I've been in a couple dozen forums in the last two or three decades. Unlike you prune eating keyboard jockey...I've met a large number of people....prolly more than 100 across th nation. Do your own search....MadJacks FIRST golf outing. There's a picture with four of us at that particular outing for that forum in Indiana. I'm on the far left. That was a number of years ago. Currently I'm still 6'5" and now 268. I've owned a very labor intensive business for three decades and lift & exercise daily. Seeing all the keyboard chirping and demagoging you employ.....I'm positive you would be light work if we were to ever get into any physical altercation.
This is the last time I give you any attention.
Move along.
Tell/support a lie once, and all your truths become questionable.
In the summer of 2019, Fox News embarked on an ambitious project to chronicle the toll progressive policies have had on the homeless crisis in four West Coast cities: Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Portland, Ore. In each city, we saw a lack of safety, sanitation and civility. Residents, the homeless and advocates say they've lost faith in their elected officials' ability to solve the issue. Most of the cities have thrown hundreds of millions of dollars at the problem only to watch it get worse. This is what we saw in San Francisco.
Many Westerners are disturbed by what they read about China’s social credit system. But such systems, it turns out, are not unique to China. A parallel system is developing in the United States, in part as the result of Silicon Valley and technology-industry user policies, and in part by surveillance of social media activity by private companies.
Here are some of the elements of America’s growing social credit system.