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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWas anyone else nauseous after reading
The article in the goofy, baldheaded fucks newspaper on the analysis of the fucking chomo falling asleep yesterday? In particular, the tut-tutting that the fucking pedophile keeps a travel schedule that his aides cant keep up with and so falling asleep is sooooo atypical of his energy.
Let me clue in the fucking worthless fish wrapper that was the WaPo (now BezPo), the walking shitbag is a 79-year-old obese, out-of-shape sack of feces with a poor diet. The only thing thats keeping him allegedly vertical are the massive amount of drugs they pump into his kid-fucker body.
Sneederbunk
(16,968 posts)DavidDvorkin
(20,424 posts)niyad
(128,432 posts)wolfie001
(6,481 posts)ananda
(33,962 posts)It stinks to high heaven and is VERY
puke worthy.
eppur_se_muova
(40,530 posts)3Hotdogs
(14,798 posts)With the blackened hands and swollen kankles, she guesses less than year.
tblue37
(67,620 posts)gave him the benefit of the doubt.
mwmisses4289
(2,757 posts)Yet he walked on that stage, and attempted to debate an idiot.
Grokenstein
(6,203 posts)"Liberal media" my arse.
Dave Bowman
(6,242 posts)Like its toxic owner.
COL Mustard
(7,793 posts)Or the Nodfatehr? The Sultan of Snooze? If Fox ever ran a story about this you know he'd call it Fake Snooze.
SleeplessinSoCal
(10,348 posts)And that's on top of lifelong malignant narcissism.
The billionaire class in America now is clearly self absorbed and without conscience. Trump is their guy and the Constitution be damned.
I'm rooting so hard for Mamdani to do a good job. I prefer this take on what he is:
This wasnt a mere ballot-box triumph. It was a brutal exorcism of Donald Trumps personalised politics, his toxic brew of division, and his so-called Trumpian economics. Ironically, in this very city, where extreme terrorists brought down the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001, killing nearly 3,000 Americans and others in an act of unimaginable horror, voters have chosen to repose unyielding faith in multiculturalism. As the confetti fell and the crowds roared, one truth crystallised. Americas flirtation with autocratic individualism is unravelling, and Trumps plummeting acceptance is the harbinger of his inevitable fall.
Trumps rise in 2016 was a carnival of chaos. He peddled fear as policy and identity as weaponry. He ascended on the backs of the dispossessed, promising walls against the others and tax cuts for the elite disguised as populism. But less than a year into his second term, the cracks are widening into chasms.
Mamdanis victory, coupled with Democratic sweeps in other key races, exposes the fragility of Trumps grip. Its a national referendum on the mans corrosive legacy. Voters in the nations largest city, a microcosm of Americas diversity, rejected Trumps exclusionary toolkit with visceral force. Mamdani turned the race into a personal battleground of identities, where heritage became both shield and sword. However, this very emphasis on leftist ideals could exacerbate national divisions. Mamdanis policies threaten to weaken the fight against illegal immigration and balloon expenditures on social measures, potentially straining the citys and the countrys resources at a time when prudence is paramount.
The campaign devolved into a raw clash of visions, with both men hurling barbs that laid bare the soul of American politics. Trump, ever the provocateur, attacked Mamdanis identity with the subtlety of a sledgehammer. In a Truth Social rant days before the election, Trump labelled Mamdani a self-professed Jew hater and declared that any Jewish person who votes for him is a stupid person. It was classic Trump who stoked religious and ethnic fears to rally his base. He implied that Mamdanis Muslim heritage made him inherently suspect. Trump doubled down, accusing Mamdani of embodying radical left identity politics that will destroy New York, tying him to supposed anti-American sentiments.
It was personal, vicious, and utterly predictablea reflection of Trumps worldview where diversity is a threat, not a strength. Mamdani fired back with eloquence and cultural firepower that dismantled Trumps fortress of exclusion. In rally after rally, he invoked his biracial, interfaith roots as proof of Americas promise. My mother is Hindu, my father MuslimI am the America Trump fears. But Mamdanis masterstroke came in channelling historical giants and cultural icons to eviscerate Trumps narrow nationalism.
Drawing from Jawaharlal Nehru, Indias first prime minister, Mamdani quoted the independence leaders famous Tryst with destiny speech. Adapting it to the American context, Mamdani thundered, We build a noble city where allHindu, Muslim, Jew, Christian, atheistdwell in unity, not the walled-off dystopia Trump peddles. It was a direct rebuke to Trumps America First isolationism, invoking Nehrus vision of inclusive democracy to highlight how Trumps personalised rule fosters fragmentation."
More at: https://www.newindianexpress.com/opinions/columns/pc/2025/Nov/08/zohran-mamdani-trounces-trumpism
flamingdem
(40,754 posts)This all makes me miss NYC so much. He's the right leader at the right time, imo.
SleeplessinSoCal
(10,348 posts)We moved back to CA IN 1998. 22 years on the Upper West Side is ingrained in my psyche and heart.
William Seger
(12,043 posts)Last edited Sun Nov 9, 2025, 01:13 AM - Edit history (1)
"Nauseated, not nauseous this nauseous editorial makes me feel nauseated. Don't say you are nauseous unless you are sure you have that effect on people."
But every other word
EDIT: I didn't mean to sound like a grammar cop; I just took the opportunity to share my teacher's little joke. But then, it occurred to me that the way you used "nauseous" is so common that it's probably been accepted since my teacher went to school, so I checked the dictionary, and... it is!