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Re: Mitch McConnell Pdawg 07/13/26 02:18 AM
Senator Mitch McConnell's office officially announced he had been admitted to the hospital on June 14, following a fall at his home.Prior to this update, his spokesperson originally only stated that he was recovering and receiving excellent care. McConnell himself provided further details on July 12, confirming the fall left him briefly unconscious and that he was also treated for a mild case of pneumonia. NBC News

His spokesman confirmed he was in the hospital from day one. There was no 3 days where he was unreachable. I have been hospitalized many times while I was working and never once was I given as much as a talking to. I was unreachable where I was. Now I usually called the EAP since I didn’t have an official spokesperson.
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Re: Mitch McConnell oobernoober 07/13/26 01:55 AM
If I, or any of us except for those that work for themselves, were unreachable for 3 working days (hospital or no), it'd be considered job abandonment and we'd be terminated. Maybe it's 5... I dunno but I think you understand the point I'm getting at.

He WAS AWOL because nobody had heard from him.
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Re: Watson vs Sanders? oobernoober 07/13/26 01:47 AM
Unless Sanders can develop on the fly and show something this year, I don't think the whole 'Watson vs Sanders' thing means anything. Neither will be on the roster after next season, IMO.

Honestly, I wouldn't be all that surprised if our entire QB room was turned over going into next season.
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Re: Poltical Jokes Part 5 MemphisBrownie 07/13/26 12:32 AM
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Re: Mitch McConnell Pdawg 07/13/26 12:18 AM
Originally Posted by WooferDawg
If the guy cannot show up for work, and is AWOL, they are incapable of doing the job.

The speculation is that he is brain-dead and that the GOP is hiding it until Aug 3 so a special election would not be held.

Even in near death, Mitch is pulling another "Garland" with Thune complicit.

Except he wasn’t AWOL he was in the hospital. He also spoke today from his hospital bed so he isn’t brain dead either. I can see not liking him, people on both sides of the aisle don’t. The conspiracy theories are as ridiculous as the ones from the right.
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Re: Watson vs Sanders? bonefish 07/12/26 10:11 PM
Until a team plays real games it is really hard to evaluate a team.

The week they practice against another team is a good week to try and get a feel.

The reports can cover how the lines are holding up.

Camp is about reps and getting the execution of plays down.

You hope for no major injuries.

I think Monken will really be looking for the quarterback that gels with the team.

SS has to gain the trust and confidence of the offensive players.
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Re: Watson vs Sanders? Bard Dawg 07/12/26 09:49 PM
For me, it is a "hold-your-nose" competition. How much extra time will Monken need to budget for development over-book install? Hard to establish reliable metrics and standards for performance with this much green roster, low achieving, new coaches, and so much more. he can be ball control if we can run well enough. Our tradition of drive killers on offense is not to be taken lightly. I expect to be unhappy all season with QB play. Can our D keep us in? I think the answers will be obvious. I also think the questions will demand attention.Good luck, Coach Monken!
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Re: Random NFL News PitDAWG 07/12/26 05:36 PM
Seahawks to be sold for NFL-record $9.6 billion: Who bought the team, and why billions will go to charity

The historic price tag smashes the previous NFL record set just three years ago

https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/seahawks-sold-9-6-billion-nfl-record-buyer-owners/
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Re: Watson vs Sanders? Iluvmyxstripper 07/12/26 04:50 PM
Another year . Same story on offense . What QB is best to lead the offense ? 4 OCs in 5 years.
At least Todd Monken has a legit resume. Unlike Tommy Rhees. He was so overhyped.
I dont think it matters who the starter is . Both are bottom tier rated ranked QBs.
I think Watson will be the opening day starter. Just because is this the last chance
To validate the worst trade in NFL history . But I think Monken will run a ball control offense . And heavy TE sets . Its easier to establish run blocking than pass blocking when your entire online is overhauled .
Minken has his work cut out . Defenses are going to load the box . The oline abd WR rooms are totally rebuilt . Monken cant present a over complicated playbook . Sanders and Watson aren't exactly great at processing defenses .
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Re: Senator Lindsey Graham dies suddenly at the age of 71 PitDAWG 07/12/26 03:32 PM
From staunch critic to fierce ally: Graham’s long, strange and consequential friendship with Trump

WASHINGTON (AP) — After the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, Sen. Lindsey Graham said he had finally had enough of the man who was championed by the mob that stormed the pillar of American democracy: President Donald Trump.

“Trump and I, we’ve had a hell of a journey. I hate it to end this way. Oh my God, I hate it. From my point of view, he’s been a consequential president,” an emotional Graham said once authorities cleared the rioters and allowed senators to reclaim their chamber. “All I can say is count me out. Enough is enough.”

It wasn’t, of course.

Graham, the South Carolina Republican who died unexpectedly on Saturday night at age 71, realized that his party’s future was inextricably tied to Trump and quickly reverted back to being a staunch defender. The shift made what had once seemed like a final rupture into just another twist in the topsy-turvy relationship between the powerful senator and the president who came to dominate their party.

“Can we move forward without President Trump? The answer is no,” Graham said in May 2021, just four months after the Jan. 6 attack. “I’ve determined we can’t grow without him.”

Trump, who called Graham a “true American Patriot” in a social media post Sunday, appeared shocked by the lawmaker’s sudden passing.

“I just can’t believe it,” the president told NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “He was like a member of the family.”

Graham often advised Trump on foreign affairs, particularly on matters pertaining to Israel, Ukraine and Iran. He was a frequent visitor at the White House.

“I said, ‘We’ll see you soon, come over anytime you want,’” Trump said about his last conversation with the senator.
Graham once said Trump’s candidacy was like ‘being shot in the head’

The senator and Trump first clashed while competing for the 2016 presidential nomination.

Graham described Trump as “unfit for office,” and was angered when Trump denigrated the military service of Graham’s close friend, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. Trump suggested, “I like people that weren’t captured” when talking about McCain’s years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam.

Trump got mad enough at Graham to release the senator’s personal cellphone number. That prompted a viral video in which the senator dramatically destroyed a series of flip phones. He smashed one with a meat cleaver and another with a golf club, then used lighter fluid, a blender and toaster oven to pulverize others before tossing one off the roof.

Graham eventually likened Trump’s winning the nomination to “being shot in the head” and said he refused to vote for Trump that November. But the pair later bonded over golf and what Graham described as a mutual and irreverent sense of humor.

Trump and Graham began so frequently hitting the links together that the senator started seeing it as something of a career builder, leaning heavily into the kind of over-the-top flattery Trump relishes. In 2017, Graham joked that Trump had beaten him “like a drum” on the course — even worse than in the presidential primary.

“Their true friendship could only be seen behind the curtain,” Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., told ABC’s “This Week.” Scott said that relationship was forged as political adversaries but also strengthened by spending 100-plus hours golfing together.

During Trump’s first term, Graham helped advance Trump’s nominees to the Supreme Court, lent credibility to the White House’s legislative agenda and even at times became part of the president’s inner circle. He frequently said Trump was maturing in politics and growing on the job.

Graham’s political divergence with McCain, who died in 2018, was never more clear than in 2017, when McCain voted against a Trump-backed plan to overturn Democratic President Barack Obama’s signature health care law. The effort had been co-sponsored by Graham.

A split that was short-lived, an alliance reignited

In his floor speech after the Capitol attack, Graham said “he’d never been so humiliated and embarrassed for the country.” But the break with Trump ended quickly.

Weeks later, Trump invited Graham for golf and dinner at the president’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, reigniting their alliance. During Trump’s 2024 campaign, Graham was a frequent Trump surrogate on television, promoting U.S. military strength that he said would advance “America First” policies.

Graham never shed his more traditional Republican foreign policy views, including outspoken support for Ukraine during the Russian invasion. He was also a leading voice pushing the White House to more fully embrace Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and take a harder line against Iran.

After the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran in February, Graham remained hawkish, staunchly defending the action and working to counter many in Trump’s “Make America Great Again” base who thought “America First” meant avoiding such military conflicts.

“To those who say Iran is stronger now than before, that is an insult to the American military and it is delusional thinking because the Iranian economy is in shambles,” Graham posted on social media June 19.

But Graham’s admiration for Trump went far beyond Iran. When Graham clinched the South Carolina Republican primary last month, he suggested the president was just short of a deity.

“I want to start with a bunch of thank yous. I want to thank the big guy, God. Trump comes later,” Graham laughed. “Mr. President, you’re not far behind God, but we’re gonna start with him.”

https://apnews.com/article/trump-gr...y-iran-abce65fdea00e13e34b8cb6380b4f8c9?
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Re: Senator Lindsey Graham dies suddenly at the age of 71 PitDAWG 07/12/26 02:34 PM
Unexpected and sad news indeed. I don't believe anyone saw this coming. RIP.
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Watson vs Sanders? bonefish 07/12/26 01:21 PM
A quarterback battle in training camp has become the "norm."

This year it is the old versus the young. A veteran against a second year player.

Monken had stated he would like to know early but the OTA's gave him no answer.

So when camp opens the battle begins.

IMO what SS did last year can be left in the past. He should begin this season with a clean slate. Last season he had little around him in the way of offensive tools. In addition, he was never expected to start and never had the normal preparation period.

Everyone knows the case of Watson.

So, now there is an entire new coaching staff and offensive scheme.

The offensive line has been rebuilt. The receiver room has added two high draft selections. Judkins will be healthy and ready to go.

Simply stated Monken wants to win games. He will start the player who gives him the best chance to win.

From my point of view unless it is clearly obvious that DW is better. SS should start.

DW can look fine in practice because he is a prototype first round selection. He has the tools of the trade. However, when facing live ammo IMO he will go back to the quarterback we have seen in a Brown's uniform.

SS will need to look the part in camp and show he has control of the offense and playbook. He will have to demonstrate that his flaw of a slow processing clock has been speeded up. The players will know who should start.

Let the battle begin. Let's get ready to rumble.
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Re: Senator Lindsey Graham dies suddenly at the age of 71 mac 07/12/26 12:23 PM

Peen, totally unexpected.. rip Senator Graham
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Re: Senator Lindsey Graham dies suddenly at the age of 71 Ballpeen 07/12/26 11:06 AM
Somewhat shocking news. R.I.P
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Everything Else... Jump to new posts
Re: Bonnie Tyler Eclipsed at 75 Ballpeen 07/12/26 11:02 AM
Originally Posted by JPPT1974
Her song was very popular when the eclipse thing happened in April 2024. 75 Is very young to pass away!! RIP!

I wouldn't call 75 very young.
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Re: Mitch McConnell Lyuokdea 07/12/26 10:24 AM
For Supreme Court Justices, do the following:

Each presidential term gets to appoint 2 supreme court justices, one during the end of the first supreme court session (July of the Presidents first year), and one during the end of the third supreme court session (July of the Presidents Last Year). The justice that gets replaced at each point is the longest serving justice at that time. If a Justice dies or voluntarily retires, they are replaced immediately, but become the next presidents replacement. If there is a third death/voluntary retirement, then you elect a temporary supreme court justice who serves up until the next replacement period.

This way each president gets two replacements, you generally know who is getting replaced, and there is no wrangling about it. The average supreme court justice (who doesn't die early) will serve for about 20 years.
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Senator Lindsey Graham dies suddenly at the age of 71 Jester 07/12/26 10:17 AM
Senator Lindsey Graham dies suddenly at the age of 71

The South Carolina lawmaker died after a “brief and sudden illness,” his office posted on X on Sunday.

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, a prominent ally of President Trump, has died at the age of 71.

Graham died after a "brief and sudden illness," his office posted on X on Sunday.

Media reports said emergency personnel responded to a call for cardiac arrest at the South Carolina lawmaker's Capitol Hill home on Saturday night.

Graham had just returned from a trip to Ukraine and was due to appear on NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday morning, according to the network.


He had been a senator since 2003 and ran for the Republican nomination for president in 2016.

Shortly after news of his death emerged, President Trump hailed Graham as "one of the greatest people and senators I have ever known."

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he was "deeply saddened" by the news, describing the Senator as a "true defender of freedom and the values that make our world safer."

Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, also paid tribute. "Israel has lost one of its greatest friends. America has lost a great patriot. I have lost a beloved friend," he said in a statement.

Graham was a prominent supporter of Israel and Ukraine and an opponent of Iran.

"Lindsey Graham has earned a reputation as a conservative problem-solver and one of the strongest proponents of a robust national defense," his website said, adding that he "consistently pushed for outcomes in the War on Terror that protect our long-term national security interests."


https://www.yahoo.com/news/politics...suddenly-at-the-age-of-71-094435253.html
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Everything Else... Jump to new posts
Re: The World Cup mgh888 07/12/26 08:03 AM
The final 4 are set:

France vs Spain.

France have looked the best team of the competition. They are stacked with talent and play attractive football.
Spain have tons of talent and are highly organized but play a possession based (boring) style of football. It will be an interesting match up - I think both teams have about an equal amount of talent. France are more explosive but Spain may foil them and frustrate them ... an early goal for France would probably help make it a more exciting game.

England vs Argentina.

England played their best game vs Mexico then looked a little flat vs Norway and could be considered fortunate to have won. Argentina have played well and they have Messi - they have also been outrageously fortunate with the officiating and in all honesty deserved to lose to Egypt without the officiating benefitting them significantly. Expect a close game with momentum swinging one way then the other.
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Re: House GOP Targets Senate Power in Capitol Hill Constitutional Feud mgh888 07/12/26 07:50 AM
See - this to me needs to be put into context.

These are elected officials - in power and pushing an agenda that proposes and wants to rip up something fundamentally American, part of the constitution and in place for 114 years.

There's much noise about the Democratic Socialist Party on this board - it appears like it might be a rebranding of a non-influential group formerly calling themselves the Socialist Party. I see online something about the DSA having just surpasses 100,000 members ... whoop da freaking loop.

This is essentially a microcosm of so much of the politics today ... something big like Project 2025 is being enacted. We're in war with Iran that is killing the economy, has essentially made Iran more influential because they know how much they can hurt the USA/Trump/the world by closing the straits of Hurmuz. We have the DOJ being used to go openly after political opponents with evidence being manipulated to Grand Juries while 10,000 lawyers depart the DoJ (presumably/possibly/probably in part because of what they see). We have an administration trying to upend Birth Right Citizenship, another part of the constitution. We have a PoTUS shilling and making Billions because of his position while simultaneous actively undermining the principal of the separation of powers and checks and balances withing the 3 branches of Govt .......... And in response the narrative from the likes of Bannon, Trump and the very influential right wing media is deflection and distraction about a "movement" with about 100,000 members. We get a focus on Trans individuals that represent a tiny % of the population overall, and then if you look at the number of Trans "issues" where contentious event has happened - the numbers are absolutely minute. We get "condoms for Hamas" and Russian lies that get spammed and spread through fake SM accounts and picked up and embraced by MAGA.

And I don't see it changing any time soon.
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Re: Bonnie Tyler Eclipsed at 75 JPPT1974 07/12/26 02:48 AM
Her song was very popular when the eclipse thing happened in April 2024. 75 Is very young to pass away!! RIP!
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Everything Else... Jump to new posts
Re: Thor YTownBrownsFan 07/12/26 12:39 AM
Kinda funny, and not in the same league, but the Guardians just drafted a 17 year old pitcher who is 6'4" and IIRC, 220#. At 17.
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Re: Random NFL News IrishDawg42 07/11/26 11:43 PM
Originally Posted by oobernoober
I wouldn't mind him coming back....

It won’t be in Cleveland, it’ll be about 2.5 hours south east of Cleveland.
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Re: Thor bonefish 07/11/26 03:13 PM
Once in a while I used to watch some of the "world's strongest contests."

It is remarkable how strong those guys are. One time I went to a work training class and roomed with a guy who had been an NFL guard.

He would get up early and work out pumping iron. He was a really big dude.

But seeing Thor up close put him in a new category like Goliath.

Regular sized people by comparison looked like 5th graders.
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House GOP Targets Senate Power in Capitol Hill Constitutional Feud PitDAWG 07/11/26 02:58 PM
A group of Republican representatives is pushing to repeal the 17th Amendment, which gave voters the right to elect their own senators, amid a feud between House and Senate Republicans over the SAVE Act.

The push to repeal the 17th Amendment comes as House Republicans express frustration with the Senate over its inaction on the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, a proposed bill that would upend federal elections. Repealing efforts face an uphill battle, as only a handful of legislators have signed onto the bill, but it still highlights the growing rift among Republicans.

The bill was introduced by Representative Keith Self, a Texas Republican and member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, and so far has eight cosponsors as of Monday afternoon. It would end the direct election of senators and require that senators be selected by state legislatures.

What To Know

A group of House Republicans wants to repeal the 17th Amendment.

Repealing any amendment requires two-thirds of Congress and three-fourths of the states, making such repeal unlikely given the current political makeup of Congress. Only the 18th Amendment has ever been repealed.

House and Senate Republicans are clashing over the SAVE Act, with Self accusing the Senate of “defying the will” of Americans.

Why Some Republicans Want to Repeal 17th Amendment

Self wrote in a statement that he believes the direct election of senators has “given us six-year politicians more focused on national ambitions and the institution of the U.S. Senate than on the states they serve.” Prior to the passage of the 17th Amendment in 1912, state legislatures selected senators for each state.

The Senate, he said, was designed to “protect state sovereignty and act as a check on federal overreach.”

“If senators are supposed to represent their states, then the states should choose them. Repealing the 17th Amendment will restore that constitutional balance and make the Senate more accountable to the people of Texas and every other state in the union,” he wrote.

While the House of Representatives was meant to represent the people directly, the Senate was intended to “represent the states as sovereign entities,” according to Self's statement. The 17th Amendment “disrupted” that balance and contributed to the expansion of federal power, the statement says.

Currently, Republicans control more state legislatures than Democrats.

Democrats control the state legislative process in 18 states, while Republicans control it in 28, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Three states are divided, while Nebraska’s legislature is nonpartisan. Republicans hold more seats than Democrats in Alaska, but there is a power-sharing agreement between Democrats and centrist Republicans.
How Repealing a Constitutional Amendment Works

The process of repealing an amendment is a difficult bar to clear. It would either have to go through Congress or a Constitutional Convention. If it goes through Congress, it would require support from two-thirds of both the House of Representatives and Senate; three-fourths of state legislatures would then have to repeal it.

Alternatively, two-thirds of state legislatures could call for a constitutional convention. If proposed, three-fourths of states would have to repeal the amendment.

Both paths would require not only support from the vast majority of Republicans but also from a significant number of Democratic lawmakers.

Full List of Co-Sponsors for the 17th Amendment Repeal Bill

In addition to Self, the following House Republicans have signed onto the bill:

Eric Burlison (Missouri’s 7th District)
Andrew Clyde (Georgia’s 9th District)
Paul Gosar (Arizona’s 9th District)
Andy Harris (Maryland’s 1st District)
Scott Perry (Pennsylvania’s 10th District)
Clay Higgins (Louisiana’s 3rd District)
Sheri Biggs (South Carolina’s 3rd District)
Michael Cloud (Texas’ 27th District)

The Battle Over the SAVE Act

The proposal comes with the backdrop of House and Senate Republicans remaining at odds over the SAVE Act. The bill would require Americans to present documentary proof of citizenship when applying to register for federal elections in an attempt to prevent participation from undocumented immigrants.

It passed the House earlier this year, mostly on party lines, but has not garnered enough support to pass the Senate, where it would need 60 votes to clear the filibuster. Republicans have a 53-47 majority, which means they would need support from seven Democrats in addition to all Republicans. No Democrats have indicated support for the bill, and some Republicans are opposed.

President Donald Trump and some House conservatives have been sharply critical of the Senate over the SAVE Act. Self himself is among the most vocal critics of the Senate over the legislation.

“The Senate is openly defying the will of the American people by refusing to pass the SAVE America Act,” he wrote in a June 26 Facebook post.

Trump, meanwhile, abruptly canceled last week a planned signing of a bipartisan housing affordability bill, threatening to withhold his signature until lawmakers pass the SAVE Act.

Senate Republicans have said there is simply no way to pass the bill given the chamber's political reality.

Senator Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican, described its passage as an “impossible task” during an interview on CNN’s State of the Union, adding that the bill “simply can't be implemented in that time frame.”

“Why are we doing more things to undermine our confidence in elections, rather than getting the strong message out that will win for Republicans this year? Talk about the emergence and the rise of the Democrat Socialists of America, accept that the voting laws are going to be fundamentally what they are today, win by them,” he said.
What the 17th Amendment Says and Why It Was Ratified

The 17th Amendment states that the Senate “shall be composed of two Senators from each State, elected by the people thereof, for six years; and each Senator shall have one vote.”

“The electors in each State shall have the qualifications requisite for electors of the most numerous branch of the State legislatures,” it continues.

It also mandates that the executive of each state has authority to fill vacancies, provided that the “legislature of any State may empower the executive thereof to make temporary appointments until the people fill the vacancies by election as the legislature may direct.”

It was ratified on April 8, 1913, as part of Progressive Era reforms. Arguments centered around support for direct democracy, the challenges of hung state legislatures and concerns about corruption, according to the Constitution Center.

Only the 18th Amendment, which led to prohibition, has been repealed. That was in 1933.
Past Efforts to Repeal the 17th Amendment

There have been attempts to repeal the 17th Amendment in the past. In 2004, Senator Zell Miller, a Georgia Democrat, introduced a resolution that would repeal the amendment and require state legislatures to make appointments to the Senate. It failed to gain traction.

There were also calls to repeal the amendment in 2013 and 2014 following the Tea Party movement.

Senator Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, voiced support for the proposal at an ALEC summit in 2013, according to The Dallas Morning News. He described the amendment as a “major step toward the explosion of federal power and the undermining of the authority of the states at the local level.”

https://www.newsweek.com/house-republicans-repeal-17th-amendment-elect-senators-save-act-12137446

This proposal, House Joint Resolution 198, has pretty much zero chance of passing but it makes their intention clear. They want to steal your vote.
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Re: Mitch McConnell hitt 07/11/26 01:32 PM
He is NOT ALONE- 24 members of Congress are 80 or older. More than half are running for re-election. Humans have looked to their "Elders" for advise and guidance forever......however, lots of these old folks have no one running against them because they have POWER, and their state base doesn't want to lose power-- Founding Fathers didn't see this happening, a professional politician male and female who stayed until their dying breath.

Term limits, like the Presidency, show have been enacted 100 years ago. I'm 78 and won't happen in my life. I'd vote for it.

PS I'm a retired fighter pilot from USAF- Military doesn't want any pilot over 40---- line/combat pilots over 30?......why should our Congress be run by a huge percentage of people over 70---- just dumb in my book.
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