impossible to stop or prevent.
“the seemingly inexorable march of new technology”
I thought usage in this context was odd, but then I remembered that, notwithstanding his insufferable sonorous self-importance, he’s actually just an imbecile
Damning Email Ties John Kerry to Burisma Bribery Amidst Biden Turmoil
Isn’t John Kerry about due for a face lift?
Bring it, Effin.
Projection much? This traitor needs to go back to his palatial estate, retire and get more jabs and booster shots. (The real ones not the placebo’s)
Once again, when the dimocrats can’t win the debate, their only option is to stop the debate.
The endless list of climate cult alarms for the last 60 years should always be included in all responses.
-fJRoberts-
Bookmark
The guy is such a loser, he thinks he’s important because he flies around on taxpayer expense to parties.
John Kerry, when you and the other Hoax sayers sell your oceanfront mansions, your gas guzzling cars and yachts, your private jets and eat bugs, then I’ll believe it.
inexorable
ĭn-ĕk′sər-ə-bəl
adjective
Impossible to stop, alter, or resist; inevitable.
Not capable of being persuaded by entreaty; relentless.
Not to be persuaded or moved by entreaty or prayer; firm; determined; unyielding; unchangeable; inflexible; relentless; — of people and impersonal forces.
So if it’s inexorably, by definition, it’s a fool’s errand to try to stop them. So get the hell out of the way or get run over.
Run along, Lurch.
American Patriots Against John KerryThe 1970 meeting that John Kerry conducted with North Vietnamese communists violated U.S. law, according to an author and researcher who has studied the issue.
Kerry met with representatives from “both delegations” of the Vietnamese (North Vietnamese and Viet Cong) in Paris in 1970, according to Kerry’s own testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on April 22, 1971. But Kerry’s meetings with the Vietnamese delegations were in direct violation of laws forbidding private citizens from negotiating with foreign powers, according to researcher and author Jerry Corsi, who began studying the anti-war movement in the early 1970s.
According to Corsi, Kerry violated U.S. code 18 U.S.C. 953. “A U.S. citizen cannot go abroad and negotiate with a foreign power,” Corsi told CNSNews.com.
By Kerry’s own admission, he met in 1970 with delegations from the North Vietnamese communist government and discussed how the Vietnam Warshould be stopped.