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#Brock Kelly has my entire heart
peach-coke · 3 years
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“I'm gonna rip his lungs out!” ➤ Whumptober 2021 || No.3 – STICKS AND STONES MAY BREAK MY BONES BUT… | "Who did this to you?"
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closetofanxiety · 6 years
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Let’s Get Ready to (Review the Royal) Rumble!!
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I watched all 11 hours of this thing, so I might as well jot down some thoughts
Rusev w/Lana vs. Shinsuke Nakamura
This was the first WWE pre-show I’ve watched in a long time. Lots of banter from the panel, which included Shawn Michaels. I’m not sure how often I will watch the pre-shows going forward. This match existed, and it concluded with a title change. Nakamura is your new United States champion. Lana took a bump and hurt her ankle in storyline. “Lana, get up!” Rusev yelled at his prone wife after she was knocked off the apron. Show a little more concern there, Rusev. Later in the show this would turn out to be a momentous ankle injury
Hideo Itami vs. Buddy Murhpy vs. Kalisto vs. Akira Tozawa
I haven’t watched 205 Live in forever, but I hear Mike Kanellis is there now. This match was not as sensational as I had expected, but it had some good spots. No reason for these guys to go full-tilt, I guess. They’re wrestling as the crowd files in to Chase Field, and when it’s done they go back to 205 Live. Kalisto should have won by default, as he is the only member of this quartet who weighs 205 pounds or less. He did not win, though, and Buddy Murphy remains your cruiserweight champion. In a year, perhaps this match will feature Kushida, Trevor Lee, Sonjay Dutt, and Kalisto. Always Kalisto. Poor, lost Kalisto.
Asuka vs. Becky Lynch
Although it would later become clear why this went on first, it was still a little surprising. And, to be honest, I did not love this match. It finished up very well, but until the last five minutes or so it was a lot slower and more tentative than I would have expected from these two. It ended on something of a surprise note, with Becky tapping and Asuka retaining. They’ve  succeeded in bringing Asuka back from the foggy post-Wrestlemania wasteland in which they stranded her. What happens to her now? Another feud with Charlotte? They should bring up Io Shirai and Kairi Sane and form a new version of Triple Tails. They will not do this.
The Bar vs. Shane McMahon and The Miz
Mark and I watched this entire match barely 12 hours ago, and now all I can remember is Shane McMahon doing a credible Shooting Star Press. Few things in pro wrestling are more boring, in 2019, than the state of the Smackdown tag team title picture. And now there are new champs. Perhaps this is the beginning of splitting up The Bar. They’ve been a tag team since September 2016. They’re both terrific wrestlers and have had many good matches, but there’s nothing about them that really sticks with me. It doesn’t help that they have one of the worst tag team names in the history of pro wrestling.
Ronda Rousey vs. Sasha Banks
I was surprised to see this match was almost 14 minutes long. It felt like it went by quickly. This was the best Sasha Banks match I’ve seen in a looooong time, and maybe Rousey’s best WWE match to date. She looked really good. The work with Gulak is paying off. Sasha also looked like the relentless competitor we remember from her NXT days. I enjoyed this match a lot. Based on what happened the last time I mentioned Ronda Rousey, I now expect to get several anonymous messages calling me a fucking imbecile. That’s OK. It’s true, I am a fucking imbecile, but Ronda Rousey is still good in a wrestling ring. After the match, Sasha held up the Horsemen/women sign. If Rousey is finishing up at Wrestlemania, I’m not sure they’re going to have time for the epochal Clash of the Horsewomen. Hey! One good thing about this match in particular is that Rousey didn’t win with her armbar. That’s good storytelling; it establishes her as a multi-tool threat. 
Royal Rumble (women)
The last 5-10 minutes of this were an absolute blast, with Lana being unable to walk out because of her ankle, and Belfast’s Fit Finaly giving the green light to Dublin’s Becky Lynch to enter the match in Lana’s place. Cue a recording of the Wolfe Tones’ “We’re On the One Road.” When the field narrowed down to Becky, Charlotte, and Nia, it was a great moment. I am not a big Nia Jax advocate, but based on the crowd reaction, she is the top heel in the women’s division. Becky winning was a legitimately cathartic moment, and kudos to leathery madman Vince for making the right call. Unfortunately, the rest of the match was kind of a slog. The surprise entrants were great, and I was particularly pleased to see Io Shirai, Kairi Sane, and Candice LeRae. I once saw Candice LeRae wrestle in a tiny performance space that normally hosted noise bands and avant-garde literature readings. People on Twitter were complaining there weren’t enough “Legends” among the surprise entrants, but come on. The pool is not nearly as deep for the women as it is for the men. The biggest women stars of the Attitude Era tended to not be wrestlers, which actually was kind of true of the WWE women’s division even after the Attitude Era. They’ve already had Trish and Lita at the previous Rumble and the Evolution PPV; at some point, it’s not a surprise anymore. It’s also good to build up the future than to be like “Remember Kelly Kelly?? Well, here she is for three minutes of listless punching!” Maria Kanellis counts as a legend by that math, and she was in the Rumble. That was kind of a surprise. I had no idea what she and Alicia Fox were doing. It seemed like challenging absurdist theater, like they spontaneously decided to act out a scene from an Ionesco play. Talk about going into business for yourself. Swoggle also appeared and chased Zelina Vega around with a lascivious look on his face, which was, uh, unexpected. 
Daniel Bryan vs. AJ Styles
First, let’s consider how great it is that a WWE championship match featuring two of the most popular wrestlers on the roster is in the cool-down spot after a women’s match. That genuinely rules. That would have been unthinkable as recently as two years ago. As the women get more and more popular, those Saudi shows are going to get harder to pull off. Hurry up with those reforms, Prince MBS! Haha, just kidding, they’re not going to reform their brutal autocracy. Oh, right; this match. This was a chore to watch. It was so boring. It was not helped by its spot on the card, but this listless, will-this-do performance wouldn’t have been good in any spot. These are two of the best wrestlers of the last 30 years, but sometimes it just doesn’t click. It did not click here. I was relieved when Erick Rowan made his mysterious (re)appearance because I knew it signaled the match was almost over. It seems they’re going to make Rowan some kind of eco-brute, helping Daniel Bryan advance his monstrous agenda of caring about the planet. Fine. At least he’s not dressed like a second-tier TMNT villain anymore.
Brock Lesnar w/Paul Heyman vs. Finn Balor
By contrast, this was a hoot. They knew they had to recapture the crowd, and they went at it full-tilt for eight minutes. The story here was great: Brock was surprised to find himself being pushed to his limits by this lithe little Irishman, and so after he won, he lashed out like a petulant, over-the-hill bully. An example of how you can tell a great story in an eight-minute match. Not every big match has to be 25 minutes. Especially not that dogshit Daniel Bryan-AJ Styles match. It would have been great to see Finn win, but the Irish have to content themselves with Becky’s Rumble win tonight.
Royal Rumble (men)
This moved along at a quicker clip than the women’s rumble, perhaps because it was nearly 11 p.m. EST when it started. Damn and heck, this was a long show. It was lots of fun to see Jarrett come out in his ridiculous 1990s gear. HUGE missed opportunity by not having Honky Tonk Man come out, but you can’t have everything. Johnny Gargano looked great, Andrade looked great, Kurt Angle looked very, very old. The best moment was when Mustafa Ali eliminated his current antagonist, Samoa Joe. The incomprehension and fury on Joe’s face were magnificent grace notes. Joe is such a great addition to the roster. It’s crazy that it didn’t happen sooner. No Way Jose was essentially used as a quick punchline. Boy, that guy’s main roster tenure has not been pretty. The big surprise I guess was an enraged Nia Jax coming out and entering herself in the Rumble and then taking four guys’ finishers. CUE: CONTROVERSY. WWE’s been dipping its toes in intergender wrestling for a bit, but it’s hard to see them going whole hog. Nia is one thing, but imagine the response if it was Alexa Bliss being ethered by Randall Keith Orton. Seth Rollins was the odds-on favorite to win (although I picked Drew McIntyre, going with my heart rather than my head) so it feels a little anti-climactic that he actually won, but whatever. Afterwards, he pointed to the Wrestlemania “sign,” which was a computer graphic visible only to people watching on the network, so to those in attendance it looked like he was pointing out the place where he spotted a UFO. 
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politicaastazi · 7 years
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President Trump Proclaims National "Prayer Sunday" For Hurricane Harvey Victims
The president announced Friday that this upcoming Sunday would be a national day of prayer for the victims of Hurricane Harvey. "I just authorized and signed a proclamation for prayer," the president said. "And we're going to have, on Sunday, a prayer Sunday... So I think it's going to be something to see and to witness. Will be -- it's been a long time, and our country deserves it, frankly." Transcript: D. TRUMP: Thank you. Thank you very much. The first lady and I are pleased to welcome Gail McGovern of the American Red Cross, David Hudson of the Salvation Army and Kevin Ezell of Southern Baptist Disaster Relief. These people have been absolutely incredible in what they've done. We'd like to thank them and their staff and volunteers for the incredible work they're doing and -- in helping people affected by Hurricane Harvey. Sounds like a very innocent name, but it's not an innocent hurricane, that I can tell you. It's of epic proportion. These organizations and the many other nonprofits involved represent the generosity, determination and unbreakable spirit of the American people. And Mike Pence was there yesterday and represented this country so well in the love and the care, and I had so many just great comments about your visit. So I appreciate it. PENCE: Thank you, Mr. President. D. TRUMP: When a disaster strikes, they work to help others in the time of need, which was over the last week, believe me. They've already provided tens of thousands of displaced gulf coast residents with meals, water, shelter, fresh blankets and clean clothing. When one American suffers -- and I say this quite a bit, and especially lately, when you see what's going on -- we all suffer. We're one American family, brought together in times of tragedy by the unbreakable bonds of love and loyalty that we have for one another. And there is a great love and a great loyalty in this country, and I think we've all seen it, maybe more so than ever before, over the last four days. So I think we really have seen it. Nowhere is our unity more evident than in the actions of our volunteer and charitable organizations that rally to their neighbors' aid when disaster strikes. The people of Texas and Louisiana were hit very hard by a historic flood. In their response, they have taught us all a lesson, a very, very powerful lesson. There was no outbreak in crime. There was an outbreak of compassion only. Real, beautiful, strong compassion. And they've really inspired us as a nation. To be honest, they've inspired the world, because the world is watching. We're pleased to receive an update from Gail, David and Kevin on the work of the Red Cross, Salvation Army and the Southern Baptist Disaster Relief. The federal government is on the ground, bringing in significant resources to bear. And I want to assure these organizations and the others involved that we will continue to coordinate with them and bring all of the relief and the comfort and everything else that we absolutely can to the gulf coast. And I want to also thank the governor and lieutenant governor of Texas. They have been outstanding. Just the coordination and the level of relationship has been, I think, pretty much unprecedented. So I just want to thank them. I want to thank all of the folks working on the ground for the administration. Tom Bossert's here today. Tom, thank you very much. We appreciate it. Every American heart is with the people of Texas and Louisiana. They're strong and resilient, and they have really overcome. And we're in the process of -- just about where I can say overcome this horrible devastation. Now it's going back to work. But the Coast Guard in particular, I have to also thank. They saved probably thousands of lives, we were just talking about it, going onto seas that very few people would want to be on, in the worst of times. And they were saving a lot of people out there. Together, we will help them all recover from this tragedy. We'll renew our hope in community, and we'll renew our hope and rebuild those homes and businesses and schools and places of worship with a strength and vigor that comes from the love within our souls. And I just authorized and signed a proclamation for prayer. And we're going to have, on Sunday, a prayer Sunday. And Mike -- that was something that was very special, just took place. So I think it's going to be something to see and to witness. Will be -- it's been a long time, and our country deserves it, frankly. I want to thank my wife, Melania, the first lady. She's been so involved in this and helping so much, and so I want to thank you. Would you like to say a few words to start off? M. TRUMP: It's great to be here with some (ph) amazing people. And I want to thank all the volunteers all across the country that came to help, to Texas. And -- fantastic job. And we are going tomorrow to be with them. And I just want to tell them to be strong and everything will be OK on the end of (ph). D. TRUMP: See, I didn't tell her I was going to do that, Steve (ph). And she did a great job. (LAUGHTER) But she really has -- she's been so dedicated to this. This has very much affected her, what's -- what's happened in Texas and neighboring states, frankly. So I want to thank you, First Lady. Thank you. Salvation Army. HUDSON: Yes, well, we're first of all very appreciative of this opportunity, appreciative of our partners in service. We are working hand in hand with groups like the Red Cross, where they provide shelter for people and we're able to provide meals. And even though we're limited in being able to get into a lot of the impacted areas, we've already served hundreds of thousands of meals, and literally millions of meals will be served. And we can only do this as we partner together. And as I've told my coworkers, this is a time that we're all Texans. And no matter where you're from, we're all about serving Americans in need. And I'd like to thank you, Mr. President, the Red Cross, and the Baptists and all of the other agencies that partner with us. Together, we can make a difference. D. TRUMP: Thank you very much. Very nice. Southern Baptist. EZELL: We're three different organizations, but we work best as one. And the joy of this is we really do lock arms and have the capacity to feed over 400,000 people a day. And, Mr. President, thank you for FEMA. They've been incredible through this. We've gone through many disasters, and they've done just a fantastic job of stepping to plate and being prepared and allowing us to volunteer in the way we're prepared to do. D. TRUMP: Well, I think we should thank Brock Long and all of the people at FEMA and the people at Homeland, and I have to say, General Kelly, who's been so much involved, as you know. He just left and he's now in the White House. But his -- his spirit and everything else that's been involved over the last few weeks, getting ready, because really, this has been probably now almost two weeks since we felt it was probably going to hit that area. But General Kelly's done a fantastic job, and Elaine Duke was -- has been terrific. So, I want to all -- thank all of our folks. Tell me, Red Cross, how are we doing? MCGOVERN: So, first of all, our hearts go out to the people of Texas and on behalf of the entire American Red Cross. So many people have lost everything and presented in our shelters with just the clothes on their back. I visited one of the shelters outside of Austin, and it housed about 200 people. And I had the opportunity to talk to all the families, everyone from a six-month-old baby, to six-foot-eight man, and everybody in between. And you heard stories of heartbreak and heartache. But the one thing that I have seen in the nine years that I've been with the American Red Cross is the incredible resiliency of the American people. D. TRUMP: That's right. MCGOVERN: They are bound and determined to build back. And there are about 40,000 people in our shelters right now across the state of Texas. And our volunteers are pouring in, giving them comfort, hope. We've served about 390,000 meals and snacks. And the incredible thing is our partners are there. They are getting hot meals into our hands so that we can serve them. Government has just been phenomenal. When we had a hard time getting our volunteers in, the city gave us dump trucks so we can get volunteers and cots in. Department of Defense gave us high-water vehicles, twenty of them, so we could break in and bring needed supplies. So I'm just so appreciative of the teamwork. I'm appreciative of your support. And, again, our hearts go out to the people of Texas. D. TRUMP: Thank you very much, Gail. That's very nice, 390,000. MCGOVERN: Meals and snacks. D. TRUMP: And that's up until now. MCGOVERN: Just up until -- as of last night. D. TRUMP: You'll be doubling that. That's tremendous. MCGOVERN: Not quite sure (inaudible). D. TRUMP: Mike, would you like to say something? PENCE: Just -- Mr. President, having just returned from southeast Texas yesterday, we heard the resilience, the character, the faith of the people of these communities. We heard their gratitude to you and the first lady for the administration's support, for your compassion, for -- their admiration for our first responders, from FEMA, down to local leadership. But I also heard, Mr. President, about their gratitude for volunteer organizations that have literally been there from the very outset of this storm. And I want to thank you and the first lady for taking the opportunity to call attention to the Salvation Army and the Red Cross and Southern Baptist Disaster Relief. But anyone looking on should know that, while the federal government is going to be there at your direction, we'll be seeking resources from the Congress to make sure that disaster relief is available for individuals and businesses. Literally, the work of meeting people's human needs each and every day will take all of us. And these volunteer organizations need resources, and they need people. And I would just add, Mr. President, that anyone looking on can go to NVOAD.org. It's our website where all these organizations are listed. People can find out how they can be supportive of national volunteer organizations that, at this very hour and for weeks and months ahead, will be coming alongside families as they rebuild their lives. D. TRUMP: That's great. Thank you, Mike. Thank you very much. This is just some of the locations that, over a very short period of time, they've managed -- they and others have managed to go to. Some of these locations, as you know very well, some of the press has been there, and I will say they are devastated. Two days ago, there was water like nobody's ever seen before. I guess in the history of our country, we've never had an amount of water like we've had, and yet you were able to occupy all of these different locations and take care of people, you and the others. So we want to just thank you. That's really a special, special job. Thank you very much. (CROSSTALK) D. TRUMP: Thank you, Gail. Thank you very much. Great job. Great job. Thank you all very much. Appreciate it. QUESTION: Mr. President, do you think DACA is illegal? D. TRUMP: Thank you very much. STAFF: Thank you, everyone. D. TRUMP: We'll be releasing on DACA sometime over the weekend. Probably Sunday, Saturday. The latest will be Monday. STAFF: Thanks, everyone. D. TRUMP: Great feeling for DACA. QUESTION: (OFF-MIKE) D. TRUMP: Excuse me? QUESTION: (OFF-MIKE) DACA is illegal (ph). (Inaudible). D. TRUMP: Thank you. QUESTION: Sir, will you be making a (inaudible) request today? D. TRUMP: We'll be making a request, absolutely. STAFF: Thank you, everyone. D. TRUMP: For the state of Texas, yes. Politica in lume - vezi sursa: http://ift.tt/2wqxsXL from Blogger http://ift.tt/2xEfUWQ via IFTTT Like: My Library
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ariaanna27 · 7 years
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ROGER STONE: ON BOYCOTTS AND CANNABIS
(By Roger Stone) Recently I launched a bipartisan effort to persuade President Donald Trump to honor his pledge made during the presidential campaign to respect the states’ rights to legalize marijuana for medicinal purposes.
Partnering with me in this important endeavor is Orlando trial attorney and major Clinton donor and fundraiser John Morgan, Fox News analyst Andrew Napolitano, Congressman Matt Gaetz and HBO’s Bill Maher among others.
I have written spoken, marched and rallied against for drug law reform for 20 years. As a libertarian, I am not a newcomer to this fight. I am also a witness in a new lawsuit filed against the Federal government to overturn the feds classification as a Schedule 1 drug.
I spoke to the Cannabis Business Expo in New York City in June, and the bipartisan approach I outlined including an effort to take Cannabis off the Schedule 1 drug classification so doctors can prescribe it to people who might benefit was well received. I am scheduled to speak before the LA- based Cannabis Business Expo on Sept 14.
Recent a small group of activists said they would boycott the Expo if I spoke and vowed to disrupt my speech if my remarks are not canceled.
It’s a free country. They are free not to attend. I have no intention of canceling my remarks which I am giving pro-bono while other major speakers are paid. I feel strongly about this cause.
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This group of dissidents uses recycled” research” from Media Matters for America packaging it as a “boycott campaign” for my scheduled speech. The trolls and bots pushing this bullshit sure look like Brock, Carusone and they’re diminutive minions.
My twitter feed is lively and not for the faint of heart. I comment on many matters.This bogus claim I am a racist, anti-Semite or misogynist is based on old tweets that are either taken out of context, twisted or in some cases simply fabricated. I most certainly never referred to myself as a ‘N*gga with a Nixon Tattoo. It’s a Fugazi.
To be clear, I have been speaking out for drug law reform for over 30 years. I spoke along with the Reverend Al Sharpton and Russell Simmons and Drug Reform Activist Randy Credico at a “Countdown to Justice Rally” against New York’s racist, draconian Rockefeller drug laws in 2003. I spoke out again against these racist laws which destroy families and lives at the Yippie Museum in Greenwich Village in 2008. These are hardly the acts of a racist.
I am proud of my libertarian streak and have consistently supported human rights actively opposing an Anti-Gay Marriage Constitutional Amendment that was on the ballot in Florida. I also supported both campaigns to legalize medicinal marijuana by constitutional amendment in Florida.
Although I have been an acolyte and intimate of President Richard Nixon, I have been sharply critical of his failed War on Drugs. It was Nixon who, as Vice President was praised by Dr. Martin Luther King for rounding up enough Republican votes in the US Senate to offset the many southern white Democrats who opposed the 1958 Civil Rights Act. President Richard Nixon desegregated the public schools without violence or bloodshed. When LBJ left office, 10 percent of Southern schools were desegregated. When Nixon left, the figure was 80 percent.
Nixon also raised the Department of Justice Civil Rights Enforcement Budget 800 percent, doubled the budget for black colleges, appointed more blacks to federal posts and high positions than any president until that time, including LBJ. Nixon invented “Black Capitalism” (the Office of Minority Business Enterprise), raised U.S. purchases from black businesses from $9 million to $153 million, increased small business, loans to minorities 1,000 percent, and increased U.S. deposits in minority-owned banks 4,000 percent.
Nixon gave us Affirmative Action by adopting the Philadelphia Plan mandating for quotas for the number of blacks in unions, and in college and university admissions. This desegregated the trade unions. Yes, I’m a Nixon Republican.
There is no doubt that some of my tweets are too pungent and politically incorrect for my critics. I did use a word used by the US Census until 2011 that some construed to be a racial epitaph in tweets regarding Herman Cain, Dr. Ben Carson, Alan West and Roland Martin. In retrospect, I see that this attempt at sarcasm can be seen as a slur; therefore, I heartfully apologize to all this gentleman.
I don’t expect this apology to appease my critics because, like the President, nothing I say can please them. Like Trump, I don’t apologize as a general principle. I am violating one of my own Rules. In this case, it’s the right thing to do. I am hopeful some of these gentlemen will accept my apology as it is sincere.
I am many things, but I am not a racist.
There is no doubt that I sometimes use flamboyant, descriptive and politically incorrect language that some people find offensive. It’s 2017, and I suggest these people read the first amendment of the U.S. Constitution which guarantees free-speech even if it is sometimes vulgar. Note- what Media Matters is advocating is censorship, the silencing of those they disagree with. It is both un-American and more egregious than anything I have ever said or written in a 40-year career in American Politics.
I do not apologize for criticizing CNN talking head Ana Navarro based on her entire lack of credentials to opine and her false description as a “Republican strategist.” This is a woman who got caught lying about being an attorney during the Jeb Bush Administration (New York Times) Everything I have ever tweeted about her is accurate is not in any way a reflection of my views on all women.
New York’s Times columnist Gail Collins ripped off a riff about Mitt Romney strapping his dog to the roof of his car and driving to Boston, making it a running gag in her column. I wrote it first in a series of columns at STONEZONE.com. Odious. Dislike of Ms. Collins does not imply criticism of the entire gender of women.
Jill Abrams, formally of the Wall Street Journal, wrote a roundup story on the best-selling books at the time of the 50th anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s assassination and didn’t include my book, “The Man Who Killed Kennedy – The Case Against LBJ,” New York Times Bestseller. Also, it was selling more copies than any book of this genre other than Bill O’Reilly’s “Killing Kennedy” (FOX was a selling machine) and out-pacing experienced authors like David Talbot.
Abrams was cavalier about my complaint to her for failure to provide fundamental fairness her story. Thus, I saw her firing at the Wall Street Journal as a reflection of her bad karma. I don’t withdraw my criticism of her. It does not mean that I hate all women.
The access to cannabis for medical purposes that is used by millions of American will end if Jeff Sessions and White House Chief of Staff General John Kelly, aided by the new FBI Director have their way and reignite the “war on drugs” with a federal crackdown on state legalized marijuana. Thus starting a reversal of a directive of Attorney General Eric Holder by which the feds have wisely stood down. Only the President can stop this catastrophe.
The President has told me he is a strong supporter of medicinal marijuana. He has launched a just war on opioids which he has correctly said the real drug abuse crisis today. We must not only assure that the Trump Administration respects the State’s Rights to legalize and set up a system to regulate, tax and sell cannabis, we must also convince the President to take Cannabis off the Schedule 1 drug list.
I am confident both can be done and will not be hindered in my efforts to make this happen. This is not the time for petty partisan politics or the small minded.
You don’t need to agree with me or my politics nor do I need to agree with yours to work together in this vital effort. Our effort includes Republican and Democrats, liberals and conservatives, libertarians and progressives. We agree on only one thing- Cannabis.Those who do not choose to join us can step aside.
My critics are only playing politics and harming the cause of a united bipartisan effort to protect state legalized marijuana in the 29 states where the people have elected to make it legal. They are more interested in scoring petty political points than securing permanent drug law reform.
I will not be deterred from my efforts to persuade the President of the folly of launching a new “War on Drugs” considering the expensive and unjust failure of the last one and to keep his promise to protect the access to cannabis by millions of Americans including many veterans who are using it for medicinal purposes.
  from Roger Stone – Stone Cold Truth https://stonecoldtruth.com/roger-stone-on-boycotts-and-cannabis/
from Roger Stone https://rogerstone1.wordpress.com/2017/08/29/roger-stone-on-boycotts-and-cannabis/
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