Skip to comments.
Reporters are told to leave the White House amid reports protesters attempted to remove an Andrew Jackson statue nearby
CNN Anderson Cooper Twitter ^
| 06 22 2020
| Anderson Cooper CNN
Posted on 06/22/2020 8:39:15 PM PDT by yesthatjallen
It looks like the DC Metro and Park Police are taking a stand to drive back 'protestors' from destroying the Andrew Jackson statue in Lafayette Park.
This is clear provocation. They're testing the limits of how close they can get to the White House.
4 min clip:
Reporters are told to leave the White House amid reports protesters attempted to remove an Andrew Jackson statue nearby.
TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: District of Columbia
KEYWORDS: andersoncooper; andersonpooper; andrewjackson; cnn; lafayettepark; media; msm; nikkisfault; obamasfault; protestors; statue; waronart; waronstatues; whitehouse
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-48 last
To: Viking2002
41
posted on
06/23/2020 12:25:17 AM PDT
by
Spktyr
(Overwhelmingly superior firepower and the willingness to use it is the only proven peace solution.)
To: DeplorableGirl
Im almost afraid to ask but what is ghost pepper? Peppers that are too hot to really enjoy.
Can ghost peppers kill you?
When you bite into a ghost pepper, your mouth feels heat in the most extreme way. Your tongue's receptors register the intensity of the pepper and relay that information to your brain, which interprets the pepper as a burning, pain-inducing interloper. This causes a chain reaction in your body as the capsaicin in the ghost pepper initiates widespread tissue inflammation and begins to wreak havoc on your nerve endings, dilating blood vessels and making you feel hot all over. Suddenly, you're too, too hot.
42
posted on
06/23/2020 12:54:45 AM PDT
by
eldoradude
(Boycott Chinese made goods)
To: Viking2002
Five cats is just too many. With one cat, there is no question about who is in charge of the people and dogs.
43
posted on
06/23/2020 1:14:38 AM PDT
by
TChad
(The MSM, having nuked its own credibility, is now bombing the rubble.)
To: Viking2002
I have survived multiple years of owning 3 indoor cats, so I am not uninitiated and not a cat hater. More than 3 cats is crazy cat lady land. Just impossible to maintain that many felines in a household without their presence being immediately of olfactory note to any visitor who walks through the door. Regardless of how many litter pans you use and how often you clean them. Also they shed an astounding amount of fur. I am now living cat free for the first time in 30 years. It is an eye opening and welcome relief.
44
posted on
06/23/2020 7:16:23 AM PDT
by
Pennsyltucky Boy
(bitterly clinging to our constitutional rights in PA P)
To: Pennsyltucky Boy
We had next door neighbors at the time who had cats, and they let them live in the bushes in the front yard. Their idea of feeding them was to dump a bag of cheap cat food on the sidwalk twice a week, and let them go mousing the rest of the time. Totally irresponsible. The mama cat adopted my wife as a small kitten, and she'd sit on the window air conditioner in my wife's little office. My wife eventually made sure that our dogs weren't in the room, and she'd close her door and open the window to let the cat in. The mama cat's mother thought I was Satan Incarnate for some reason and would hiss at me, but she got along fine with my wife. Eventually, mama cat started living on our porch, because it was bigger and was covered. The dogs couldn't get to her because they had a dog door to the back yard only, which was fenced in. About six or eight months later, mama cat got pregnant and downloaded the gaggle we have now. Now we had a whole nest of them on the porch. About two or three months later, lightning hit our house and gutted it. Our doxies got trapped in the bedroom and suffocated, but the cats, being outside, all took off. A day or so later the mama cat and the all but two kittens reappeared. Now we're stuck with the dilemma of what to do with all of these felines. We were both still in shock over losing he house and dogs, and my family came down from PA/MD to help us try to salvage what little we could from the inside, which wasn't much. My niece, who was seven at the time, wanted to take a kitten home with her, so I told my brother-in-law to go for it. Idea time! Tell the neighbors, free cats! We unloaded two more, and ended up with Mama and three kittens. This is where it gets funny. The granny cat noticed that my wife was gone, but so were the dogs, so she started coming in the dog door in back and sleeping on the kitchen counter. It was burned black, but she stayed there, and my wife discovered her a few days after we'd found some temporary digs to live in. So, she started going by every day, putting down bowls of food and water inside, and playing with her. This went on for a few weeks, and I'd already told her that before we buy a new house, all of the existing house rats were to be spayed or neutered. And
no more cats! But, she'd already named the granny cat after her late mother, and with tears in her eyes and lower lip aquiver, she said "We just can't leave her behind!" *sigh* OK, go get her. But, THAT IS IT. I'm thinking jeez, she already crossed the Crazy Cat Lady threshold, and now she wants to up the ante. And neither of us ever owned a cat before, so we had to get a primer in
Felis catus 101 PDQ.
All I wanted was a dog. *chuckle* That was seven years ago. Granny cat and I came an understanding. She's asleep in my window, sunning herself as I type this. She also knows I'm an easy target for mooching if I put my dinner plate on my desk. Oh, and the kitten that my niece got? I saved his life twice: once, when a historically violent hailstorm hit and he got trapped in the brambles beside the driveway, getting pummeled my hailstones the size of baseballs. I had to put a steel sauce pan on my head like a helmet to go out and grab him. (I was sore for days afterwards.) Then I saved him again when he had the misfortune of trying to explore the yard behind the fence and one of our dogs cornered him. I gotta admit, he worked some pretty amazing Cat Fu on the dog and kept him back until I could chase him in the house. And that little SOB cat just hissed at me afterwards. To this day he still hisses at me. I should have just let the damn dog eat him. LOL My wife uses some sort of high octane kitty litter, so there's no aroma in the house. That was another part of the deal: I'll help feed them, water them, even sweep up after them because I'll be damned if my name's on the mortgage and I have to swim in a sea of cat hair, but YOU are cleaning the litter boxes!
45
posted on
06/23/2020 10:37:25 AM PDT
by
Viking2002
("If a really stupid person becomes senile......how can you tell?" - George Carlin)
To: dandiegirl
Cats are a lot more temperamental than most dogs; and dogs are smart enough to understand that :-)
46
posted on
06/23/2020 5:35:47 PM PDT
by
Jamestown1630
("A Republic, if you can keep it.")
To: FreedomPoster
They’ve probably got all sorts of stuff the tyros in Lafayette Park haven’t dreamed of...
47
posted on
06/23/2020 5:39:48 PM PDT
by
Jamestown1630
("A Republic, if you can keep it.")
To: Viking2002
48
posted on
06/23/2020 5:46:16 PM PDT
by
Jamestown1630
("A Republic, if you can keep it.")
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-48 last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson