zagora
zagora
zagora

I’m really uncomfortable with this gif. I feel fairly certain it’s of someone experiencing a medical issue.

I never knew the rage that I could inspire in people until I revealed that I actually knew the sex of my baby, but was keeping it private.

I later just started to lie and pretend I had no idea.

I was the board director of an organization for which I had to terminate the office manager because we had caught her in a lie for the upteenth time. I walked her out around noon.

At 12:30 the local wing place called in a panic, asking to speak with the office manager. I said she wasn’t there, but could I take a

I wish I was brave enough to do this. My stepmom literally tried to kill me once and yet I still talked to her up until she passed away. My mother was abusive and I continue to hold out hope that she’ll somehow turn into the mom and grandma I want her to be, but it will never happen.

I’ve worked on five DNC conventions. I have never worked on a convention where it wasn’t wrapped up well before July. 2008 was an outlier, because HRC remained in it until June 2 as I recall. But even in 2000, 2004 when there were aggressive challenges for the nomination - there was a presumptive nominee months before

Whoa, that’s a deep cut reference. But maybe accurate...?

I really am curious what evidence you have of there being “wonky” accounting of donors. FEC reports are rigged?

I think this is really interesting ground to study. Voters tend to turn out when their candidate is doing well, but how much of that ceases to be true when they think their entire primary is pointless?

Back in 2008, Hillary won Indiana by one point. But the other state having a primary that day was NC, where Obama blew her out of the water by 15 points, erasing the delegate margin she won from the PA primary.

Hey, Chuck E. - I’m not sure why you think I’m having a math argument with you or why in the world you think I’m talking about delegates when I’ve made it pretty clear I’m not. Frankly, your hashtag feels like mansplainin’.

I would squee if reporters wrote about it as such. “And in other news, Senator Bernie Sanders won Indiana, surprising pollsters, but didn’t net any delegates. But GOOD FOR HIM.”

Whoa. I wasn’t turning this into a delegate math argument AT ALL.

I think that was a dumb comment by the campaign - everyone knows no supers will flip, especially not now.

She wasn’t the presumptive nominee at that point. It wasn’t until May that it still looked locked up, although there was a path — granted, a steep one — pretty much until the very end. (I was one of the lucky staffers who got sent to PR to campaign on behalf of HRC.)

I’m not arguing about delegates, but more about the rather unimpressive popular vote performance in IN.

I’m not so sure that this was a strategic move. Consider the fact that the next match-up isn’t until May 17. That’s a big window for Bernie to raise more money off of the momentum of this win, which his campaign has shown they’re very capable of doing. If her campaign could have wrapped this up, they would have -

Polls predicted a loss for Bernie. Instead he won rather solidly.

It’s a “major upset” in that the polls got it all wrong - and frankly, an impressive win considering that the media has largely already proclaimed her the nominee.

My daughter had a vaccine a few months ago. Everything was fine that afternoon, but that evening she stopped breathing. I had to perform CPR. She’s okay now, but it was a terrifying, life-threatening reaction.

HOWEVER. I know that eschewing the medical community would be far more likely to be a threat to her health.

Actually, the only vaccine for which the whole “toxins” is true is the vaccine against whooping cough - and that’s because it’s the toxin released by the bacteria that makes you sick.

My daughter had a life-threatening reaction to a vaccine, and she was hospitalized for two days. But I remain 100% pro-vaccine. Because