Message from @V77
Discord ID: 494936828579807237
ha ha ha
Muh letters are sauce
Reeeeeeeee
crickets
Boom
I KNOW
but it is quiet
Expert Calls Kavanaugh Accuser's Polygraph Test 'Unbelievable'
https://www.lifezette.com/2018/09/expert-calls-kavanaugh-accusers-polygraph-test-unbelievable/
Mr chairman, I have 10,000 letterd from pink hat wearing gals who will agree with Drunkard, uh, Dr. Ford's testimony....All 10,000 gals swear that they were at the party and corroborate the witness.... We just need to give them ALL THE DETILS THAT Mrs Ford CANNOT remember about date, time, place, music and how she got there or got home... Sir.
now its related
Hahah. @V77 Love that post from Tolerant Fellow.
Golden.
@American Lion ty 💚
Seriously now. Everyone in when the music stops = Pay to play. Payment for traitors.
👀
?
Hah, all 30 of them.
330 million people in US. They got maybe 30 paid protesters.
Any mods on? <@&430217924267999233>
Head down to text only, shitshow needs to be shut down.
Remember to feel sheep.
Don’t think.
Feel
Exactly
I'm a moderator and evilanne does not respect that fact. She talks right over me.
Lol
White knighting these nasty women, virtue signaling, concernfags. Senators like Booker are disgusting.
It's just like when they show children killed in an attack in order to gain support to start a war. Same tactic. Target the emotions. Bypass logic.
Bucklew v. Precythe
http://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/bucklew-v-precythe/
Issues: (1) Whether a court evaluating an as-applied challenge to a state’s method of execution based on an inmate’s rare and severe medical condition should assume that medical personnel are competent to manage his condition and that procedure will go as intended; (2) whether evidence comparing a state’s method of execution with an alternative proposed by an inmate must be offered via a single witness, or whether a court at summary judgment must look to the record as a whole to determine whether a factfinder could conclude that the two methods significantly differ in the risks they pose to the inmate; (3) whether the Eighth Amendment requires an inmate to prove an adequate alternative method of execution when raising an as-applied challenge to the state’s proposed method of execution based on his rare and severe medical condition; and (4) whether petitioner Russell Bucklew met his burden under Glossip v. Gross to prove what procedures would be used to administer his proposed alternative method of execution, the severity and duration of pain likely to be produced, and how they compare to the state’s method of execution.
She’s going to see a million memes