Shaboid
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2014
- Messages
- 10,296
- Likes
- 13,640
- Points
- 113
As do I. We can both agree that it is asinine.No, but I certainly defend his right to determine his own diet.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
As do I. We can both agree that it is asinine.No, but I certainly defend his right to determine his own diet.
Was a good place to start. We loved the Round table in Lake Oswego only 3 miles from our house but they got rid of their thinnest crust. Now, all we have is Papa Murphy's doctored up pizza and my wife doesn't like that. Also, with a pizza cooked at home, while it's got it's advantages, it lacks the social experience that you get when going out.The dough/crust is the most important part of any pizza, in my opinion. That is what a pizza is built on. I like a thin crispy crust. Almost cracker like. Round table crust is a good place to start.
You don't know good food until you go to St. Louis, San Francisco or New York.Literally my favorite part of Portland these days is the food. It's one of the better food towns in the US that I've been too, and there is a lot of diversity, good Pizza, Sushi, Indian, Jewish, etc. Very good food to be had.
Escape from New York is one of my favorites, as well but it's super casual and not many places to sit down. I think I recall two maybe three tables and a few bar stools. The problem with them is that they don't have quite the same thin crust as I've had in NY and New Jersey as well as parts of St. Louis.You must not be looking hard. Portland is widely recognized these days as a great pizza town. Wood fired delicious pizzas wherever you look.
My personal favorites are Apizza Scholls and Escape from NY.
Now I know what place you're talking about.You must not be looking hard. Portland is widely recognized these days as a great pizza town. Wood fired delicious pizzas wherever you look.
My personal favorites are Apizza Scholls and Escape from NY.
Hey hey, this was our secret? How did you find out? Was it at our regular Wednesday night meetings?
Yes, viruses don't respect borders whether secured or not. However, now here's the hilarioud irony, Central and South America have less Covid19 coronavirus than we do so maybe they should close their borders to us. We are now no. 2 or 3 in the infected population count and headed for no. 1. Your Trump is a huge failure in saving American lives.CNN's Chris Cillizza mocked for telling Trump viruses 'don't, uh, recognize borders'
By Joseph A. Wulfsohn | Fox News
CNN editor-at-large Chris Cillizza was widely mocked on social media on Monday while attempting to mock President Trump for his vocal stance on borders amid the coronavirus pandemic.
President Trump has long supported strengthening the southern border between the U.S. and Mexico, but as the coronavirus continues to spread worldwide, there has been a renewed call to increase border security to crack down on the transmission of the virus on top of the travel ban he had set against China as well as the majority of Europe.
On Monday morning, Trump touted his support for strong borders on social media.
"THIS IS WHY WE NEED BORDERS!" Trump exclaimed.
CNN'S JAKE TAPPER UNDER FIRE AFTER ADMITTING HE DIDN'T FACT-CHECK AOC ON TRUMP-CORONAVIRUS CLAIM
Cillizza responded to what the thought was a witty response.
"Viruses don't, uh, recognize borders," Cillizza told the president.
Critics ridiculed the outspoken CNN commentator for the tweet.
"How do you think viruses cross borders, Chris?" Human Events managing editor Ian Miles Cheong asked.
"Cillizza’s hot take is 'viruses don’t recognize borders' as countries around the world are temporarily closing their borders," Daily Caller social media manager Logan Hall said.
"Viruses, uh, are transmitted by human beings," Washington Examiner reporter Jerry Dunleavy told Cillizza.
"The curve of media intelligence has been flattened," comedian Dave Cooperman quipped.
"Cillizza thinks that this is a good point? People who carry viruses do, however, respond to checkpoints and border security," RealClearInvestigations senior writer Mark Hemingway reacted.
Even Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas., knocked the liberal pundit's tweet.
"So was it good or bad that the US halted flights in and out of China?" Cruz asked.
The Media Resource Center and Fox News are noteworthy poor sources.Study suggests mainstream media double standard at work after arrest of Rep. Chris Collins
![]()
By Brian Flood | Fox News
![]()
Mainstream media spent more time on the arrest of Rep. Chris Collins, R-N.Y. in one day than it did in a year where Rep. Corrine Brown, D-Fla., was concerned.
Mainstream media has often been accused of focusing on the flaws of Republicans while looking the other way when it comes to Democrats. Consider this week's coverage of the arrest of Rep. Chris Collins, R-N.Y.
The Media Research Center reported that ABC, CBS and NBC combined to cover Collins’ arrest on evening and morning newscasts for a combined 18 minutes and 24 seconds during the first 24 hours of coverage. The MRC study also noted that similar ordeals involving a Democrat received little to no attention from the same networks.
Former Democrat Rep. Chaka Fattah resigned in 2016 after being convicted of federal corruption charges including bribery, racketeering, money laundering and bank fraud. The networks spent more time on Collins in one day than they did on Fattah in over a year, according to the MRC.
“During the year-and-a-half period in between his indictment and conviction for bribery and fraud, the ABC, CBS and NBC morning and evening programs managed a scant 68 seconds,” MRC associate editor Scott Whitlock wrote.
Former Florida Rep. Corrine Brown was sentenced last year to five years in prison over a variety of charges including fraud, but the networks ignored it all together. ABC, NBC and CBS combined for zero minutes of coverage from Brown’s indictment through sentencing, according to the MRC.
According to the MRC, CBS spent 7 minutes and 6 seconds on the Collins story, while ABC spent 5 minutes and 41 second and NBC dedicated 5 minutes and 37 seconds of airtime on the story.
CBS, ABC and NBC did not immediately respond when asked about the study.
Collins said he believes that charges filed against him "are meritless" and he will remain on the ballot for re-election. The indictment charges 68-year-old Collins; his son, Cameron Collins; and the father of his son's fiancée, Stephen Zarsky, with conspiracy, securities fraud, wire fraud and making false statements to the FBI. All three pleaded not guilty in court Wednesday afternoon.
“On Wednesday and Thursday, the networks not only offered a lot of time to Collins’s arrest, but they also heavily emphasized the Republican’s connection to Trump,” Whitlock wrote. “Is that the journalistic standard now? Corruption matters because Trump is President? Apparently, corrupt Democrats were of no concern during the Obama era.”
Collins, who has served New York's 27th District since 2013, ran unopposed in the Republican primary and holds what's largely considered a safe Republican seat in a state that went to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016. He's being challenged by Democrat Nate McMurray, a Grand Island, N.Y., town supervisor.
http://www.foxnews.com/entertainmen...d-at-work-after-arrest-rep-chris-collins.html
The New York Times doesn't have to harass Carlson to get him off the air...
Then they should stop. I mean, seriously.
Probably not?If they are, sure, they should stop. Probably not going to take Tucker's word for it that they're targeting him for harassment.
Probably not?