now being leveled at me.

Surreal. Really is. To top it off, before the charade was over, as I was about to ask the judge a question, the druggy cut me off and asked the judge if he can get his guns back.

By the way, the druggy has never been charged for shooting me on September 10th.

I remained calm and declined the judge's request to have a hearing on the possible charges at spur of the moment (he really thinks I am that stupid?)

I am nearly deaf. State of Oklahoma has a law requiring the court to provide me with a qualified interpreter. The judge knows this because the last snow job these Masons did on me is still being appealed for that very reason.

At every hearing, the judge sees me holding the Koran. It's what's keeping me calm, but it enrages him.

Left messages at the Tulsa Islamic Center for over a year now, and no one ever gets back to me.

Perhaps someone here can do me a favor and find someone who will actually talk with me?

But if no one cares, that's alright. I am prepared to go through another trial alone, trusting God has a plan for me.

Stay strong. There is always a path.
 
I am sorry, but that is one hard life bro... coming out of all that is achievement in itself, Good luck with your court cases man...
Thank you.

Know of any Muslim investigative journalist? What is going on in this small Oklahoma town is mind-blowing.
 
Thank you.

Know of any Muslim investigative journalist? What is going on in this small Oklahoma town is mind-blowing.
No not really, I know CAIR organization is very active if you can reach out to them about things they might help you.
 
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