I have my doubts about this theory. I think Joe thinks he can actually run and "win" again. As long as the fix is in. |
Sounds like a friend of mine. Can't navigate even with a map app. |
The door only ever swings one way. |
"No, thanks—I stopped smoking children a while ago." |
But the victories under Trump proved hollow because of how quickly they were undone. |
Too late. Check your Democrat-run cities. |
Missing apostrophe bugs the fuck out of me. |
They're covering it up as we speak, alas. |
Yikes. |
I guess "it" refers to "gun," but it looks as if it could mean "application." Write more clearly. |
I agree with this. Education, Energy... lots of departments must go. |
"Blazing Saddles" comes to mind. |
This happens a lot. |
And you still hate Oxford commas. |
I like how "Ending" is capitalized as if English were German. |
Kangaroo Jacked |
ah, happier times |
Charles notes this last meme is a fake and links to Snopes to demonstrate this. What's funny is that the Snopes article debunking the image finishes this way: "Nonetheless[,] the company still appreciates the humor: after someone shared the photo in question on WD-40's Facebook page, the company simply replied: 'AWESOME!!!'" The meme might not be legit, but it has the company's nihil obstat. |
Too bad that WD-40 ad isn't real.
ReplyDeleteHa! Fooled again!
ReplyDeleteBut you can trust Snopes only so much. Politically speaking, they're more "fact checkers" than fact checkers.
There are quite a few other resources that point out the falsity of the ad; I just chose Snopes as it is the most widely known. I also saw that the company expressed their approval, and why wouldn't they? Free advertising! And, as they say, sex sells.
ReplyDelete