andsmokeit
andsmokeit
andsmokeit

i mean we shouldn’t have been there in the first place, obviously. and we went in without an exit strategy, obviously, and had we not left we would have been mired in that country to this day. but the way we left was also bad!

who knows? maybe they would have. maybe they wouldn’t. this is a useless thought exercise that serves no purpose except to muddy that point that in this area in particular, obama’s administration failed. badly.

the implication is that the US fucked up and are culpable in what is happening right now. everyone wringing their hands over russia & what to do when we as a country should have stood up for this FIVE YEARS AGO when it wasn’t already too fucking late

correction: this isn’t “one of”, it IS their single biggest failure, starting all the way back in libya.

or you can always go the classic obama administration route which is tentatively promise help but not really so maybe we’ll try to give you some weapons—oh oops ISIS has those now good luck i guess

the road to aleppo was started in 2002 and bumped out to a 8-lane highway in 2011

i accept any and all

moar michael keaton is honestly now my response to every movie trailer and it very much applies to this as well

any movie that lets channing tatum be his true self is a success GOODBYE

i stand by it.

cory booker is the russell wilson of senators

“i, andrew cuomo, think the infrastructure of this country is falling apart. thats why i support bringing free wifi to all major highways and transportation corridors so you will be too distracted by twitter to care that much. i will work closely with my friend’s broadband company to make this happen and promise to

the rock is so gd charming that im not gonna sit here and act like i’ll not watch this

some states are trying, like new york state bringing solar to buffalo (which is mired in its own set of unfortunate problems mostly related to the state government being corrupt idiots). if their plan manages to succeed, you may begin to see it replicated on at least a state level

of course there is no way to be absolutely sure, but when you see a general positive trend over a period of years its not unreasonable to expect the upward trend to continue.

intrigue!

fair enough but its also important to look at the overall trend. what will the small majority turn into 5 years from now? 10?

you dominating all over these threads is lifting my gray sad spirits

she got romney’d

no, i don’t base my view of political movements on comment sections.