Biden says Twitter spews lies across the world
Biden is an expert when it comes to lies:
Karine Jean-Pierre: Biden Regrets That People ‘Twisted’ His Promise to End Coal

Biden is an expert when it comes to lies:
Karine Jean-Pierre: Biden Regrets That People ‘Twisted’ His Promise to End Coal

| Rank | Pollster | Avg |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | Selzer & Co. | 2.0 |
| 2nd | InsiderAdvantage | 2.6 |
| 3rd | UMass Lowell | 3.0 |
| 4th | Susquehanna | 3.3 |
| 5th | Trafalgar Group | 3.4 |
| 6th | Emerson | 3.9 |
| 7th | CBS News/YouGov | 4.0 |
| 8th | CNBC/Change Research | 4.1 |
| 9th | Suffolk | 4.3 |
| 10th | SurveyUSA | 4.4 |
| 10th | Rasmussen Reports | 4.4 |
| 12th | HarrisX | 4.8 |
| 12th | NY Times/Siena | 4.8 |
| 14th | Marist College | 4.9 |
| 15th | CNN | 5.0 |
| 16th | PPP | 5.2 |
| 17th | Remington Research | 5.3 |
| 18th | ABC News/Washington Post | 5.4 |
| 18th | Monmouth | 5.4 |
| 18th | FOX News | 5.4 |
| 18th | Reuters/Ipsos | 5.4 |
| 22nd | Mason-Dixon | 5.5 |
| 23rd | Quinnipiac | 5.7 |
| Rank | Pollster | Avg |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | Trafalgar Group | 2.5 |
| 1st | Susquehanna | 2.5 |
| 3rd | InsiderAdvantage | 2.6 |
| 4th | Rasmussen Reports | 3.2 |
| 5th | UMass Lowell | 3.8 |
| 6th | SurveyUSA | 4.1 |
| 6th | CNBC/Change Research | 4.1 |
| 8th | Reuters/Ipsos | 4.3 |
| 9th | CBS/YouGov | 4.4 |
| 10th | Emerson | 5.0 |
| 11th | NY Times/Siena | 5.1 |
| 12th | ABC News/Washington Post | 5.5 |
| 13th | FOX News | 5.7 |
| 13th | Marist | 5.7 |
| 15th | PPP | 7.0 |
| 16th | CNN | 7.1 |
| 17th | Quinnipiac | 7.5 |
| 18th | Monmouth | 7.6 |
Insider Advantage Senate Polling
GA Senate
(R) Herschel Walker: 48%
(D) Raphael Warnock: 45%PA Senate
(R) Mehmet Oz: 48%
(D) John Fetterman: 46%AZ Senate
(R) Blake Masters: 48%
(D) Mark Kelly: 48%NV Senate
(R) Adam Laxalt: 50%
(D) Catherine Cortez Masto: 44% pic.twitter.com/Ngc5RBpSRn— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) November 6, 2022
“…“Amnesty” comes from the Greek word ἀμνηστία, whose primary meaning is “forgetfulness.” In common parlance, the word carries a suggestion of forgiveness as well. But neither forgetfulness nor forgiveness is on the docket. People are not about to forget what the politicians and their bureaucrats just did to them. And if they do not forget, neither will they forgive.
Nor are they going to forget what the FBI has done and is doing to us. The dawn raids against non-violent political rivals of the regime and pro-life activists, the nationwide dragnets to nab people who protested against the 2020 election, the spying on Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign, manufacture of forged evidence in order to mobilize the awesome surveillance apparatus of the state against American citizens and undermine Trump’s presidency. The bill of indictment is long and damning. How long? More than a thousand pages in its first iteration, which GOP members of House Judiciary Committee dropped on Friday under the title “FBI Whistleblowers: What Their Disclosures Indicate About the Politicization of the FBI and Justice Department.”
What they indicate is an agency that has gone rogue and should be dismantled. This has been a theme sounding for more than a years now. Roger L. Simon, writing for the Epoch Times, said that the FBI, like ancient Carthage, must be destroyed. Holman Jenkins, writing for the Wall Street Journal, said that the agency had to be abolished. I’ve argued the same case several times, here, for example, and here. In my column for the December Speccie, I suggest that FBI be relocated to Kansas City and have its budget cut by 75 percent. “Then,” I write, “it should be taken apart altogether,” not least because “a national police is probably unconstitutional certainly un-American.”…”
BIDEN ON COAL:
"We're gonna be shutting these plants down all across America, and having wind and solar." pic.twitter.com/JXIZxDzvsu
— Townhall.com (@townhallcom) November 4, 2022


Neil Oliver: 'The righteous insist those clinging by their fingertips to the outside edge of existence don’t matter and must be ignored, cast aside as collateral damage. Who cares about the inconvenient living, when there’s a fantasy future to sell to the gullible?' 1/2 pic.twitter.com/rI37NY8bb0
— GB News (@GBNEWS) November 5, 2022
BIDEN: "I love those signs when I came in. 'Socialism.' Give me a break. What idiots." pic.twitter.com/W9bzOLCj0x
— RNC Research (@RNCResearch) November 5, 2022



WTF did he just say? 😂 https://t.co/HpPEu4z5wV
— Catturd ™ (@catturd2) November 6, 2022
“…Last year California’s State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB), explicitly responding to the suddenly discovered legacy of “white supremacy” and “the national and worldwide backlash against racism toward Black people and related Black Lives Matter protests of 2020,” passed a nine-page resolution (accompanied by 47 pages of “reference literature”), headlined “Condemning Racism, Xenophobia, Bigotry, and Racial Injustice and Strengthening Commitment to Racial Equality, Diversity, Inclusion, Access, and Anti-Racism.” One might have thought “inclusion” would have involved mentioning homophobia and Islamophobia, too, except that Black Lives Matter and their supporters get very angry when you mention the importance of any non-black group.
This cliché-ridden piece of predictable performance posturing is a case study of several intertwined traits of progressive governance today. California’s State Water Resources Control Board (and nine regional subordinate water boards) dates back to the 1960s, and was initially charged with monitoring the state’s water with an eye to detecting and remediating pollution from major sources such as industrial production, agricultural runoff, wastewater, and natural sources of unhealthy water. Surface and subsurface water quality is one of the more challenging environmental problems the nation faces because of the wide variety of ways water quality can be degraded, so it is not surprising that water monitors and regulators have a large range of factors to manage, from underground storage tanks to—in California’s case—the effects of specialized industries such as winemaking to, more recently, cannabis cultivation.
But as with all bureaucracies, mission creep and the political imperative of ever larger budgets and staff always leads to inexorable growth of power and reach, even as its primary original mission remains unfulfilled. Naturally the Board now includes “climate change” as one of its primary concerns, and “public outreach” and education—essentially propaganda and self-congratulation—as key functions. It is not surprising that it would jump on the anti-racist bandwagon along with everyone else in Leftist government…”
He needs to be replaced with a younger man who has not succumbed to Washington-itis